Word: soule
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...over the nation, many of them splendid women. . . . The prisoners give only the street address of the prison in Ossining and often elaborate on the views from the windows and the beauty of the Hudson River. . . . The unsuspecting feminine reader enjoys the letter and is soon writing out her soul to a convict lover, thus building up a tremendous problem against the day of the prisoner's release into society...
...intellectuals who not only tried to prevent the late Great War but refused to succumb to it. The result: exile in Switzerland, where he still lives (aetat 65). When he digs into a subject he digs deep. His ten-volume Jean-Christophe won him the Nobel Prize (1915). The Soul Enchanted, a study in feminism, ran to three volumes. Since then he has been working the Beethoven vein, has published one (U. S.-translated) book on Beethoven the Creator (TIME, Sept. 16, 1929). Rolland's scholarship is a mine from which he does not care to emerge. Says...
Radio is a wonderful medium for drama. The color and quality of the soul shows in the voice. Your "little brown man" speaks in correct, slow, oddly-accented English. I visualize an unassuming dreamer; a man possessed of an incorruptible logic and a driving will of iron...
...bitterness and hatred of those insane days have largely abated Witness Count Von Luckner's reception here in Worcester the other evening, a friendly reception not unmixed with admiration. Ten or eleven years ago we wouldn't give much for the count's chances of preserving his tranquillity of soul on the Mechanics Hall platform...
Then, and only then, the apostle of "soul force" spoke. Gently but firmly he exhorted his audience to keep the truce he had made with Lord Irwin. Diversion: mouselike Mrs. Gandhi brought as her guests to the speakers' platform some tourists from the S. S. Belgenland including Mrs. Hattie Belle Johnston (see above...