Word: soulfully
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...choir sang Shelley's anthem "Hark, bark, my soul," and "The shadow of the evening hour," by Barre...
...Verein on Monday evening at Young's Hotel was a great success. The eighteen members present enjoyed an excellent meal served in Berlin scyle (except for the colored waiters), and were treated in the intervals between the courses and after desert by a rarefeast of reason and flow of soul. Under the eloquent presidency of Mr. Winkler, the following toasts were made and responded to: Conference Francaise and die Schlacht bei Sedan, Mr. Villard; Der Massigkeitsvereinler and seine Stellung zur deutschen Kultur, Mr. Hoffmanu; Die deutsche Gemuthlichkeit, das funfte Temperament, Mr. Bailey; Die deutsche Wurst, ein anatomisches Studium, Mr. Seligsberg...
...Appleton Chapel last evening by the Rev. T. C. Williams, of New York, who also delivered the address. His text was taken from the ninth chapter of the Epistle of St. Paul to the Romans. He said that there are two creations in man: the body and the soul. The first is destructible and the second attains joy eternal. We groan because we have two different natures, that there is no unity in us; but who would not wish to take part in his soul's redemption? People who have turned from bad to good are often haunted by their...
...music by the choir was of the highest order and was very well rendered. The programme was as follows: "Hark! Hark my Soul," by Shelley; "O for the Wings of a Dove," by Mendelssohn, the tenor solo being sung by Mr. J. D. Merrill, '89; and the baritone solo and chorus, "Look down, O Lord," from Mendelssohn's "Elijah," the solo by Mr. S. L. Swarts...
...Santayana in his poem "Two Voices" beautifully expresses the antithesis in the bitter language of the soul that has found nothing but defeat in this world and that looks beyond earth for some sign of hope, and in the resignation of that other soul that finds in every triumph and defeat the fulfilment of its own destiny. The thought is, perhaps, somewhat too deeply hidden by the words, but we do not begrudge the effort to unravel it. Mr. Bates's poem "The Sleeper," develops an original idea. The metre chimes well with the sentiment of the tale; the lines...