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Word: deeps (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...have watched the increasing number of men which Exeter has been sending to New Haven claim that at Yale greater efforts are continually made to give Exeter men a hearty welcome. The Exeter Club is about the most flourishing of the school clubs there. The men take a deep interest in its welfare, and they show it by the enthusiasm displayed at their annual dinner. Every effort is made to show the students at Exeter that Yale is the place where the heartiest fellowship and welcome are awaiting them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Changed Tendencies toward Harvard and Yale. | 12/10/1890 | See Source »

...poet was next introduced, Benjamin A. Gould, Jr., '91. The poem was always happy and often brilliantly clever as it hit off the prowess and familiar characteristics of the men we have watched with such deep interest that we have grown to feel the reality of that often hypothetical thing, college brotherhood. From Lake to Cumnock, he went through the list and ended by declaring "There's no sweeter music than Twelve...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Foot Ball Dinner. | 12/9/1890 | See Source »

...philosophy is one of caprice among idealists. It has a basis in Kantism and makes a world of ideas, which is one of deep unreason. It is on the whole a rationalism with an ideal basis. It appears much as Hegel's, yet, whereas in Schopenhauer all is tragedy, in Hegel we have the traits of a logos which is above the world...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Royce's Lecture. | 11/20/1890 | See Source »

...simply a selfseeking, laborious, shrewd, quarrelsome man, faithful to his office and to his flatterers, and proud of his barbaric style. As a boy he was pedantic and thoroughly objective. Yet even in the diary which he kept when he was fifteen years old there appear warnings of the deep delight he was later to take in the paradoxical, and the professional mind-dissecting air which followed him through life...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Royce's Lecture. | 11/13/1890 | See Source »

Particular illustrations of the tendencies of the Romantic School are found in Friedrich Schlegel. He was a romantic genius, wayward, but not deep. Novalis' was a tender and noble nature, yet fickle and without a truly ideal object. Schelling was also way ward in method and worked back from Fichte and Spinoza. His chaotic idealism won the condemnation of Fichte himself. Schelling was largely influenced by the idol of the Romantic School, Carolina, whose correspondence with him is of great assistance in our study of the time...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Royce's Lecture. | 11/6/1890 | See Source »

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