Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 82
... never mention her ; Her name is never heard ; My lips are now forbid to speak That once familiar word . From sport to sport they hurry me , To banish my regret ; And when they win a smile from me They think that I forget . They bid me ...
... never mention her ; Her name is never heard ; My lips are now forbid to speak That once familiar word . From sport to sport they hurry me , To banish my regret ; And when they win a smile from me They think that I forget . They bid me ...
Page 341
... never , according to our observation and experience as a medical man , from their having worked too hard or too fast . We believe such a case was never yet met with . Before we saw the report of the physicians , or the vo- lumes of ...
... never , according to our observation and experience as a medical man , from their having worked too hard or too fast . We believe such a case was never yet met with . Before we saw the report of the physicians , or the vo- lumes of ...
Page 464
... never his attributes fully in single structures . He is instant , but never extant wholly , in his works . Nature does not con- tain , but is contained in him ; she is the memoir of his life ; man is a nobler scripture , yet fails to ...
... never his attributes fully in single structures . He is instant , but never extant wholly , in his works . Nature does not con- tain , but is contained in him ; she is the memoir of his life ; man is a nobler scripture , yet fails to ...
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