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Word: hymns (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...upon whole generations and that survived in the more grandiose visions of Strauss and Gustav Mahler. Nevertheless, the composition is well worth an occasional hearing, if only because it preserves in a curiously suspended state all of the conventions of romanticism. At the end, the chorus launches into a hymn to the returning sun, with its suggestion of resurrection. A musical resurrection was certainly on the way when the work was written, but even Composer Arnold Schoenberg did not know at the time what it was to be. After Gurrelieder, the road led on to the forbidding atonal shrieks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Farewell, Romanticism | 3/17/1961 | See Source »

Sold with Hymns. "I was a perfect child," Sir Thomas once remarked. "Never spoke, never cried!" Presumably, the perfect child owed his disposition to the consumption of Beecham's Pills, a laxative invented by his grandfather, a Lancashire horse doctor. Eventually the sale of Beecham's Pills rose to a million a day with the aid of a hymn book circulated free of charge and containing a famous quatrain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Cut Out the Cant | 3/17/1961 | See Source »

Last week the Marine Corps reeled under a humiliating attack that purpled faces from Quantico to Korea. Reason for all the commotion: an article in Cavalier, a corpuscular magazine with a large barracksroom circulation, that made the Marines' Hymn and many of the corps' proudest boasts sound like the Parade of the Wooden Soldiers. To compound the horror, the author was a certified leatherneck with 26 years' service in the corps, retired Brigadier General William B. McKean...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: How Semper Fi? | 2/24/1961 | See Source »

...marines did fight in the halls of Montezuma- and on the shores of Tripoli, but not as impressively as the Marines' Hymn implies. Eight marines helped 150 Greeks and Arabs capture the fortress city of Tripoli from the Barbary pirates in 1804. In the battle for the castle at Chapultepec in 1847, fewer than 200 of Winfield Scott's 7,200 troops were marines. The actual heroes of Chapultepec, moreover, were the Mexican boy cadets, Los Niños Heroes, who, with a small number of regular troops, forced the gringos to retreat three times in 24 hours...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: How Semper Fi? | 2/24/1961 | See Source »

...DESIRING, by Menno Gallie (192 pp.; Harper; $3.50) is a sort of border ballad about the frontier between England and Wales. Few Americans think of that line as much of a barrier, but to Griff Rowlands, a hymn-singing Welshman from a valley full of coal tips and chapels, it is booby-trapped with social snares and moral menace. At 24, he gets an appointment as assistant lecturer in mathematics at one of the new raw "red brick" universities in the English provinces. Starting writh this subject matter, Menna Gallie's brisk, garrulous and altogether charming novel serves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mixed Fiction | 2/24/1961 | See Source »

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