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Word: loved (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...which he acted with pleasing restraint. The most difficult part was that of Hartwig, in which E. F. Hanfstaengl '09 showed an ability seldom seen among amateurs. G. A. Schneider '07 as Schnake and C. Wesselhoeft '08 as Dr. Steinkirch added greatly to the comedy of the play. The love scene between the latter and Ludmilla is perhaps the most amusing incident of the play...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE VEREIN PLAY TONIGHT | 3/16/1906 | See Source »

...without any communion with the beauty of nature. But there is a brighter side to these eastern cults. The long struggle for monotheism is still continuing. In some Hindu sects today one supreme, all-righteous god is conceived, and their rule of life is to be guided by righteousness, love, and justice. Throughout the Orient there is almost a yearning for Christianity, and its essence is being assimilated. To illustrate this Dr. Hall read several Mohammedan and Brahmanic prayers which are almost the same as some used in the Episcopal Church...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fifth Noble Lecture Last Night | 3/13/1906 | See Source »

...duel. Rather than admit that he has been falsifying, he accepts. El Boticario, the second, challenges him to a duel with two pills, one poison and the other harmless. Narciso immediately drives him out of the room. The third, El Quidam, proposes that, as his wife is in love with Narciso, he may as well support her and he pretends that he has forgotten his own and his wife's names. At a signal from Ramon, Juana returns with the bouquet of hyacinths, and El Quidam then remembers his wife's name. Don Narciso immediately sees that the tables have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Spanish Play April 26 | 3/7/1906 | See Source »

Atlantic Monthly-"The Love of Wealth and the Public Service," by F. W. Tausig '79; "Low New York," by G. C. Lodge '95; "M. Mulvina," by H. J. Smith '04; "Shakespeare and the Plastic Stage," by J. Corbin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Magazine Articles by Harvard Men | 2/28/1906 | See Source »

...decidedly ill-mated and Pickwickian, and consequently are drawn into all sorts of entanglements and paradoxical complications, while the courtship of the fourth forms an agreeable and pleasing contrast by the good sense, independent thought and true feeling which make the friendship of this pair finally mature into love. The plot is simple and perspicuous and does not require a detailed analysis, but it is handled in a witty and clever manner, and there is not a dull line in the whole comedy. It is a play of unquestionable artistic merit and a striking refutation of the charge of heaviness...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GERMAN PLAY TODAY | 2/27/1906 | See Source »

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