Word: sanford
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...sentences, which is a strong point of French writers. Mr. Berenson's account of Jung-Stilling is told in an intensely interesting manner, and with great lucidity. The poems contributed to this number are, "Spring-Time in Italy" by Mr. F. S. Palmer, "Dum Favet Nox" by Mr. Sanford, and "Ghosts" by Mr. Houghton...
...Superior Court of the Pow Wow for the coming year will consist of Carpenter, '85, Codman, '86, Hansen, '85, Hight, '86, Merriam, '86, Nutter, '85, Sanford, 85, R. D. Smith...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: - It seems to me that in the criticism on the Harvard Monthly that appeared in yesterdays paper, more especially in the portion relating to Mr. Sanford's story, the reviewer has forgotten some of the first elements of criticism; namely, that a literary work should be regarded as a whole, and that it is unjust to criticise excerpts from a story without the slightest reference to the context, when by so doing he perverts the meaning and general effect of the passage in question. Now the critic takes exception to the hero's "quoting Homer...
...great merit, and cannot fail to thrill all who read it with its tale of a noble life bravely done. "Sorrow and Stillness," by Mr. Sanborn, distinctly lacks melody, and contains several unmusical halting lines. The feeling is strong and the expression good. "A Second Empedocles," by Mr. Sanford, is, to say the least, a strange effort. It is incongruous and decidedly lacks force. The Latin quotations mar the form and weaken the passion aimed at by the writer. One does not quote a Latin translation of Homer in the death agony; and for a Stoic to die with Horace...
Messrs. W. A. Leaby, '88, and H. S. Sanford, '88, have been elected editors of the Harvard Monthly...