| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - Humanities - 1876 - 472 pages
...testimony, long afterwards, to the advantages he had derived from his academic education : " The unfading art which I acquired at college was that of study ; and, if the acquisitions I then made are faded or fallen from the surface, the art or faculty of study ha-< never left me."... | |
| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - Humanities - 1876 - 424 pages
...testimony, long afterwards, to the advantages he had derived from his academic education : " The unfading art which I acquired at college was that of study ; and. if the acquisitions I then made are faded or fallen from the surface, the art or faculty of study ha* never left me." A... | |
| American Philosophical Society - Electronic journals - 1877 - 720 pages
...class at Harvard University, the president of which, at that time, was the Rev. Joseph Willard, DD and LL. D. In the autumn after his admission he unfortunately...where he was always happy, he remained in his chambers in one of the college buildings during an entire autumnal vacation, and studied every day of it fourteen... | |
| Anthropology - 1877 - 696 pages
...during his college life, he ever regarded as his most important gain, and many years afterward he-spoke of it as such. Much of what he acquired he said he...where he was always happy, he remained in his chambers in one of the college, buildings during an entire autumnal vacation, and studied every day of it fourteen... | |
| Philadelphia Bar Association - Law - 1906 - 516 pages
...though he had preserved enough to assist his children in their education, "but," he added, "the unfading art which I acquired at college was that of study,...where he was always happy, he remained in his chambers in one of the college buildings during an entire autumnal vacation, and studied every day of it fourteen... | |
| Humanities - 1876 - 442 pages
...testimony, long afterwards, to the advantages he had derived from his academic education : " The unfading art which I acquired at college was that of study ; and, if the acquisitions I then made are faded or fallen from the surface, the art or faculty of study ha-* never left me."... | |
| 694 pages
...then give. Through his entire college life his intercourse with the officers of Strong.] ° [.Ttn.i, the institution was one of one uninterrupted respect...where he was always happy, he remained in his chambers in one of the college buildings during an entire autumnal vacation, and studied every day of it fourteen... | |
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