| David Josiah Brewer - 1901 - 440 pàgines
...I am told it. But I cherish, too, the consolatory hope that I shall be able to tell them that I had an old and learned friend whom I would put above all...fountains of Athens and of Rome, who had fed the youthful vigor of his studious mind with the theoretic knowledge of their wisest philosophers and statesmen,... | |
| W. V. Byars - 1901 - 616 pàgines
...I am told it. But I cherish, too, the consolatory hope that I shall be able to tell them that I had an old and learned friend whom I would put above all...fountains of Athens and of Rome; who had fed the youthful vigor of his studious mind with the theoretic knowledge of their wisestphilosophers and statesmen;... | |
| William Vincent Byars - 1901 - 614 pàgines
...I am told it. But I cherish, too, the consolatory hope that I shall be able to tell them that I had an old and learned friend whom I would put above all...fountains of Athens and of Rome; who had fed the youthful vigor of his studious mind with the theoretic knowledge of their wisest philosophers and statesmen;... | |
| William Jennings Bryan - 1906 - 278 pàgines
...arn told it. But I cherish, too, the consolatory hope, that I shall be able to tell them that I had an old and learned friend, whom I would put above...fountains of Athens and of Rome; who had fed the youthful vigor of his studious mind with the theoretic knowledge of their wisest philosophers and statesmen,... | |
| Claude Gernade Bowers - 1916 - 600 pàgines
...I cherish, too, the consolatory hope that I shall be able to tell them that I had an old and valued friend, whom I would put above all the sweepings of...fountains of Athens and of Rome; who had fed the youthful vigor of his studious mind with the theoretic knowledge of their wisest philosophers and statesmen... | |
| Thomas Clarke Luby - 1880 - 560 pàgines
...passage : — "But I cherish, too, the Consolatory hope that I shall be able to tell them that I had an old and learned friend, whom I would put above all the sweepings of the hall,* who was of a different opinion; who had derived his ideas of civil liberty from the purest... | |
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