Word: dykes
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Hastings, or some practical subjects in Architecture; the third later in January by Mr. F. Hopkinson Smith, on Illustrative Art, Out-door sketching, Processes in black and white, Cor position, the Picturesque, and Certain art fads; and the fourth in the middle of March by Professor John C. Van Dyke, on Renaissance painting in Italy...
...meeting being principally for western students although any men who go there will have a good chance to visit the World's Fair as Lake Geneva is only two hours ride from Chicago. Many prominent men have been secured to lecture among whom are Professor Drummond, Rev. Henry Van Dyke, of New York, formerly one of the Harvard Preachers; Professor M. W. Jacobus, of Hartford Theological Seminary Rev. H. P. Beach, of the School for Christian Workers; Professor George T. Purves, of Princeton: Rev. W. H. P. Faunce, of New York; Hon W. C. P. Breckinridge, Kentucky, who will speak...
...very common, the number contains two articles on travel, one by Henry Van Dyke entitled "From Venice to the Gross-Venediger," the other by Alfred J. Weston, called "From Spanish Light to Moorish Shadow." There are so many magazine articles of travel which are hardly more than mere guide book accounts, that it is a pleasure to come across such an appreciative writer as Dr. Van Dyke. He gives something more than a topographical description of the country passed over; and when he gives this, he puts it in a charmingly readable form. There is a distinct atmosphere...
...midwinter Century is an unusually interesting number. A point of special interest to us is the fact that two of the articles are written by two of our University Preachers, "The Voice of Tennyson" by Henry Van Dyke and the second chapter of the "Cosmopolis City Club" by Washington Gladden. "The Voice of Tennyson" is one of the best articles in the number. It is written "to record a memory" not to enter into any trivial gossip over Tennyson's life and works. Mr. Van Dyke describes the poet as he reads "Maud" and shows us how singularly beautiful...
...Henry Van Dyke...