| Enrique Péroz Escrich - 1910 - 326 pages
...the wonderful storehouse — memory. They repeat themselves during the hours of sleep, and become, like a familiar tune during our conscious periods, a part of our very These same scntcnces leap to our lips rcady for use at the proper moment. We arrange and rearrange... | |
| Raphael Diez de la Cortina - 1907 - 224 pages
...the wonderful storehouse — memory. They repeat themselves during the hours of sleep, and become, like a familiar tune during our conscious periods, a part of our very being. These same sentences leap to our lips ready for use at the proper moment. We arrange and rearrange... | |
| R. Diez de la(Rafael Diez de la) Cortina - 1910 - 328 pages
...the wonderful storehouse — memory. They repeat themselves during the hours of sleep, and become, like a familiar tune during our conscious periods, a part of our very being. And Then — These same sentencies leap to our lips ready for use at the proper moment. We arrange and rearrange them — a... | |
| Jean Alcide Picard - 1917 - 116 pages
...the wonderful storehouse — memory. They repeat themselves during the hours of sleep, and become, like a familiar tune during our conscious periods,...And Then— These same sentences leap to our lips for use at the proper moment. We arrange and rearrange them — a hundred variations occur to us involuntarily... | |
| Jean Alcide Picard - 1917 - 322 pages
...the wonderful storehouse — memory. They repeat themselves during the hours of sleep, and become, like a familiar tune during our conscious periods,...And Then— These same sentences leap to our lips for use at the proper moment. We arrange and rearrange them — a hundred variations occur to us involuntarily... | |
| Jean Alcide Picard - 1917 - 304 pages
...in the wonderful storehouse—memory. They repeat themselves during the hours of sleep, and become, like a familiar tune during our conscious periods,...And Then— These same sentences leap to our lips for use at the proper moment. We arrange and rearrange them—a hundred variations occur to us involuntarily... | |
| Enrique Pérez Escrich - 1919 - 326 pages
...away io the wonderful storehouse-memory. They repeat themselves during the hours of sleep, and become, like a familiar tune during our conscious periods,...use at the proper moment We arrange and rearrange them — a nundred variations occur to us involuníarily as thought inspires them. We are THINKING... | |
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