The Wit & Wisdom of Mark TwainHarper & Row, 1987 - 265 pagina's This sparkling anthology of Mark Twain's most trenchant remarks has been culled from his books, speeches, letters and conversations recorded by contemporaries. The sayings are as fresh today as when he first wrote them and represent Twain at his wittiest and best. |
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Pagina 26
... young audience in a speech delivered in 1882. " But good ones are the sort for the young to read . Remember that . They are a great , an inestimable , an unspeakable means of improvement . Therefore be careful in your selection , my young ...
... young audience in a speech delivered in 1882. " But good ones are the sort for the young to read . Remember that . They are a great , an inestimable , an unspeakable means of improvement . Therefore be careful in your selection , my young ...
Pagina 138
... young man , he once met an old man who claimed to have crossed the Delaware River with George Washington . " Were ... young man . " Mr. Clemens , I am a newspaper reporter and have been commissioned to ask you a few questions , " said ...
... young man , he once met an old man who claimed to have crossed the Delaware River with George Washington . " Were ... young man . " Mr. Clemens , I am a newspaper reporter and have been commissioned to ask you a few questions , " said ...
Pagina 256
... young . " I am just as young now as I was 40 years ago . -Baltimore News , 1909 There is no sadder sight than a young pessimist . -Notebook , 1902 It is a pity that we cannot escape from life when we are young . -Neider , Autobiography ...
... young . " I am just as young now as I was 40 years ago . -Baltimore News , 1909 There is no sadder sight than a young pessimist . -Notebook , 1902 It is a pity that we cannot escape from life when we are young . -Neider , Autobiography ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
American answered asked audience Autobiography become believe Biography called City civilization Clemens Connecticut Yankee critics dead death DeVoto difference don't Earth England essay experience fact feel Following the Equator give hand Harper heard heart Heaven Huckleberry Finn human humor idea Innocents Abroad interest invented Italy keep kind lecture Letter literary live look man's Mark Twain matter mean mind Mississippi morals natural Neider never Notebook once opinion Paine perfect person published Pudd'nhead Wilson race reason religion replied reporter rest river Roughing Satan Sawyer sometimes speak speech stand story Stranger talk tell thing thought told Tramp trouble true truth weather whole woman write wrong wrote York young
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Take It to Heart: Sixty Meditations on God and His Word Christin Ditchfield Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2005 |