Word: loved
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Whittemore '96, was very well rendered. "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," as usual, proved a good tonic and the glee club received an enthusiastic encore. G. D. Whitehead's solos were especially commendable and received their due appreciation. The "Darkey's Jubilee" by the Banjo Club, and "Love's Dream after the Ball," by the Mandolin Club were the most effective pieces rendered by the respective clubs. Dancing followed the musical programme...
...life and poems of Wordsworth are, as it were, bracketed. To know the poet it is necessary to see the man. His boyhood was passed in close contact with nature, he came to have an intimate acquaintance with all the lake country, and to love it with the healthy love of a country boy without moody self-consciousness or sentimental effusiveness. It was the all important period of his life when his philosophy of life and poetry was determined...
...Love's Dream after the Ball, Czibulka...
...number of Outing is much more interesting to the general reader than usuall. The first article is "How the Major Learned to Fish." It is an interesting and commonplace love story with a little advice as to the best methods of fishing for pike and bass worked in. The heroine is a little stilted but she knows so much about fishing that we can forgive her. "A Jack-Rabbit Chase" by Belle Hunt, is brisk and amusing. The leading article of the number is "Queens of the Trotting Track." It is chiefly statistics and is rather dull reading...
...number of the Monthly appearing today is largely given up to fiction. Though the stories are above average undergraduate offer's they are not up to the Monthly's standard and are rather disappointing. There are three, "A Ray of Light," "Javente," and "The Mellow Drama of Love." All start well and succeed in holding the reader's attention, but the endings of the first and last are very weak while the ending of "Javente" is worse than weak. It is unnecessary, not justified by the rest of the sorry, and the conception is certainly no credit to the author...