Word: joyful
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...woman for her cultivation of the arts, sincerely regrets that real enjoyment of music should be limited to females and that androgynous abomination, the so-called "aesthete". Mr. Whiting's lectures, however, at various colleges, give him authority to say that the American males are beginning to realize the joy of aesthetics as well as athletics...
...East Boston; Abe Robert Ginsburgh uC., of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; William Gresser '17, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Myron Guren '17, of Cleveland, O.; Albert Haertlein '17, of St. Louis, Mo.; William Joseph Hever '17, of New York; Allan Ludvig Gustav Jensen '17, of Portland, Me.; Thomas Parke Joy '17, of Dorchester; Aaron Loeb Kallen '17, of Roxbury; William Morris Konikon '17, of Malden; Theodore Lang '17, of Newark, N. J.; Robert Levenson '17, of Roxbury; Lawrence Meyer Levin '17, of Jamaica Plain; Adrian James McDonald '17, of Ogdensburg, N. Y.; Malcolm Perrine McNair uC., of Dansville, N. Y.; Clifton Ellsworth...
...best. Mr. Whistlerr's plea for strict nonprofessionalism in amateur athletics stands out as the most noteworthy contribution to the magazine. The exposition is admirably clear and just, the illustrations are well chosen, and there is a maturity in the style which is most grateful to the reader. "The Joy of being a Freshman," by Mr. Murdock, is in humorous vein, and enjoys a real merit among pieces of its kind in making fun moderately and in having a vital subject. The writer has discovered a truth is too late,--that of all four years at college there are only...
...Joy, T. P., 106 Milton St., Dorchester...
...this procedure becomes a "thread of lustre" and Nicolette "a drop of radiance." The mediaeval romancer in his description of this episode had instincts which were truer because simpler. Though Mr. Cummings' imagination makes Swinburne's seem sluggish, the glimpse of any imagination whatever is too rare a joy to permit of cavil. Let us trust that this one may for a time be set to tend a Greek temple--or even to learn how Keats...