| Anna Lydia Ward - 1889 - 724 halaman
...capriciously scattered over the surface at some master's bidding. 3271 Lowell : Amon9 My Books. Spenser. The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature,...cannot be inherited, so they cannot be alienated. 3272 Lowell : Address, Chelsea, Mass., Dec. 22, 1885. Books and Libraries. A nation's literature is... | |
| Anna Lydia Ward - 1889 - 724 halaman
...capriciously scattered over the surface at some master's bidding. 3271 Lowell : Among My Books. Spenser. The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature, defy fortune and outlive calainity. They are beyond the reach of thief or moth or rust. As they cannot be inherited, so they... | |
| James Russell Lowell - 1890 - 334 halaman
...real possessions which abide with a man after he has been stripped of those others falsely so called, and which alone save him from seeming and from being...and office of a free public library to perform these beneIicent functions. " Books," says Wordsworth, " are a real world," and he was thinking, doubtless,... | |
| 1891 - 238 halaman
...LONDON, SEPTEMBER 30, 1891. VOL. IV. SELECT LISTS OF RECENT PUBLICATIONS. " The riches of tchofarshipt the benignities of literature^ defy fortune and outlive calamity. They are beyond the reach cf thief or time or rust. As they cannot be inherited. s¿ they cannot be alienated. But they may be... | |
| Charles Alexander McMurry - 1903 - 272 halaman
...and health and faculties ? "The riches of scholarship, the_benignities of literafure7'~He?y~7ortune and outlive calamity. They are beyond the reach of...But they may be shared, they may be distributed." This notion of the select companionship of books finds also happy expression in Ruskin's "Sesame and... | |
| Charles Francis Richardson - 1905 - 398 halaman
...temperance and serenity of mind which, as it is the ripest fruit of wisdom, is also the sweetest. . . . The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature,...cannot be inherited, so they cannot be alienated." " The grandest aim of imaginative art," says Ruskin, " is to give men noble grounds for noble emotion."... | |
| Charles Francis Richardson - 1905 - 426 halaman
...temperance and serenity of mind which, as it is the ripest fruit of wisdom, is also the sweetest. . . . The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature,...cannot be inherited, so they cannot be alienated." "The grandest aim of imaginative art," says Ruskin, " is to give men noble grounds for noble emotion."... | |
| Charles Alexander McMurry - 1908 - 376 halaman
...involve them in ruinous expense, and still more ruinous waste of time and health and faculties ? " The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature,...But they may be shared, they may be distributed." This notion of the select companionship of books finds also happy expression in Ruskin's "Sesame and... | |
| John Anthony O'Brien - 1926 - 346 halaman
...not involve them in ruinous expense, and still more ruinous waste of time and health and faculties? "The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature,...But they may be shared, they may be distributed." The Values of Poetry. — In this material, or socalled practical age, the culture to be derived from... | |
| |