![]() The Skipper caught me at it, I know but he continued generously unabated in reminiscence. Mercedes Higgins was voluble as a Greek, and wandered on in reminiscence. Imitation) as the basis of all social morality, in reminiscence of Female Fisher had forgotten time, and hastened to her bedroom to wash her hands and smoothe her hair.Īnd for the other part of memory, called reminiscence, which is the retrieving of a thing, at present forgot, or but confusedly remembered, by setting the mind to hunt over all its notions, and to ransack every little cell of the brain. It seems as if something akin to what in our own mental experience we call reminiscence or association existed in the workings of nature for though the organic combinations are so distinct in different climates and countries, they never wholly exclude each other. Let me salute you with a reminiscence from a speech to this Empire Club some time ago. World Cup thoughts | Diane Duane's weblog: "Out of Ambit" (And, on a happier note, a magic reminiscence from a tournament long ago:) The cover evokes it's science fiction theme better then all the rest of the book covers and is in reminiscence if past science fiction covers.īooks Received for July 2008, Week 1 (Pick Your Favorite Cover!) It was a Maxfield Parrish reminiscence from the Arabian noun the process of remembering (especially the process of recovering information by mental effort).noun a mental impression retained and recalled from the past.noun An act of remembering long-past experiences, often fondly.įrom WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University.noun That which is remembered, or recalled to mind a statement or narration of remembered experience a recollection.įrom Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. ![]()
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