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...even greater heights. The next day the real Harvard Magazine came out. Can I face the more mature judgments of certain members of our English Department and confess to a decided feeling of disappointment on perusing the pages of the new periodical? With the exception of Miss Barbey's sketch, a charming "bit", creating the mood of a dead past much as Hergesheimer does in "Java Head", I failed to find anything in the publication to stir either the intellect or the emotions. There was considerable attempt at originality both in the stories and the poems, which left only...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications | 3/8/1919 | See Source »

...advised me to see Jack Barry more when he crossed paths with me. I shall, but meantime I am of necessity content with amateur concerts by the Poilus. Night before last a Lieutenant had a sketch produced as the "feature" of such a concert, and I went as his guest. There were semi-singing comedians. Why do all comedians in France paint their faces so broadly red and white? And their songs border on the decent sometimes, remarkable as it seems. One man sang bits from Nanon. He resembled a winter-garden chorus man about the face and timid sweet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "WE WILL NOT SEE AGAIN A RETREAT COMING OUR WAY" | 10/25/1918 | See Source »

...Lucky At Games, Unlucky At Love," by F. A. Thompson '21, is the charming story of an 11-year-old American boy in France, while "En Route," by I. J. Williams, Jr., '20, is a vivid sketch of the American camion drivers in France, beginning at 3.45 A. M. It is evidently a very real experience...

Author: By S. F. Damon ., | Title: Class Day Number of Advocate Good and Shows Intelligence | 6/8/1918 | See Source »

...prose, Mr. Hill's "Repatriation Service in France" lacks finish, but makes up for the lack by sincerity and substance: Mr. Eastman's "After the Dance" is a short fanciful sketch. "Death and the devil," it may be fairly said, have "done for the rest." J. D. writes with sardonic force on suicide; Mr. Williams depicts vituperative Frenchmen "bandying jovial indecencies" till the order comes: "All sections roll tomorrow at four. ***Trenchbombs." Mr. Sparks tells of an aviator killed in an accident and of the French girl who mourned him. As in many stories that deal with passion, the author...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Current Advocate Creditable; Better Than Some Predecessors | 4/13/1918 | See Source »

Cheerfulness is a virtue ordinarily so difficult of achievement in these days that the editor of the Graduates' Magazine must be congratulated on the optimistic tone of the March number. The note is struck in Mr. Wister's sketch of the late Evert Jansen Wendell, in which the great-hearted "perpetual undergraduate" is depicted wart and all. The secret of Wendell's personality was an abiding youthfulness or, to use Mr. Wister's phrase, an innocence that "never shrank from its full original stature." Like all youths he was swept ahead by enthusiasms, sometimes to the detriment of social conventions...

Author: By David T. Pottinger ., | Title: Cheerfulness Dominant Strain of Current Graduates' Magazine | 3/26/1918 | See Source »

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