Word: lyric
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...through the number hastily--one starts at the cover, in which T. Sizer '16 shows the Christmas exodus in a well-received drawing with stained glass shadow motif. The prologue is a lyric, suggesting "ye oldene tyme," and is appropriately followed by E. E. Hagler's frontispiece, "Under the Mistletoe," done in the ante-bellum crinoline style. After a realistic diary of the musical club's western trip by H. Wentworth '17, one comes to the editorials...
...Modern Language Conference. The Lyric Tradition in Spain." Professor J. D. M. Ford '94. Common Room, Conant Hall...
Romanticism in Greek lyric poetry...
...Kipling of Mexico." Then "Scherzo," a smart trifle, before we reach Mr. Nathan's little essay, "Poetry for Today." An admirable piece of writing in its particular field, it digs deeply enough into the life and philosophy behind poetry to bring out something of the meaning of the lyric art of the world and a bit of a forecast of what that art may become. Certainly it is an admirable example of the sort of thing the Monthly should be able to do--relate life and art. If the Monthly can accomplish that to some extent this year, it will...
...first offered in 1886-87 by John Osborne Sargent, of New York, of the Class of 1830, and was endowed in his memory, in 1892, by his daughter, Georgiana W. Sargent. The prize is of one hundred dollars, and is offered for the best material translation of a lyric poem of Horace, to be selected each year by the Department of the Classics...