Word: heros
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...last of the concerts in Sanders Theatre this season by the Boston Symphony Orchestra will be given next Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. The following program will be rendered: Davison, Symphonic Poem. "Hero and Leander"; Mozart, Concerto for Violin in A major; Tschalkowsky, Symphony No. 6, "Pathetic." Mr. Carl Wendling will be the soloist. After the concert Professor Spalding will give a reception at his home in honor of Dr. Karl Muck...
BOSTON, SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERT. Soloist: Mr. Carl Wendling. Sanders Theatre, 8 P. M. Program: Davison, Symphonic Poem, "Hero and Leander"; Mozart, Concerto for Violin in A major; Tschaikowsky, Symphony No. 6, "Pathetic...
...last act the toyman presents in a puppet show a ridiculous parody on the story of Hero and Leander. The zealous Busy rushes in to pull down the puppets, but, consenting to a debate with them, he is utterly routed by their arguments. Justice Overdo then reveals his identity in order to stop the show, and reads off the list of misdoings he has discovered. All the "enormities" are turned upon him, and he finds he has been mistaken in every individual case. Conciliated, he seeks reconciliation with the falsely accused by a general invitation to go home with...
...white marble, and bears the following inscription: "Theodore Parker, 1810-1860. Graduate of this school in 1836. Preacher, reformer, scholar; master of wide learning applied to human uses by frank and unsparing speech; fearless follower of Jesus, bearing witness to the truth; lover of righteousness, hater of iniquity; a hero in fight, a saint in prayer; he proclaimed as human invitations the perfection of God, the authority of conscience, the assurance of immortality. 'Sin to rebuke, to break the captive's chains; to call thy brethren forth from want...
...editors to Freshmen. Then it rambles through Mr. Ford's "Varied Outlooks," which are so very varied that few readers will know what the author wishes them to see. It is better in Mr. Edward Sheldon's "Among Those Sailing." There are good things in the story; but the hero and heroine, probably unlike any lovers who ever lived that were worth their salt, stop in their mutual declaration of love to compare themselves with Mr. and Mrs. Browning. Mr. Rogers MacVeagh's "Anonymously Dedicated" is a better story,--the fiction in the present Advocate that the reader is most...