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Word: liking (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...cloud and wind their sympathy of form and movement, that sustains the faith of the crag in its forlorn endurance, and of the harebell in the slender security of its stem, may inspire or soothe, console or fortify, the man whose physical and mental fibre is so sensitive that, like the spectroscope, it can both feel and record these impalpable impulses and impressions, these impersonal vibrations of identity between the fragmentary life that is in himself and the larger life of a universe whereof he is a particle...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Criticism of Wordsworth. | 4/27/1894 | See Source »

Will you permit me through your columns to make an inquiry about the freshman nine? I should like to ask why they have no regular coach. Here they have been out of doors for a month and nobody has been out to give them any steady instruction. They have for a captain a man who has no practical experience in the game, who therefore is not qualified to coach the team. Take the combination of circumstances and the '97 nine is the weakest freshman team within the experience of any undergraduate. On Tuesday they just barely got a victory over...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/26/1894 | See Source »

...neither of them can we find the observation of nature and sympathy with it that Wordsworth has or the Pagan gift of union with it that Shelley has. Nor in them shall we find the mystic imagination of Coleridge. And neither of them sees things in the picture-like sense that Keats does. Almost all of these gifts are found however in a less degree in both these poets. Browning has far less of the picture-like sense than Tennyson. Whatever of these gifts these poets may lack, we find in each of them a real poetic breadth, which goes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Copeland's Lecture. | 4/24/1894 | See Source »

...choir sang "Hearken Unto Me," by Sullivan, and "Like as the Hart," by Hoyte...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 4/23/1894 | See Source »

Within a little over a month will come Memorial Day, and, if there is to be appropriate observance by the University, it is time that plans for this should be given thought. The members of the local Grand Army post would like, if it were quite agreeable to the students, to take part in any observance which shall be made, and it is safe to say that all students would welcome their cooperation. If the observance takes the form of a meeting in Sanders Theatre, we think that it would be better not to have it so long...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/23/1894 | See Source »

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