Word: emotionalized
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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IN the tale of homely people whose lives touch and intertwine through their proximity to each other in that curiously respectable phenomenon of urbanity, a London lodging house, Miss Phillpotts evinces a mature power without wholly sustaining the reader's credulity. One cannot help wondering at the sudden transformation of...
"If one should feel inclined to doubt this statement," said Dr. Kellermann, "he need only note how deeply the works of the great German philosopher, Kant, is anchored in Mathematics, and how Goethe's works so pulse with the emotion of Biology.
"What did you call that ball?" she asked the ponderous Tolley. Her voice shook, her face was furious. For the first time in her life she was showing emotion on a tennis court.
Perhaps he took too much. Anyway, something allowed him the visionary eyes of a Merlin for he was able to look about the conference and picture the same group ten years from now. The Browning Club of Cherokee Falls will be addressed this afternoon by Mr. Blank, the young American...
"There was an historic day in this body on March 19, 1920, when a raging press representing international bankers, some representing internationalists, others representing perhaps an emotion and a sentiment, thundered at the doors of the Senate and demanded the ratification of the Treaty of Versailles and the adoption of...