Word: poet
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Laurence Binyon, of the British Museum, well known as a poet, lecturer and writer on the fine arts, will give a lecture on "The Art of Asia" at the Fogg Art Museum, this evening at 8 o'clock. The lecture will be open to the public...
...announces the following election of officers for the current year: Watson McLeay Washburn '15, of New York, N. Y. first marshal; Cecil Hurxthal Smith '15, of Cambridge, second marshal; Cecil Hurxthal Smith '15, of Cambridge, secretary; Robert Cutler '16, of Brookline, orator; Kenneth Ballard Murdock '16, of Chestnut Hill, poet...
...monument is a bas-relief in Knoxville pink marble, representing six figures of characters taken from the poet's best known works, in front of which is set on a projecting pedestal a Bronze portrait bust of Longfellow. The most interesting part of the statue is the bas-relief in the marble slab, depicting the characters in Longfellow's poems, Miles Standish, Sandolphon, the Village Blacksmith, the Spanish Student, Evangeline, and Hiawatha. The tablet is in Renaissance style, and is exquisitely shaped and carved...
...bulk of the undergraduate contributions are evenly divided between essay, sketch, picture, story, and verse. Mr. B. P. Clark's "Fancies" is an excellent example of the new freedom in verse that is opening up much inner spirit, even though it sacrifices part of the poet's charm. "The Copper Duke," by Robert G. Dort, has not enough atmosphere or excitement about it to make a banal invention into an exhilarating plot. Mr. Skinner's "Courtesy of War," a sketch of a French village in war time, has more cultured ease in the telling than the subject can stand...
...POET...