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What would have become of me if no one had wanted to read my books? And don't forget all those who
What would have become of me if no one had wanted to read my books? And don't forget all those who
What would have become of me if no one had wanted to read my books? And don't forget all those who
What would have become of me if no one had wanted to read my books? And don't forget all those who
What would have become of me if no one had wanted to read my books? And don't forget all those who
What would have become of me if no one had wanted to read my books? And don't forget all those who
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Josiah Royce:
As for you, my beloved friend, I loyally believe in your uniqueness; but whenever I try to tell toJosiah Royce:
We seek true individuality and the true individuals. But we find them not. For lo, we mortals see wJosiah Royce:
This preparatory sort of idealism is the one that, as I just suggested, Berkeley made prominent, anJosiah Royce:
The world, as transformed by this creative deed, is better than it would have been had all else remJosiah Royce:
That this individual life of all of us is not something limited in its temporal expression to the lJosiah Royce:
So, as one sees, I by no means deprive my world of stubborn reality, if I merely call it a world ofJosiah Royce:
So far as we live and strive at all, our lives are various, are needed for the whole, and are uniquJosiah Royce:
Our will makes constantly a sort of agreement with the world, whereby, if the world will continuallJosiah Royce:
Of this our true individual life, our present life is a glimpse, a fragment, a hint, and in its besJosiah Royce:
No baseness or cruelty of treason so deep or so tragic shall enter our human world, but that loyal