Word: snow
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...primitive, semi-poetic, material--idea of image--that, in the past, has had-to be worked up slowly and elaborately into conventional fiction form. Much of the "free verse" seen in the magazines is of this type--some of it quite successful and interesting, in its way, like Mr. Snow's poem, "The Girardian," in the Advocate--while a certain amount of the residual prose itself, like Mr. Low's sketches "Inspiration" and "The Forest," in the same number, tends to approximate the same type...
...verse, which has mostly emancipated itself from being libre, the authors are Messrs. S. F. Damon, J. R. Parson, M. Cowley, W. A. Norris, L. K. Garrison, R. H. Snow, A. Putnam, P. R. Doolin, R. S. Hillyer, and W. Willcox, Jr. None of it is bad and some of it is good. With two or three exceptions, it is all facilely academic...
...team were awarded their "W H T": Stanley Burnham '19, of Gloucester; Eugene Leon Coates Davidson '17, of Washington, D. C.; Harry Louis Ettlinger '18, of St. Louis, Mo.; Horace Goodwin Killam '18, of Cambridge; Roger Wilson Killam '19, of Cambridge; Orlando Lindesmith '17, of Owatonna, Minn.; William Brackett Snow, Jr., '18, of Stoneham; and Harold Raymond Caley '17, of Princeton, Minn., manager...
Company C: Cadet 1st Lieut., J. S. Hunt 2L; Cadet 2d Lieut., G. Towle '19; Cadet Sgts., C. E. Snow 3L, C. S. Tippetts 1L, W. F. Williams '19, L. V. Hughes Sp.; Cadet Corps., B. Lancaster '18, H. Sherman '18, H. Hamershlog, Jr., '20, R. B. Jenkins '19, W. Elliott '18, F. B. Bradley '19, B. J. Osborn...
...does not so clearly deserve this praise. "Crepuscule," by Mr. Hillyer, is a pretty conception prettily worked out. The verse runs well and the reminiscences of older English poetic diction (in a good sense) are not unpleasing. The other verse contributions in the number are of less interest. Mr. Snow's "Episode of Reincarnation" shows some skill in using devices which are almost foredoomed to failure in English metre. With reference to Mr. Auslander's "Maybe in Years to Come," one feels like asking whether the lines about "inarticulate years" and "lovely silences that yearn to music" seem...