Word: hayward
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President, Robert E. Ely; vice-president, F. W. Stiles; recording secretary, F. J. Wood; corresponding secretary, F. W. Grinnell; treasurer, N. Hayward; librarian, S. Goodel; steward, I. Davis; chairman educational committee, J. K. Whittemore; chairman house committee, Charles Sievwright; chairman membership committee, Charles Sievwright; chairman lecture committee, C. H. Crane; chairman entertainment committee, J. A. Stinson; executive committee, the officers, and Professor F. G. Peabody, C. E. Linton, J. F. Harrington, W. H. Nagle, G. O. Virtue...
...Hayward...
...Harvard Square transfer station at 2.15 Thursday afternoon to visit the American Bell Telephone Co., Boston: W. H. Herschel, F. S. Pratt, W. H. Cram, F. Mason, H. B. Montague, N. J. Brumbaugh, O. H. Basquin, J. Corbett, W. H. Kelsey, F. L. Gilman, C. Abbe, N. Hayward, A. Durward, S. W. R. Langdon...
...Copeland complained that outside of Jonson's ballad, "Drink to me only with thine Eyes," almost no works of the minor dramatists of the Elizabethan age are read nowadays. The plays of Jonson, Webster, Hayward and the rest, are many of them excellent reading, and a slight acquaintance with them will almost always bring with it the desire for greater familiarity. Not only are they thus interesting in themselves, but they form the best background for Shakespeare's works, and it is a shame that we are content to take him without...
There are many reasons which make Hayward easier to begin with than the other Elizabethan dramatists. He is strangely modern, and takes almost after the realist of today, telling tales of home life in a homespun way. There is no poetry in his plays, and in this respect he is like Massinger. The latter is very skillful in his dramatic effects. His play, "A new Way to Pay old Debts," is the nearest approach to Shakespeare we have, with the single exception of "She Stoops to Conquer." But wonderful as Massinger and the others may be in their separate ways...