Word: reminders
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...course your article is not actually invidious. The surest way into the heart; of "travelers" is to remind them that some travelers ("present company always accepted!") are "rubbernecks". It gives us all such a feeling of superiority! surely an established and respected firm like Cook's need not be slaughtered to make a travelers' holiday...
...cover as suavely lurid as a tiger rug. It abandoned s practice of reproducing, under its title-head, a portrait, by some substantial master-folowed instead the example of The Dial, The Atlantic Monthly, The Yale Review by printing there its table of contents. There was little to remind the twitching ear-tabbed centenarian of the cover familiar to his halcyon days - the two roco pedestals that framed a page made acceptable for mid-centry boudoirs with a trinity of cherubs, two scattering flowers while the third his little round buttocks eclipsing the north pole of a small world wafted...
Little did the contents itself remind him of that old-time miscellany of reprints from the works of Englishmen. In the new magazine his rheumy eyes encountered first, an article by Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick entitled Religion and Life, Moral Autonomy or Downfall. It was a searching article, highly civilized, passionately logical, but little to the old man's ribald taste. He skipped it to peruse the first installment of Christopher MORLEY'S Thunder on the Left...
...Rising Tide of Culture-"They remind me," says the "doctor," "these modern huntresses of culture, of sportsmen who, in their anxiety, get so close to their quarry that they blow it to smithereens with both barrels." Culture is knowledgeable interest, not the emotional deflection that Americans, especially their women, seek. Prosperity has released so many naive intellects "that in no other period in history, and in no other race, has virtue been so curious about her sisters." But, culture being reflected in manners, these naive ones are of good report. "They are developing new resources in human intercourse." The Lady...
...critical immigrant who has written so noteworthy a book as Casuals of the Sea and such commendable books as Captain Macedoinc's Daughter, Aliens and Command, and who now purposes to become a U. S. citizen, anchored for further writing (a sequel to Race) at Westport, Conn., should remind his new countrymen of the texture of his thought. Grimly opposed to "sea stuff," particularly in the magazines of a landlubber nation, he is himself by no means all sailor. His concern is the large "ineluctable problem of human folly," his attitude that of a "benevolent marbleheart," his wit salt...