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Word: cousin (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...young man, who has wonderful dramatic genius, escapes from the army, deceives his family, deludes his grandfather, and by a clever trick takes his father's place on the stage of the Theatre Francais. After an outburst of fury, he is forgiven and awarded the hand of his cousin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CERCLE THEATRICALS FRIDAY | 12/7/1908 | See Source »

...Hoyt 1G. Matthews, Harvard 1909, A. R. Clas Sp. Hastings, Harvard 1910, F. S. Ross '10 Green, new student, W. L. Phillips '08 Newman, new student, R. M. Robinson Sp. Young, new student, H. R. Stiles Sp. Rose Window, niece of Mrs. Hill, H. L. Olmsted '08 Geraldine, her cousin, G. R. Bunker '10 Lolla, W. D. Owen '11 Kicka, G. R. Bunker '10 Tum-tum, M. M. Mann 2G. Page, B. W. Pond 2G. Prologue. Rameses II, King of Egypt, P. W. Brown '08 Professor Scarabs, professor of Egyptology at Harvard, R. Wheelwright 2G. Isis, an Egyptian genie...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Architecture Dept. Play May 12 | 5/2/1908 | See Source »

...Cousin John," though somewhat flimsy, has a touch of originality. But by no means novel is the lengthy editorial on reforms in college athletics...

Author: By F. Moore., | Title: Review of the Current Advocate | 4/1/1907 | See Source »

...Sawyer;" the fun, however, is meagre and the piece too young by several years; it belongs rather in the columns, let us say, of the Cambridge Latin School Review. Although one may admit that a tractate against snobbishness and Anglomania is always timely, the bald rehearsal of Cousin Harry's solecisms in "Hands Across the Sea" reads too much like a catalogue...

Author: By C. R. Lanman., | Title: Advocate Reviewed by Prof. Lanman | 11/17/1906 | See Source »

...childish innocence. Later in the same act he has a meeting with a lady of the Court, who is in love with his impetuous genius, but not with the man himself. In the course of the play, Alison, her silent love for Marlowe conquered, but not forgotten, weds her cousin to the bitter disappointment of Richard Bame, another suitor. Marlowe, in the meanwhile, has been proven an "atheist" and "blasphemer" through the efforts of the lady of the Court, who, by this time, had tired of the playwright's admiration, and he is debarred from the Queen's players. Broken...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Plot of Radcliffe Play | 6/12/1905 | See Source »

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