Word: odes
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After Professor Norton had read parts of the Commemoration Ode, the services were closed by the Glee Club's singing a few verses of the hymn often sung at the funerals of fallen soldiers, "Integer Vitae...
...already been announced, a brief service will be held in Sanders Theatre tomorrow at 12 o'clock, noon, in memory of Harvard men who fell in the War. The only exercises will be the reading of portions of Mr. Lowell's Commemoration Ode by Mr. Charles Eliot Norton, with a few appropriate remarks, and singing by the Glee Club. The exercises will take very little if any over half an hour. Coming at just this hour when nothing else is going on to interfere, there seems to be no reason why a large number of the students should...
Professor Charles Eliot Norton will make a few remarks and will read passages from Mr. Lowell's Commemoration Ode. The Glee Club will sing. Members of the G. A. R. have been invited to attend...
Arrangements for the Memorial Day services in Sanders Theatre have been nearly completed. Professor Norton will read selections from the Commemoration Ode, and speak a few words fitted for the occasion. There will be singing by the Glee Club. The service will be very short. The local post of the Grand Army has been invited to attend in a body. The public also will be welcomed...
From the first it is the feeling of law which governs Tennyson. Even in "In Memoriam," an ode to a dead friend, who was far dearer to him than any one else in the world, we find a gradual swaying back to the spirit of law, until the personal disappears completely. The tendency of Tennyson is to glorify restraint rather than indulgence. He shows his great hero, the Iron Duke of Wellington who represents legal and just power, making head against lawlessness in the person of Napoleon. For this reason perhaps Tennyson has given us less of music...