Word: revealed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...last act is worth a column in itself. This is what the artful dramatist has been building for all the time. Space forbids a discussion here; besides it is not quite fair to reveal it. It contains the best and the worst of the play. Besides one or two seemingly curious contradictions of character, there is a showy device of dramatic technique in the inquisition scene which seems in poor taste,-- a dissent from good dramaturgy to bad artifice, so it seems to me. You may not agree...
...have said that your object has been to produce a picture of our Commonwealth of Nations. No one can doubt that this has been fully attained. The exhibition may be said to reveal to us the whole empire in little, containing within its 220 acres of ground a vivid model of the architecture, art and industry of all the races which come under the British flag...
When Mr. John Talty of the Franklin Railroad Supply Company speaks in Pierce Hall tomorrow night, he will reveal the achievements of two University professors, who were largely instrumental in perfecting one of the most important developments in railroad engineering...
...deeply into certain alleged War graft cases. ¶ Roxie Stinson, divorced wife of the late Jesse M. Smith, continued her miscellaneous testimony. Her most sensational remarks dealt with a "deal" in which five men made $33,000,000 in a few days. She did not care to reveal their names and the Committee did not press her. Indeed, when counsel for Attorney General Daugherty attempted to secure the men's names, the Committee upheld her silence. Questioning her in regard to her reluctance to mention their names, Senator Ashurst said: "Madam, if I understand your attitude, it has been...
Perhaps they reveal even more than she intended. The book teems with tales of intrigue, art and heart-rivalry, even jealousy. Certainly the authoress has no mean opinion of her own accomplishments. "I insisted upon singing the Mad Scene," she writes, "in which I amazed the critics, and astonished some of my warmest admirers." And again: "I am a greater artist for what that Winter brought me. Probably my experience helped me to sound the note of passion in my various interpretations, made me more the dramatic singer...