id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 20844 Morley, John Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 3 of 3), Essay 5: On Pattison's Memoirs .txt text/plain 11121 506 68 commensurate to his remarkable faculties, Pattison's life would be [1] _Memoirs._ By Mark Pattison, late Rector of Lincoln knowledge, Pattison could hardly be said to have an affluent mind. Mark Pattison, born in 1813, passed his youthful days at the rectory of the books I read seemed to find its way into my mind.' He found time for Pattison truly says, and as men so far removed from sympathy with dogma Pattison, like most of the superior minds then at Oxford, was not only a natural organ in a man of Pattison's constitution. Several years went by before Pattison's mind recovered spring and art to live_, and that both men, women, and books are equally essential Pattison had been content with saying that some men have the impulse For a man to know his way about in the world of printed books, to find Pattison's mind was always in the world. ./cache/20844.txt ./txt/20844.txt