Word: echoeing
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Wright characterized the 20 years since Brown as the "second Reconstruction," and said that current public debates over racial equality "echo the weariness of 100 years...
...memories of eleven thousand people in Harvard Stadium roaring their approval of the resolution, "This body repudiates the right of the Corporation to close down our University," then they'll have me. Tears will well up in my eyes, I'll reach for my checkbook, and "Fair Harvard" will echo in my mind
...BlotnerBlotnerBlotner Blotner. We could have guessed just from the sound of the name of the biographer that the approach would be neither magical nor mysterious. It's good, it's all there, but it's Blotner. Why not Carvel Collins, Cleanth Brooks, Malcolm Cowley? These names (and writings) ring, echo Quentin Compson, promise a more magical treatment--a story told worthy of the great story-teller. But Collins fought with the Faulkner family a while back--sin number one for a megabiographer--and his biography had to wait for Blotner's. Cleanth Brooks will eventually come out, I hope, with...
...Green Line trolleys were quiet yesterday on their runs past Kenmore, and Jersey street did not echo the calls of the peanut sellers hawking their goobers. No one was sitting atop the Windsor Canadian billboard either--mother nature and not the Boston Police had seen to that...
...biography, of sorts," it calls itself. The subtitle is not merely a corny echo of Eliot's own Notes Towards the Definition of Culture but "an acknowledgement, like his, that this will not be the last word on the subject." It's just as well. Along with every other student of Eliot, the author asks sadly unanswerable questions; no writer can even hope to solve the haunting mysteries of Eliot's life until all existing information has been studied. At the moment, the Emily Hale papers (the bulk of a life-long correspondence) are doomed to dusty confinement at Princeton...