... and without which this nation will no more stand, permanently, soundly, than a house will stand without a substratum,) a religious and moral character beneath the political and productive and intellectual bases of the States. The North American Review - Side 251883Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
 | Walt Whitman - 1882 - 412 sider
...religious and moral character beneath the political and productive and intellectual bases of the States. For know you not, dear, earnest reader, that the people...— and yet the main things may be entirely lacking? — (and this to suggest them.) View'd, to-day, from a point of view sufficiently over-arching, the... | |
 | Walt Whitman - 1883 - 390 sider
...religious and moral character beneath the political and productive and intellectual bases of the States. For know you not, dear, earnest reader, that the people...all read and write, and may all possess the right to vote—and yet the main things may be entirely lacking ?—(and this to suggest them.) View'd, to-day,... | |
 | Walt Whitman - 1888 - 212 sider
...productive and intellectual fyispg nf the gfetf ''or Tcnow you not, dear, earnest reader, that the people our land may all read and write, and may all possess...— and yet the main things may be entirely lacking ? — (and this to suggest them.) View'd, to-day, from a point of view sufficiently overiarching, the... | |
 | Walt Whitman - 1901 - 566 sider
...religious and moral character beneath the political and productive and intellectual bases of the States. For know you not, dear, earnest reader, that the people...— and yet the main things may be entirely lacking? — (and this to suggest them.) View'd, to-day, from a point of view sufficiently over-arching, the... | |
 | 1914 - 632 sider
...Surely no man loved and believed In the people more than Walt Whitman, who once wrote: 'Tor know you not that the people of our land may all read and write,...and yet the main things may be entirely lacking?" Our people are indeed gorged with reading and writing and voting, but to me it seems evident that the... | |
 | Walt Whitman - 1916 - 388 sider
...religious and moral character beneath the political .jand productive and intellectual bases of the States. For know you not, dear, earnest reader, that the people...— and yet the main things may be entirely lacking? — (and this to suggest them). Viewed, to-day, from a point of view sufficiently over-arching, the... | |
 | Walt Whitman - 1916 - 390 sider
...religious and moral character beneath the political and productive and intellectual bases of the States. For know you not, dear, earnest reader, that the people...— and yet the main things may be entirely lacking? — (and this to suggest them). Viewed, to-day, from a point of view sufficiently over-arching, the... | |
 | James Cloyd Bowman - 1926 - 364 sider
...religious and moral character beneath the political and productive and intellectual bases of the States. (For know you not, dear, earnest reader, that the...— and yet the main things may be entirely lacking? — and this to suggest them.) Viewed, to-day, from a point of view sufficiently overarching, the problem... | |
 | James Cloyd Bowman - 1926 - 356 sider
...religious and moral character beneath the political and productive and intellectual bases of the States. (For know you not, dear, earnest reader, that the...all read and write, and may all possess the right to vote—and yet the main things may be entirely lacking?—and this to suggest them.) Viewed, to-day,... | |
 | American Library Association - 1914 - 556 sider
...Surely no man loved and believed in the people more than Walt Whitman, who once wrote: "For know you not that the people of our land may all read and write,...and yet the main things may be entirely lacking?" Our people are indeed gorged with reading and writing and voting, but to me it seems evident that the... | |
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