Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all, — an, unfaltering determination, an invincible defiance to all that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men, who, being conquered... O. Henry Biography - Pagina 65di Charles Alphonso Smith - 1916 - 258 pagineVisualizzazione completa - Informazioni su questo libro
| Albion Winegar Tourgée - 1880 - 578 pagine
...carried through a great war should come to regard any thing as an excuse for organized Thuggism ! Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all,...that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men, who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
| Albion W. Tourgée - 1880 - 392 pagine
...carried through a great war should come to regard any thing as an excuse for organized Thuggism ! Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all,...that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men, who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
| Albion W. Tourgée - 1880 - 572 pagine
...carried through a great war should come to regard any thing as an excuse for organized Thuggism 1 Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all,...that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men, who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
| Albion Winegar Tourgée - 1883 - 424 pagine
...carried through a great war should come to regard any thing as an excuse for organized Thuggism ! Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all,...that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men, who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
| Samuel A'Court Ashe - 1906 - 810 pagine
...prepared not only to issue it, but to see that it was executed. "Yet," says he, in "The Fool's Errand," "it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all...that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
| 1916 - 600 pagine
...neighbors as they saw themselves was rather a failure. But let that pass. He goes on to say : "Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all,...that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
| Albion W. Tourgée - 1961 - 442 pagine
...carried through a great war should come to regard any thing as an excuse for organized Thuggism! Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all,...that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men, who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
| Albion W. Tourgée - 1880 - 576 pagine
...for organized Thuggism ! Yet it was a magnificent sentiment that underlay it all, — an nnfaltering determination, an invincible defiance to all that had the seeming of compulsion or tyranny. One can not but regard with pride and sympathy the indomitable men, who, being conquered in war, yet resisted... | |
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