Word: cowleys
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...contributors to the book are Norman Cabot, Grant Code, Malcolm Cowley, Jack Merton, Joel T. Rogers, R. Cameron Rogers, Royall Snow, and John Brooks Wheelright. All of them, in various degrees, justify their right to a place in the volume...
...poets represented in this issue are impressive numerically at least. Mr. Cowley's "Eighteenth Century Sonnet," intentionally unorthodox in form, is the most interesting and individual of the poems. I wonder why it is secreted at the very end of the number. Of the five sonnets, Mr. Hull's "To a Cat" and the sestet of Mr. Cabot's "Late Spring" stand out as something more than a succession of words arranged with varying skill in a predetermined pattern. Mr. Morrison's "Song" contains two or three significant lines and flows along sonorously. In "Lines," Mr. Behn has conveyed...
...Alfred L. Benjamin '20, John Harvard; David Berman '20, Price Greenlead Aid; Warren E. Blake '20, Toppan; Frederick M. Carey '20, John Harvard; Charles W. Carter, Jr., '20, Nathanial Ropes, Jr.; Burton L. Chadwick '20, Lincoln; Porter Ralph Chandler '21, John Harvard; Paul P. Coggins '21, Addison Brown; Malcolm Cowley Occ., Harvard Club of Western Penna.; Paul R. Doolin '21, Richard Augustine Gambrill; Nathan Lincoln Drake '20, Bigelow; Theodore Dunham, Jr., '21, John Harvard; William Eldrige '21, John Harvard; Jacob Fine '21, Price Greenleaf; Paul B. Flanders '20, John Appleton Haven; Stephen A. Freeman Occ., The Franklin Temple Ingraham Memorial...
...Dead Leaves," by Mr. Auslander, is a charmingly graceful bit of verse, while Mr. Cowley's clever "Nantasket" and Mr. Hillyer's "Interlude" are also praiseworthy. "The Brief Case," a page humorously setting forth many current doings, is a happy addition to the magazine. From the first editorial to the last book review interest but seldom lags, and with the increased incentive of prizes to be given for the best contributions, the Advocate seems started on a year that will be worthy of the proudest traditions of its past...
...excelent sonnet "End", by Joseph Auslander '17; a short piece, "Billy Sunday in Boston," by S. F. Damon '14, which shows at least that Mr. Damon is a clever son of Gertrude Stein by Donald Evans; and a couple of sonnets on "Bayonet Drill" by Damon and Malcolm Cowley '19, which are interesting souvenirs...