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Word: flowers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

Breathed from the budding flower...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A SUMMER IDYL. | 1/13/1883 | See Source »

...reading matter is contributed by a number of well known favorites. Among others we notice the names of Wheelwright, J. C. Goodwin, Alden of the Times, and Arthur Penn. We cannot forbear clipping from the "Macaulay-flower Papers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIFE. | 1/9/1883 | See Source »

...that the nation was remembering its dead. Recitations, lectures, examinations went on as usual. This indeed could be pardoned, but when the students saw that grand Memorial Hall as free of decoration as on any other day of the year they concluded that corporations were indeed soulless. Not a flower was before a single-one of the many names engraved on the marble tablets which line the transept; not a flag floated in the breeze. Memorial Hall had another object besides that of a memorial; it was intended to educate the youth of Harvard College in patriotism. We cannot help...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SOMETHING WRONG AT HARVARD. | 6/1/1882 | See Source »

...renowned botanist, celebrated his seventieth birthday with his mental and physical powers in full vigor. The professor, in looking over an old herbarium, found a specimen of the fruit of a plant of which nothing was known. From this fruit he founded a genus, described and classified the unseen flower, and when, many years after, the plant was rediscovered in the mountains of North Carolina, the flower was found to answer his description in almost every particular. - [Scholastic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 3/25/1882 | See Source »

...Athens" burn and are utterly consumed with the fire of precious and supreme transcendentally, or in cold and unappreciative apathy turn their backs upon the king of aesthetes and abhorrer of the common place. Bostonians surely appreciate the beautiful, but will they place in their shrines the chaste sun-flower and immaculate lily, and before them kneel in aesthetic adoration and reverence? We cannot tell. Will the sons of Fair Harvard, imitators of the island-born Briton, also conform to the manners of him who yearns and is intense? Will they wander aimlessly through the yard with woe-begone expressions...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/21/1882 | See Source »

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