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Word: eye (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1870-1879
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Usage:

...only needs a bright blue eye...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IN VACATION. | 9/27/1877 | See Source »

...Sibley's resignation of the office of Librarian, in consequence of his failing eye-sight, the position, hardly expecting that it would be accepted, was offered Mr. Justin Winsor, who for nearly ten years has been the able and efficient Superintendent of the Boston Public Library. Of the subsequent proceedings between Mr. Winsor and the city authorities, wherein efforts were made to retain him, it is unnecessary here to speak, as the dailies have told the whole story time and time again. Whether Mr. Winsor was to be preferred to another great scholar and brilliant writer, for some time past...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CHANGE IN LIBRARIANS. | 9/27/1877 | See Source »

Again I caught her eye...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HONORS. | 7/3/1877 | See Source »

...employed in a work which requires tact, taste, and skill. By remembering just where a man sat in a group picture we have been able after much study to recognize a few lineaments of one or two of our most intimate friends. One man, with whose clear, bright eye we were all familiar, comes out under the "Celebrity Photographer's" manipulation Homeric in his blindness. Another, whose mild, good-natured countenance is almost proverbial, by some mysterious process is changed into a hardened roue just returned after ten years' dissipation on the Continent. Another's is very good, if considered...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 7/3/1877 | See Source »

...that august body; but when a respectable journal, making comments on Harvard and Yale, sets itself up as champion of such an inane course as refusing college aid to such students as "drink, smoke, dance, or play billiards," we are forced to believe that the writer either has an eye to the paper's country subscription-list rather than to the convictions of his own conscience, or else possesses a fund of facile gullibility and eremitical unworldliness which is totally inconsistent with the reputation and position of the New York papers. While we have no desire to enter into...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RESTRICTIONS ON SCHOLARSHIPS. | 4/6/1877 | See Source »

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