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Word: naturedness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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BASEBALL is a game which can be made to call for a man's most serious attention, or it can be played with little regard for improvement, but merely for the personal enjoyment of each individual player. Freshman nines are notoriously slack in their work at the beginning of the...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/13/1893 | See Source »

Sainte-Beuve accomplished a great amount of work, many poems, a novel, literary portraits and essays. In his poems he sometimes lacks breadth and opinion, and often they have too much of a prose quality. As a historian he showed considerable power in his Porte Royale, an article on the...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Black's Lecture. | 5/5/1892 | See Source »

A. A. KINER,649 Main St.IF any Harvard student owns a tan and brindle pug bull-terrier of about 20 lbs. weight, and quite good-natured, he will do me a favor by communicating with me at once.

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Special Notice. | 1/27/1892 | See Source »

"The Apologist" is the most ambitious piece of prose in the number. Taking for his text some thoughts of Bourget, Mr. Hapgood indulges at some length in an analytical discussion of certain phases of realism of the century, of a certain literary unrest which produces heroes like that one of...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Monthly. | 1/14/1892 | See Source »

Professor Albert Bushnell Hart contributes an able paper on "The Speaker as Premier." It is a timely consideration of a question which has been much before the public of late. Mr. Lowell continues his articles on travel in Japan. Perhaps the most valuable contribution to the number is Francis Parkman...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Atlantic Monthly. | 2/26/1891 | See Source »

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