| Francis Henry Underwood - 1882 - 398 pagine
...condescended to answer Mr. Poe's attacks ; and I would advise you now, at the outset of your literary career, never to take notice of any attacks that may be made...and if I find that the article has been written in a pleasant spirit, I read it through ; but if I find that the intention is to wound, I drop the paper... | |
| William Shepard Walsh - 1889 - 352 pagine
...condescended to answer Mr. Poe's attacks ; and I would advise you now, at the outset of your literary career, never to take notice of any attacks that may be made...and if I find that the article has been written in a pleasant spirit, I read it through ; but if I find that the intention is to wound, I drop the paper... | |
| Francis Henry Underwood - 1882 - 392 pagine
...condescended to answer Mr. Poe's attacks ; and I would advise you now, at the outset of your literary career, never to take notice of any attacks that may be made...he said, ' and if I find that the article has been writ0 ten in a pleasant spirit, I read it through ; but if I find that the intention is to wound, I... | |
| William Winter - 1883 - 190 pagine
...I am alive and still writing — and that is the end of the matter. I never condescended to answer Mr. Poe's attacks ; and I would advise you now, at...and if I find that the article has been written in a pleasant spirit, I read it through ; but if I find that the intention is to wound, I drop the paper... | |
| William Winter - 1892 - 314 pagine
...I am alive and still writing — and that is the end of the matter. I never condescended to answer Mr. Poe's attacks ; and I would advise you now, at...and if I find that the article has been written in a pleasant spirit, I read it through ; but if I find that the intention is to wound, I drop the paper... | |
| Matilda Piro - 1892 - 336 pagine
...I am alive and still writing — and that is the end of the matter. I never condescended to answer Mr. Poe's attacks; and I would advise you now, at..."and if I find that the article has been written in a pleasant spirit, I read it through ; but if I find that the intention is to wound, I drop the paper... | |
| Mary Elizabeth Phillips - 1926 - 846 pagine
...words definitely attest, first and last, that Longfellow had no part in the "Outis" defense prints.] He then took up the volume of Poe, and. turning the leaves, particularly commended the stanzas — ' For Annie ' and ' The Haunted Palace.' '" Surely this was significant of Longfellow's motto which... | |
| Fireside pictorial annual - 1883 - 808 pagine
...condescended to answer Mr. Poe's attacks ; and I would advise you now, at the outset of your literary career, never to take notice of any attacks that may be made...stanzas entitled 'For Annie,' and 'The Haunted Palace.' " III. LONGFELLOW'S PEBSONAL APPEARANCE. Mr. William Winter, in a letter to the New York Tribune, thus... | |
| 1898 - 664 pagine
...the leaves, particularly commended the Approach the artist through his work, never through his Ute. stanzas entitled "For Annie" and "The Haunted Palace."...articles, about his own writings, that were received by him,—sent, apparently, by their writers. •' 1 look at the first few lines," he said, "and if I... | |
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