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America To-day, Observations and Reflections

William Archer

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .ions are ours, his standards are ours, his ideals are ours. He is busied with the same problems of ethics, of æsthetics, of style, even of grammar. I had not been three days in New York when I found myself plunged in a hot discussion of the "split infinitive," in which I was ranged with two Americans against a recreant Briton who defended the collocation. "It is a mistake to regard it is an Americanism," said one of the Americans. "It is as old as the English language, or at least as old as Wickliff. But it is unnecessary, and the best modern practice discountenances it." I felt like falling on the neck of an ally of half an hour's standing, and swearing eternal friendship. What matters Alaska, or Venezuela, or Nicaragua, "or all the stones of stumbling in the world," so long as we have a common interest in (and some of us a common distaste for) the split infinitive? To put the matter briefly, while the outlook of the New York. . . Read More

Community Reviews

“There, however, are the ‘skyscraper’ buildings, looming out through the mist like Jotuns in Niflheim of Scandinavian mythology. They are grandiose, certainly, and not to my thinking ugly. That word has no application in this context. ‘Pretty’ and ‘ugly’—why should we forever carry about these aesth