| Alexander Mackie - 1912 - 138 sider
...and callous to the proprietor's interest. He will say of the river, as the lyrist said of his love, " If she be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be ?" Seldom having the chance of exercising his skill, he may be excused if he feels indifferent to... | |
| Violet Rosa Markham - 1913 - 468 sider
...on the other hand, does not take these rebuffs lying down, and retorts — in the vigorous spirit of If she be not fair to me What care I how fair she be — that Rhodesia has wholly exaggerated and magnified the character of the advances made to her,... | |
| Anthony Trollope - 1913 - 366 sider
...and allow his heart to sink into his very feet because a girl would not smile when he wooed her ? " If she be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be? " He had repeated the lines to himself a score of times, and had been ashamed of himself because... | |
| 1914 - 878 sider
...Legendre, and simply memorized him. I have heard geometry described as a ' beautiful science,' but — If she be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be? To me she was an obstacle in the path of knowledge, invisible, not hostile, but palpable and stubborn... | |
| William Maddux Tanner - 1917 - 352 sider
...Legendre, and simply memorized him. I have heard geometry described as a ' beautiful science,' but — If she be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be ? To me she was an obstacle in the path of knowledge, invisible, not hostile, but palpable and stubborn... | |
| Franklin Pierce Adams - 1917 - 172 sider
...strings, And I long to be labour-free, I just go and do those pleasanter things I spoke of in II and III. IF SHE be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be? Still, if she be fair, why then That is something else again. OVER the country, from coast to coast,... | |
| 1919 - 962 sider
...another favorite, which is just as likely to be the one scorned by the first teacher. But with the poet, "If she be not fair to me, what care I how fair she be." Surelythere are certain criteria by which text books may be judged. Might not our English Bulletin... | |
| 1920 - 350 sider
...another favorite, which is just as likely to be the one scorned by the first teacher. But with the poet, "If she be not fair to me, what care I how fair she be." Surely there are certain criteria by which text books may be judged. Might not our English Bulletin... | |
| Rupert Clendon Lodge - 1920 - 388 sider
...he was trying to charge too much. 2. Point out the element of analytic expansion In the following : If she be not fair to me, what care I how fair she be? If that Is my car, I must run. Anyone who can put two and two together must realise that sincere... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1922 - 650 sider
...must speak the language of his age. The age says of the poet, as the lover does of his mistress, " If she be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be." And this- sentiment must not be thrown away as though it only meant that the taste of one age... | |
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