Word: cannot
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...stripped of those others falsely so called, and which alone save him from seeming and from being the miserable forked radish to which the bitter scorn of Lear degraded every child of Adam. The riches of scholarship, the benignities of literature will defy fortune and outlive calamity. As they cannot be inherited, so they cannot be alienated. "Books," says Wordsworth, "are a real world," and he was thinking, doubtless, of such books as are not merely the triumphs of pure intellect, however supreme, but of those in which intellect infused with the sense of beauty aims rather to produce delight...
...Libretto of the Latin Play which is now on sale is published in an admirable form and will add much interest to the performance. An English prose translation by Professor M. H. Morgan accompanies the Latin text in parallel columns and will enable those who cannot translate readily to follow the action of the play with ease. The new prologue is by Professor J. B. Greenough. Appended to the play is a series of twenty-six half-tone engravings of miniatures in the Vatican manuscript of Terence, which are here for the first time accurately reproduced, from photographs which were...
...question of Protection does not enter. (a) Sugar cannot be produced in sufficient quantities in the U. S. (b) The sugar industry already established can be more economically protected by a bounty...
Many of the prayers and hymns of the Episcopal Church are in words that convey the deepest meaning that is in the power of language, and if we consider carefully what we say we think it is not possible that we should be sincere. If we cannot be, it is more than useless to repeat these prayers and phrases that are only so many empty words. It hurts ourselves and it hurts the Church. We can bring ourselves, however, to say these prayers and to mean them by comparing our own very imperfect lives with the life of Christ...
Such, then, is the Harvard C. S. Reform Club. Its work cannot well be carried on with a small membership. To get "Good Government" at club rates we need one hundred and fifty members. Those who are carrying on the work in the college do so for the sake of the reform. It is a work which should appeal to the patriotic spirit of every American, and especially of every college man. I ask every man interested in pure and efficient government if the support of the club is not a worthy object of his consideration? Membership blanks and copies...