Word: puritanize
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...Harvard Chapter of Delta Sigma Rho, a national society of college debaters, will hold its first annual banquet this evening at the Hotel Puritan, Boston. Judge A. P. Stone '93, Professor E. H. Warren '95, of the Harvard Law School, and R. W. Kelso '04, instructor in the Department of English, will speak informally after the dinner...
...complete success, especially in the middle acts. Savery '11, as the Scarecrow, was uneven, but did so well in spots that one may expect a much higher degree of effectiveness in later performances. E. a. C. Layman's face was not meant by nature for that of a Puritan justice; and, in spite of occasional good passages, his mirthful geniality of expression persisted in belying the character he had assumed. Miss Gragg rendered the varying and not entirely convincing moods of the heroine with a charm which was, perhaps, a trifle modern; and Mr. Papazian's capable presentation...
President Eliot will deliver an address on "The Puritan Church and the Puritan College," at a public meeting which will be held in the Old South Church, Boston, this evening at 8 o'clock. The meeting is in honor of Dr. G. A. Gordon '81, who has completed twenty-five years' service as pastor of that church: Dr. Gordon became minister at the Old South Church only three years after his graduation from Harvard. He is at present an Overseer of the University and a University preacher...
...approval of the editorial plea for the study of poetry as literature; such study, the article properly adds, will not be open to the charge of dilettantism if it rests on a basis of sound philological and historical scholarship. The Advocate hopes to see justice done Poe when the Puritan shall have passed--but why shall not justice be done him now? In fact there is a suggestion of Poe in "The Cat and the Mouse"--an effective story, with some thing of Poe's grim despair and situations full of horror; the tone is different from...
There is very little plot, and the action centres around the four principal characters: Littlewit, a proctor; Busy, a Puritan; Cokes, an esquire of Harrow; and Overdo, a justice of the peace. The scene is laid at Bartholemew Fair, where the characters have gone for recreation. Cokes is buying toys and ballads, when Edgworth slips up and picks his pocket. Justice Overdo, who is present in disguise, is accused and placed in the stocks. Then the Puritan Busy enters, and, filled with fanatical zeal, tries to destroy the gaily-colored booths. He is also put in the stocks, where...