| Denton Jaques Snider - 1921 - 398 pages
...this melting-pot of battle to be poured afresh. Listen to the new note of reconciliation: "We will not again disparage America, now that we have seen what men it will bear." A repentant touch also may be felt in this confession, for has not Emerson often slighted and even... | |
| Caroline Ticknor - 1926 - 316 pages
...••••••••» The war is a new glass to see all our old things through, how they look. We will not again disparage America, now that we have seen what men it will bear. I wish that war, as peace, shall bring out the genius of men. In every company, in every town, I seek... | |
| 1930 - 724 pages
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| 1916 - 1054 pages
...many departments of trade ; at the close of the war Emerson, speaking again in Cambridge, said : " We shall not again disparage America now that we have seen what men it bears." That, in a word, is the test of prosperity : What kind of men and women does a country or a... | |
| 1915 - 896 pages
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| Edmund Wilson - 1943 - 1288 pages
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| Philip Rahv - 1957 - 472 pages
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