| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1849 - 208 páginas
...to say also that I thought our literature would finally not be wanting in a kind of universality. " As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own,...will give us universality, so much to be desired." " If that is your way of thinking," interrupted the visitor, "you will like the work I am now engaged... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1849 - 168 páginas
...to say also that I thought our literature would finally not be wanting in a kind of universality." " As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own,...will give us universality, so much to be desired." " If that is your way of thinking," interrupted the visitor, " you will like the work I am now engaged... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1851 - 376 páginas
...to say also that I thought our literature would finally not be wanting in a kind or universality." " As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own,...will give us universality, so much to be desired." "If that is your way of thinking," interrupted the visitor, " you will like the work I am now engaged... | |
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1853 - 678 páginas
...literature is not the growth of a day. Centuries must contribute their dew and sunshine to it. * • As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own,...will give us universality, so much to be desired." " These views seem to us, in the main, sound. The only expression against which we are disposed to... | |
| William Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone - 1855 - 780 páginas
...special misB non for American Literature, it would seem to be — universality : As the blood of nil nations is mingling with our own, so will their thoughts...solid sense. And this will give us universality, so rauch to be desired. In the " Mosses from an old Manse," one of the authors whoso names stand at the... | |
| 1855 - 784 páginas
...contribute their dew and sunshine to it. If Mr. Longfellow anticipates a special misbe — universality : As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own, so will their thoughts and feelings timilly mingle in our literature. We shall draw from the Germans, tenderness; from the Spaniards, passion;... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1861 - 498 páginas
...to say also that I thought our literature would finally not be wanting in a kind of universality. " As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own,...will give us universality, so much to be desired." " If that is your way of thinking," interrupted the visitor, " you will like the work I am now engaged... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1861 - 608 páginas
...to say also that I thought our literature would finally not be wanting in a kind of universality. " As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own,...sense And this will give us universality, so much to he desired." " If that is your way of thinking," interrupted the visitor, " you will like the work... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1874 - 868 páginas
...to say also that I thought our literature would finally not be wanting in a kind of universality." " As the blood of all nations is mingling with our own,...will give us universality, so much to be desired." " If that is your way of thinking," interrupted the visitor, "you will like the work I am now engaged... | |
| 1880 - 516 páginas
...afford, and he frankly reflected it in his writings. " As the blood of all nations," he continues, " is mingling with our own, so will their thoughts and...will give us universality so much to be desired." Ten years elapsed after the publication of Hyverion before another, and his latest, prose work appeared.... | |
| |