Word: epilog
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This expression of surprise last week was the more remarkable because in 1933 the Ochs memorandum was shown to Lord Lee, received his approval in writing, and contains this epilog by Mr. Ochs: "I have told Lord Lee on several occasions that I hoped some day to place a wreath of laurel on his brow for having been the originator and promoter of this epoch-making event." In Cuba, tough Lord Lee was a Rough Rider with the late great Theodore Roosevelt...
Like last week's other revivals (see cols. 2 & 3), Miss Adams' had its peculiarities. She herself performed not as Viola but in the minor part of Maria. The play was equipped with a prolog and epilog suggested by Miss Adams and written by old-time Dramacritic Walter Prichard Eaton, which attempted to give Twelfth Night the flavor of a play within a play. In the prolog, while the players bargained with an innkeeper and set up their props, supernumeraries, representing members of a 17th Century audience at a country theatre "try-out," gathered in the stage boxes...
...spread his arms wide and the orchestra sounded quietly, richly. Then Baritone Schorr, whose father was a cantor, started to intone the Mali Tovu ("How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob"). The chorus rose to one climax after another. Cymbals and tympani triumphed over melancholy woodwinds. In the epilog, Baritone Schorr abandoned Hebrew for English: "May the time not be distant, O God, when Thy Name shall be worshipped in all the Earth. . . ." It was Bloch's way of showing that in spirit his Service was universal, as much for Gentiles as for Jews. And as a full-blooded...
...spent a year in jail; Alexey left school and decided to become a writer. Meantime their father, with the best will in the world, was running through what was left of his estate. Alexey's reminiscent story ends with the beginning of his first serious love affair. As epilog he tells of the funeral in exile of one of Russia's Grand Dukes. Of the interval that cost him his country and irrevocably removed his youth, he says nothing. Author Bunin, like all good Russian authors, writes with a reverent simplicity which only a natural dignity can carry...
...Epilog. Thursday, Dec. 12, 1799, the weather being very bad, rain, hail and snow falling alternately, Washington rode out to his farm as usual, returned with coat and hair wet by snow, and sat down to dinner without changing his clothes. Next day he showed signs of a cold. His throat was hoarse. Washington, answering remonstrances: "I never take anything for a cold. Let it go as it came...