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...Anderson, H. Hapgood...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Provisional Commencement Parts. | 1/23/1892 | See Source »

...Apologist" is the most ambitious piece of prose in the number. Taking for his text some thoughts of Bourget, Mr. Hapgood indulges at some length in an analytical discussion of certain phases of realism of the century, of a certain literary unrest which produces heroes like that one of M. Bourget's who "rots in science, dimly feels his rottoness, defends it in syllogisms, and turns its foul breath on the purest flower in sight." For all this, Mr. Hapgood has a moral and comes to the conclusion that "our discontent with the conditions of our life...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Monthly. | 1/14/1892 | See Source »

Their names and the positions for which they will try are: for the out field, J. Allen '92, J. L. Heard '92; (and 2nd base), W. P. Hapgood '94; (and 3rd base), W. W. Caswell '95; (and 1st base), R. E. Paine '94; J. I. Wadsworth '95; (and 2nd base), B. F. Linfield '94, W. A. Quigley '94; (and short stop), J. Corbett '94, W. T. Smith '95, A. Harding '94, H. A. Frothingham '94; for first base, W. C. Rogers '95; for second base, A. C. Dearbon '93, C. Drefus '95, J. B. Lowell '94; for short stop...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Candidates for the Nine. | 1/12/1892 | See Source »

...Sawdust" is a sketch of much power. In it Mr. Hapgood has delineated two characters, - a woman whose passion and love for a certain man are not returned, and the man. The scene which he portrays is incontestably vivid...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Monthly. | 12/10/1891 | See Source »

Miss Isabel F. Hapgood has translated a large number of Tolsto's books and it is, perhaps, natural that, seeing "Count Tolstoy at Home," she should make this the title and subject of a paper in the November Atlantic, which is one of the features of the number. Miss Hapgood, although admiring his great gifts, is not a blind adherent of his changeable philosophies. Her sketch is therefore clever and trenchant and it must be read if one would understand Tolstoy better than perhaps he understands himself. It is a useful bit of information for the layman that the name...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Atlantic Monthly. | 10/30/1891 | See Source »

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