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Word: fooled (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...mood but the consistency in spirit of an entire nation throughout the ages. Did she expect Spain to cast off her mourning and giggle? Did she seek for a soda fountain in Segovia? Did she want the devil on the church steeple? If she did I call her a fool, if she did not I place her in the ranks of those who fail to recognize, calling it theatrical, that most holy thing, austerity...

Author: By C. G. Paulding ., | Title: Austerity Characteristic of Zuloaga Pictures in Boston | 11/22/1916 | See Source »

...night." The University of Salerno in Roman days declared; "To sleep seven hours is enough for either a young man or an old one." In more modern times we have the famous dictum of Napoleon: four hours sleep for a man, five for a woman and six for a fool. Thomas Edison believes we shall have time enough to sleep when...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SLEEP | 11/14/1916 | See Source »

...attempt to reply to such a point of view will receive a blank stare and the answer that your inability to see in itself proves the national mental inferiority as exampled in you. That is a fairly unanswerable argument; the old one of saying a man is a fool because he is not wise enough to see he is a fool...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LOYALTY | 11/4/1916 | See Source »

...Observatory, an expert and renowned man of science, denounces the "daylight saving" trick with the clock as a foolish and useless fiction. His opinion will have great weight and will carry conviction to the many who have hitherto regarded the scheme as a more or less successful plan to fool Mother Nature and her children at the same time...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Scientists Opinion. | 9/28/1916 | See Source »

...Noyes believes that Hamlet, with his intellectual ecstacy, was merely an apotheosis of Shakspere's former creation. Touchstone the Fool. Mr. Noyes maintained that it is difficult to conceive how critics could support the madness of Hamlet in the face of the fact that Shakspere himself ridicules other characters in the play for holding this same belief. In their swift, subtle phrases, modified by infinite jest and exquisite fancy, Hamlet and Touchstone can be identified as one and the same creation; and their further loyalty to love, and love for worship, seal their close relationship...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ALFRED NOYES, ENGLISH POET, DENIES HAMLET'S MADNES | 5/24/1916 | See Source »

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