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Word: beggars (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Europe, particularly in Spain, where he worked extensively in 1913. The ballad department of the Widener Library owes its position as first among the collections in America largely to Mr. Gay and his brother, the late Frederick Lewis Gay '78. He had arranged that on his death his "Beggar's Opera" collection should go to further enrich the collection at Widener...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ernest Lewis Gay '97. | 11/27/1916 | See Source »

...great many take advantage of the class-festivities. One prowler was found "canvassing" in the early morning after class night. In another case, the miscreant was a beggar who stopped men on the way to and from dinner...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MANY THEFTS IN THE YARD | 1/23/1914 | See Source »

...MacKaye's latest play was produced for the first time on any stage at the Shubert Theatre last night and a large and genuinely appreciative audience forgot the commonplace world that buzzed outside the door and lived in a world of grotesquerie and romance, rings and roses with a beggar's wallet thrown in for good measure. Mr. Macrame waved his magic wand and bade us step with him into the Land of Heart's Desire, where men dared all for the love of fair women. And his audience followed him joyously...

Author: By E. C. Ranck, | Title: MacKaye's "Turandet" Reviewed | 12/2/1913 | See Source »

...Arabian Night" in three acts and ten scenes, Mr. Knoblauch's play gives us a day in the life of Hajj, the Beggar; from his post before the Mosque of the Carpenters in Bagdad, this scheming, yet somehow lovable, mendicant rises to be friend to Wazir Caliph, and drinks deep of the joys of life, and of its sorrows, too, and at the end of the twenty-four hours is found again on the steps of the Mosque, the old cry on his lips: "Alms, for the love of Allah...

Author: By G. SANTAYANA ., | Title: New Plays in Boston | 3/27/1913 | See Source »

...Otis Skinner does the part of Hajj, played abroad by Mr. Oscar Asche, and Miss. Rita Jolivet that of the beggar's daughter Marriah originated by Miss Lily Brayton. It is difficult to suppose that either character could have been better portrayed in the first production than in the present. Mr. Skinner is particularly fitted through long and thorough training to give, as indeed he does, a living Hajj, the Beggar. The staging of the play evidently offered many very difficult problems but these have been met skilfully and effectively; especially is this the case in the scene...

Author: By G. SANTAYANA ., | Title: New Plays in Boston | 3/27/1913 | See Source »

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