Word: loved
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Saint"; that he strives to render clearly the differing value of the two books, and does not quite succeed; but one also feels that he is on the right road and that with more experience of life and a larger knowledge of literature-for which he plainly has love-he will do good work in this line...
...poetry is good, on the whole, although P.A.Hutchinson's "The Secret of the Sphinx"remains mysterious even after the revelations-but that may be the reader's fault. There is a striving after expression in the two pieces, "Love and Death" and "Love by the Sea," by J.H.Wheelock, but the effort was worth the making, and the result is not unsatisfactory. The "De Senectute" of W.Tinekom-Fernandez is distinetly good, and the "Fair Harvard" of B.A.Gould, while unequal, has a lift and a swing that take the attention and keep it. J.T.Addison's "Solomon's Ship" is suggestive of color...
Scribner's--"Across the Cordilleras in Winter," by A. B. Ruhl '99; "The General Manager," by R. Herrick '90; "The Peace of Love," by H. Hagedorn...
...spheres for such emphasis on the affirmative are found in commercialism, literature, society, morals and religion. In order to use this principle, remember that love is the affirmative of affirmatives...
...learn something of a marvellous personality, of which the personality, of which the present College word known all too little; but also to realize just why it is fitting that the Senior class should take the first step to perpetuate in the minds of the coming generation a love for the best friend the Harvard undergraduates ever...