Word: loved
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Atlantic Monthly--"The Dawn of the American Drama," J. Corbin '92; "Love and the Machine," A. S. Pier...
...stories, "The Coward," by E. B. Sheldon '08, seems to the reviewer the most successful. The story of a reformed "sport" who becomes a clergyman, and ultimately, through fear of his inability to resist the attractions of the world, gives up everything, even love, to enter a religious order, is not by any means easy to handle, and the avoidance of sentimentality on the one hand and melodrama on the other deserves the highest praise. The dialogue, also, is handled with admirable directness and naturalness, and the characterization of the principal figures is excellent. Something of the same admirable restraint...
...chorus and the difficult stichomythia is unusually good. As a minor point it may be noted that the characterization of Paris as the "husband of Helen of Troy, mortally wounded by the arrow of Philoctetes" and of Oenone as "a demi-goddess--who can heal mortal wounds--and the love of Paris until he saw Helen" ought not to be necessary in a college community, but perhaps the author is right in taking no chances. The other poems call for no special comment H. Bagedorn's "Song among Ruins" is finished and pleasing, W. H. Wright's "Ballad of Primeval...
...best part of the number. It is hoped that with the first of these editorials, a clear, definite, unafraid statement of our position, the "Brown of Harvard" episode will be dropped in press and in conversation. The beautiful tribute to Professor James in the second gives expression to the love and respect held for him by all his former students. The paragraph in "public lectures given in the University" is interesting as snowing our quickness in detecting cheap sentiment, affectation, and our inability to divorce the man, as we see him superficially and are impressed, from the cause which...
...Brown University; D. W. Johnson assistant professor of Physiography; H. M. Kallen '03, assistant in Philosophy; R. G. Leavitt '89, instructor in Botany; G. L. Lincoln '96, Austin Teaching Fellow in Romance Languages; F. E. Floyd, professor of Botany at Carnegie Desert Botanical Laboratory; Tuscon, Arizona; J. L. Love '90, assistant professor of Mathematics; W. E. McElfresh '95, professor of Physics at Williams College; G. R. Mansfield '04, instructor in Geology; E. R. Markham, assistant in Shop-work; D. G. Mason '95 Musical Critic; A. H. Morse '01, instructor in Mechanical Engineering; H. W. Morse, instructor in Physics; M. Mower...