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

...seems absolutely improbable. "The Story of Nellie and Jack," by E. A. Wye '01, is well told, though the curious dialect is rather trying on the reader. Dialect stories have to be very good indeed to make up for the difficulty of struggling through the sentences. "In at the Death," by J. P. Sanborn, Jr., '00, seems hardly plausible in the telling, and not especially enter taining. "Told from a Diary," by W. H. Mearns '02, begins well, but finishes leaving the reader decidedly in the air. The poetry consists of two pieces, "The Prison of St. Quentin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Advocate. | 3/13/1900 | See Source »

...life was a simple, quiet and meditative one. He re-edited and made known in France Beckford's Vatheck and Translated the poems of Poe. He was professor of English first at Avignon and then at Paris almost until his sudden death...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Stephane Mallarme. | 3/9/1900 | See Source »

Members of the Radcliffe Idler Club last night presented "Sunbonnets" to a very appreciative audience. The play, a farce comedy, by Miss Marian D. Campbell, death with the complications arising from two rival missionary societies of a village church. The characters were accurately drawn and the dialect was natural. The cast was well selected, Miss Campbell, as Mrs. Du Bois, a summer boarder, and Miss Katherine Searle, as Mrs. Butterfield, the hostess, being particularly good. The performance, however, suffered slightly from over acting, a fault common to amateur theatricals. Miss Mabel W. Daniels sang between the two acts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Idler Club Theatricals. | 3/3/1900 | See Source »

...clock in Sever 11 Mr. Copeland will read selections from the works of Defoe, fielding, Smollett and Sterne. Among the selections will be the description of Crusoe's first sight of the man Friday from "Robinson Crusoe," the account of Partridge at the play from "Tom Jones," the death of Lefevre from "Tristram Shandy" and Thackeray's criticism of Smollst in the "English Humorists" series...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Copeland's Reading Tonight | 2/27/1900 | See Source »

...Peer Gynt Suite" played by the orchestra was enthusiastically received. In "Morgenstimmung," where Grieg gives the scene of Peer's death, the joyousness of the daybreak is strangely contrasted with the sad minor strains of which death is the theme. In "Aase's Tod" is expressed the sinking to rest of a soul wearied with the sorrows of life. "Anitras Tanz" is an infectious little dance into which Grieg has introduced an Oriental element. The final movement, 'In der Halle des Berg Konig's," introduces the troll music, an exuberant staccato, illustrative of the grotesque, fantastic, splendor of the unearthly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Scandinavian Concert | 2/17/1900 | See Source »

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