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...months is plain stymied. "They give me the cold shoulder," is too often the story of the shipping clerk who is out of it because he lacks the ambition to become at least bi-lingual in the mad search for knowledge. The primitive day of the quoter of Shelley has passed, and John may be forgiven for not saying a word all evening only if he has said it in several tongues, and given it a psychological inference. All this is, of course, a plain challenge to the colleges, a challenge which too probably will be answered by the snorting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: S'IL VOUS PLAIT | 12/6/1927 | See Source »

Julius Caesar and Boss Tweed ... Cleopatra and Coolidge ... Shelley and Trader Horn ... the flood of biographies comes pouring in out of the publishers' presses. Chaliapin and Bismarck ... Napoleon and His Women Friends ... Robespierre and Uncle Joe Cannon ... with every anecdote that ever murmured about them in five point type. All the state secrets the private correspondence, the family albums, the unkind word and the billet doux that was lost before it could be committed to the flames...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE REST ARE IN PEACE | 11/19/1927 | See Source »

...Maurois, the author of "Ariel, on la Vie de Shelley" and the recent "Vie de Disraeli", was more inclined to talk about his impressions of Harvard than of himself and his writings. He spent some time strolling through the Yard, declaring himself fascinated by the old buildings and the air of quiet which pervaded the lawns and paths. He evinced a keen interest in the Fogg Museum, and also praised the Widener Library for the size and magnificence of its collection. It was the Business School, however, which most attracted M. Maurois' attention. Having been a wool manufacturer himself until...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Business School Monopolizes Attention of Andre Maurois, Author of "Ariel"--Admires Informality of Life at Harvard | 11/15/1927 | See Source »

REQUIEM-Humbert Wolfe-Dor-an ($1.50). In English drawing-rooms which once echoed with frantic praise of Shelley's Adonais or censure of Keats' Endymion people now prefer, if literature must be mentioned, to comment briefly on what Bernard Shaw said to the old lady from Nantucket. The one astounding exception to this rule is found in the poetry of Humbert Wolfe, a young Briton whose work has actually inserted itself into the lists of best sellers. Possessed of a dexterous though partly imitative technique, it has none of the raucous and hurtling sentiment which usually gives poetry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NON-FICTION: Requiem | 10/3/1927 | See Source »

Professors from other foreign universities will hold lectureships at the University this year. Professor Andre Moszul, of the University of Strasbourg, France, will lecture in the English Department in the second half-year. A course on Shelley and one on Romance in French versification will occupy his time, and it is expected that he will speak on aspects of the English language as seen by a foreigner...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MACLAGEN CHOSEN AS INCUMBENT OF CHAIR OF POETRY | 9/26/1927 | See Source »

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