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Word: tellingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...good story, but the setting is badly chosen. It seems hardly likely that even a circus rider would pour out the secrets of her heart to an utter stranger with the freedom with which the lady of the pink tights and the white pony is made to tell her story; and the insistence upon the setting by references to the passing crowds of trippers and the sights and sounds of a seaside resort seems forced and mechanical. Mr. Schenck's "Psychical Research" is rather well told, but the conclusion is obxions almost from the start. "The Conciliator," by H. Edgell...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Criticism of Current Advocate | 1/28/1908 | See Source »

...members of the Intercollegiate Civic League to take an intelligent, disinterested and practical part in the everyday duties of the average citizen. At present it is impossible for intelligent men to take an intelligent part in the duties of citizenship, because city records are so kept that they either tell falsehoods or only a small part of the truth necessary to intelligent judgment. If the presidents of the colleges above mentioned were to be sent to Boston to serve as the small commission which President Eliot urges to reform municipal government in the United States, they could not possibly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CIVIC LEAGUE ARTICLE | 1/18/1908 | See Source »

...intelligence that others possess about us. You and I are, of course, good in spots because of what we know, but we are also good, oftentimes, because other people know exactly what we are doing. Intelligence is most useful to the governed when it is in their possession to tell them what governing officials are about...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CIVIC LEAGUE ARTICLE | 1/18/1908 | See Source »

Custom, aided by natural reluctance to speak plainly, has prevented managers from telling the truth at the beginning of a competition to men who are obviously not possibilities for election. It has been thought kinder to let them work, dropping them as early as occasion arose, or, if this were not possible, nominating them as dummies for election. We believe that within a few days after the opening of the competition a manager should, after careful consideration and personal interviews with each man, drop all whom he knows to be unfit for the position. In doubtful cases, he should tell...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MANAGERSHIP COMPETITIONS. | 1/6/1908 | See Source »

...time in a Christmas spirit and neither time at his best. "The Return after Death" is ambitious and in spots effective, but suffers from want of metrical skill and from occasional weakness of word. The "Song," though less faulty, is also less interesting. It is noteworthy that both poems tell of a love which shall be "not as before...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dean Briggs Reviews Xmas Advocate | 12/20/1907 | See Source »

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