Surely I have never yet made, and never expect to make any money. Neither do I expect to write ever for the multitude. I write for beloved friends who can see colour in words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine... The Japanese Letters of Lafcadio Hearn - Sayfa xxxiiiLafcadio Hearn tarafından - 1910 - 468 sayfaTam görünüm - Bu kitap hakkında
| 1912 - 788 sayfa
...And in conclusion: " I write for beloved friends who can see color in words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine...eventually have their rights recognized by the people." Now I for one, with my dull ear and dim eye, cannot realize all of these superb possibilities, but... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne, Waldo Ralph Browne, Scofield Thayer - 1911 - 398 sayfa
...for the multitude. I write for beloved friends who can see colour in words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine...eventually have their rights recognized by the people.' " Notwithstanding his love for the mere abstract sound of words, Hearn was too much of an artist in... | |
| fred lewis pattee - 1915 - 522 sayfa
...for the multitude. I write for beloved friends who can see color in words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine...eventually have their rights recognized by the people. His essays, therefore, even as he has intimated, are for the few who are attuned to them, who have... | |
| Lafcadio Hearn - 1922 - 526 sayfa
...for the multitude. I write for beloved friends who can see colour in words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine...heresy. But a bad reason, you will grant, is better than — etc. Faithfully LAFCADIO HEARN DEAR CHAMBERLAIN, — You have heard of Composite Photographs, and... | |
| Sarah Augusta Taintor - 1923 - 318 sayfa
...colour in words, can smell the perfume in syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine elvish electricity of words. And in the eternal order of...eventually have their rights recognized by the people. Stevenson, whom Henry van Dyke calls the best example in modern English of a careful writer, compares... | |
| Harry Lloyd Miller, Richard Theodore Hargreaves - 1925 - 436 sayfa
...words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine elfish eccentricity of words. And in the eternal order of things, words...eventually have their rights recognized by the people." Determine the Position and Aims of Constructive Arts in General Education. — 2. In the constructive... | |
| Charles Kay Ogden, Ivor Armstrong Richards - 1927 - 398 sayfa
...words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine elfish eccentricity of words. And in the eternal order of things, words...eventually have their rights recognized by the people." Words or arrangements of words evoke attitudes both directly as sounds, and less directly in several... | |
| Terrence Gordon - 1994 - 596 sayfa
...words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine elfish eccentricity of words. And in the eternal order of things, words will eventually have their rights recognised by the people.' Words or arrangements of words evoke attitudes both directly as sounds,... | |
| Melvin Jonah Lasky - 752 sayfa
...words, can smell the perfume of syllables in blossom, can be shocked with the fine elfish eccentricity of words. And in the eternal order of things, words...eventually have their rights recognized by the people. The French essayist Jean Paulhan has similarly observed that to understand a word or a sentence is... | |
| University of Colorado (Boulder campus) - 1913 - 244 sayfa
...dim eye, cannot realize all of these superb possibilities, but I do accept his closing thought that "in the eternal order of things, words will eventually have their rights recognized by the people"; even if there will always be a few Humpty Dumpties on the wall. And in assigning their rights we must... | |
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