Word: ever
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...with some posthumous verse contains much that will be read with pleasure and more that is of indifferent merit. A sympathetic yet admirably frank introduction by Daniel G. Mason '95 gives an attractive picture of Mr. Savage as a man, and puts the reader in an appreciative mood. An ever-present love of nature is evident in nearly all of the poems. Especially do the shorter verses catch and hold this quality, happily phrased and musical as they often are. At times, however, there is too much of the observer and not enough of the poet in evidence, since...
...eligible this year. Among the new men there is some very good material which has developed unusually well. An open tournament for novices alone will be given later in the year under the direction of the Boston Athletic Association. There has been more interest in fencing this year than ever before and with the good material a strong team will undoubtedly enter the intercollegiate match in the spring...
...meeting of the American Society of Naturalists and affiliated societies, held in Baltimore on December 27. The colored stereopticon slides which will be used to illustrate the lecture are loaned by Mr. A. C. Vroman of Pasadena California and are made from probably the finest collection of photographs ever taken in the region of the South-west...
Macmillan & Company are soon to publish a new book by Mr. Benjamin Rand entitled a "Bibliography of Philosophy." It will be the first bibliography of Philosophy ever written and promises to be of great assistance to students in the subject. It will be published as a separate volume and also as the third of a series of three volumes, called a "Dictionary of Philosophy," prepared by a large corps of writers under the direction of Professor J. M. Baldwin of Princeton...
Whether men agreed with him or not in his social or political estimates, no man ever suggested that Roger Wolcott fell below his own lofty ideas--and they were the ideals of a man of honor and Christian faith. Conscious that much had been given to him, more than is generally bestowed upon man, he was determined to render a good account of his talents...