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Word: moods (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...technique. The "Phantasy," by Mr. Willcox, though abounding in color and imagination, is breathless in its movement; it reminds one of the "patter" of comic opera. Mr. Rogers is dreadfully sophisticated. But perhaps "Retrospect" is not his last word on life. "A Thought" represents him in a less heartless mood. Mr. Parson expresses in a meditative sonnet his awareness of the power...

Author: By W. C. Greene ., | Title: Current Advocate Uniformly Good | 4/14/1916 | See Source »

There are just two moods which would make "The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife" and "Androcles and the Lion" impossible for the spectator: one is the mood of the "Follies" and the other is the mood possessed by what Cyril Harcourt has termed "Consumptive Puritans." Both plays are rare treats,--but only to those who do not carry the above-mentioned attitudes with them to the Wilbur Theatre. Some may claim that it doesn't take a sick Puritan to turn pale when Shaw's burlesque of early Christianity really gets under way. That would be true...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Theatre in Boston | 10/27/1915 | See Source »

...poem by Mr. Bates is the expression of a haunting mood of man and of nature, and is beautifully rendered...

Author: By W. L. Downks ., | Title: Reviewer Finds Monthly Pleasing | 10/14/1915 | See Source »

...Clark's fragment of "vers libre," "The Sea Nymph," we find a vagrant memory fixed in a present mood. The lines, except the second, are musical; Mr. Clark has secured his effect with rare economy of effort. The two sonnets by Mr. Norris, "An Old Story," and "Winter Sunrise," dealing with more clearly defined subjects, show more direct treatment. In form, they are slightly irregular, and suffer from a jerkiness due to the large proportion of end-stopped lines. But the description is good; and Mr. Norris is particularly felicitous in his closing lines...

Author: By W. C. G. ., | Title: Current Advocate is Entertaining | 3/26/1915 | See Source »

Following is the program for the pop concert in Symphony Hall this evening: Mr. Maquarre's Last Appearance. 1.March, "Salye Imperator." Fucik 2. Overture, "The Far Away Isles," Maquarre 3. Waltz, "Militaire," Ganne 4. Selection, "The Little Cafe," Caryll 5. Suite, "Peer Gynt," Grieg a. Morning Mood. b. Anitra's Dance. c. In the Hall of the Mountain King. 6. Meditation on a Theme by Bach, J. Bordier (Violin, Mr. Theodorowicz). (Harp, Mr. Holy). (Organ, Mr. Marshall). 7. Overture, "Raymond," A. Thomas 8. Selection, "Rigoletto," Verdi 9. Overture, "1812," Tschaikowsky 10. Clair de Lune, Maquarre (Violin, Mr. Theodorowicz). (Organ...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pop Concert Tonight | 6/13/1914 | See Source »

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