Word: humanity
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...contributions to learning, and taken together they give, from different points of view, a very consistent account of a character that has deeply influenced recent generations of Harvard men. A sonnet, taken from "The Critic," comments appropriately, though in rather halting verse, on Mr. James's extraordinary receptivity and human sympathy...
Century--"A Man May Die," by P. H. Savage '93; "The Graves of Three Washingtons," by H. C. Potter h.'90; "Temperament," by H. Austin 1.'79; "The Human Side of Immigration," by J. G. Brooks...
...modern experience, all human instinct, goes to support the belief that the cure for other things than drunkenness lies in giving every man a chance of a decent and comfortable home, that at all events without that chance he will not be content and cannot be counted upon as a good citizen. What choice shall we make then? How shall we rate our fellow-citizens of tomorrow--in terms of money, or of men? If the former, perhaps you will make money. If the latter, without fail you will make men. Which...
...little of the fascination of the school of Rossetti. Both show imagination, the second especially has some excellent lines. "The Song of the Revolutionist" by A. Davis '07 has a good galloping rhythm, and "O I'll be there at the Merrymaking" by R. J. Walsh '07 has enough human tenderness to make us forget the time-worn theme...
...following books by Harvard men have been recently published: "Christ and the Human Race," by C. C. Hall h.'97; "The Garden and its Accessories," by L. Underwood '97; "Tiles from the Porcelain Tower," by E. Gilchrist h.'52; "The Lodging House Problem in Boston," by A. B. Wolfe '02; "Preludes," by J. D. Logan...