WORDS OF NOTE
May 11, 1995
In perfect eloquence, the hearer would lose the sense of dualism, of hearing from another; would cease to distinguish between the orator and himself.
* An excerpt from 'Journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson.'
In perfect eloquence, the hearer would lose the sense of dualism, of hearing from another; would cease to distinguish between the orator and himself.
* An excerpt from 'Journals of Ralph Waldo Emerson.'