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...Mare, a poet of the modern English school, will speak in the Trophy Room of the Union tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. Mr. de la Mare has come to America representing a group of English poets who are to accept the Howland Prize posthumously awarded to Rupert Brooke. His talk will be "Rupert Brooke and Magic in Poetry." He was a personal friend of the latter poet and is therefore singularly qualified to speak on this subject...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Walter de la Mare Speaks Tomorrow | 11/22/1916 | See Source »

...dead feel that they were sacrificed--Rupert Hughes, for example, who acted without a moment's hesitation? To us who look with reverence upon our living, and with love upon our dead soldiers, it might seem that the profoundest answer to all these questions has been given by another French soldier, himself no mean artist, who gave up his young life for his country last year. "If fate claims the best," he wrote to his mother, "it is not unjust. The less noble who survive will thereby be made better. . . .Nothing is lost. . . The true death would be to live...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Dead are not Sacrificed. | 10/10/1916 | See Source »

...Allinson's "Life" is a whimsical bit of verse; how much more crisply a similar idea has been treated, he can easily discover by reading Rupert Brooke's "Heaven." "When the Dead Awaken," by Mr. Willcox, is commonplace. Mr. Leffingwell attempts a feat of compression in a "A Song of Resurrection," and leaves his reader in a somewhat confused state of mind. Mr. Sanger collects his impressions of "Iron Ore Mines," and expresses his views about "America's Mission" in something that appears to be akin to free verse. Both his impressions and his views are worth while; but they...

Author: By W. C. Greene, | Title: Variety Marks Current Advocate | 6/15/1916 | See Source »

...Castle, Jr., '00, John J. Chapman '84, Richard Washburn Child '03, Charles T. Copeland '82, John Corbin '92, Charles T. Dazey '81, Charles M. Flandrau '95, M. Morton Fullerton '86, H. H. Furness, Jr., '88, Robert Grant '73, George W. Gray '12, Albert Bushnell Hart '80, Robert Herrick '90, Rupert S. Holland '00, George Lyman Kittredge '82, Edward Knoblanch '96, John Macy '99, Edward S. Martin '77, Arthur W. Page '05, Arthur Stanwood Pier '95, Harold E. Porter ("Holworthy Hall") '09, Waldron K. Post '90, Harold T. Pulsifer '11, Theodore Roosevelt '80, Arthur Ruhl '99, Guy Scull '98, Joseph Hamblen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE FIRST PUBLICATION TO PASS HALF-CENTURY MARK | 5/17/1916 | See Source »

...College would contain the names of most of the writers of the nineteenth century. When these are added to the catalogue of those which Mr. Winsor and Mr. Lane have for many years been accumulating for the College Library, recently very largely increased by the gift of Dr. Rupert Norton's collection, by those in the Harry Widener Library, and those of Mr. Robert Gould Shaw, the College will have available for use a very important body of material illustrating the personality of nearly all the men and women who have had a dominating influence upon the last hundred years...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIELDS BEQUEST GAVE FAMOUS OLD WORKS TO TREASURE ROOM | 1/21/1916 | See Source »

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