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Word: echoeing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Till the echo that comes back...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WE'RE HARVARD MEN. | 11/23/1907 | See Source »

...Wheelock's "The Street" is notable amongst the poems in the number. Though one feels an echo of the Dowson kind of poetry, the echo is passed on with a new voice, a voice not so sickly and more ingenuous. In Mr. W. G. Tinckom-Fernandez' "Clerk o' Cardiff" there's a whiff of good story, an insistent refrain, and a manner of words and rhythms reminiscent of Kipling through Alfred Noyes. "Persicos Odi Puer", a happy immigrant translation from Horace by Mr R. J. Walsh, might perhaps have taken even more advantage of its "freedom...

Author: By W. Bynner., | Title: Mr. W. Bynner Reviews Advocate | 4/12/1907 | See Source »

...Herald either cannot or will not understand the case as it is. I don't see that it matters at all whether it does or not. But the opposition to the settlement within the University is another matter. The cry of undergraduates for harsher punishment for an undergraduate; the echo in the Bulletin of "the charge that in Harvard College the rich man is treated better than the poor"; are not a little depressing. "The government of a University," says ex-Dean Briggs, "cannot with safety be entrusted to students; they are harsher than their elders and less just...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BROOKS HOUSE CASE | 6/5/1905 | See Source »

Century -- "The Grand Canon of the Colorado," by John Muir h.'96; "The Echo Hunt," by D. Gray...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: November Magazine Articles. | 11/4/1902 | See Source »

...pleasantest reading in the number is found in a very brief essay "On Listening," by H. S. Pollard. It is avowedly "an echo from 'The Tatler'," and its quaint common sense and clear powerful style might pass for work of some first rank English linguist of Addison's or Jonson's time. "The Judgment of Ybarra," by L. M. Crosbie, is an unusually vivid and interest-compelling story of the west. In its theme it has a little echo of Kipling's, "The Man Who Would be King," and in treatment something of its vigor. "Timothy Knox, Peddler," a story...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Monthly. | 4/26/1902 | See Source »

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