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Word: tenderness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Resolved, That we tender our heartfelt sympathy to his sorrowing family and friends...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE LATE P. A. BAUM, '84. | 10/12/1882 | See Source »

Resolved, That we tender our sympathy to the sorrowing family and friends of the departed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JUNIOR CLASS MEETING. | 10/7/1882 | See Source »

...else than garden-wall or opera-box love; there comes home to him those other feelings and impulses of youth, and so he does not write only of a theme to which college poets have so long devoted their talent and occasional genius, that, despite the universality of the tender sentiment, they have made it pall upon us and caused us to hear with pleasure the other notes that come home to our hearts from "the harp-strings by nature's palm so joyous struck," to use Mr. Hudgens' own words...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "EXETER, SCHOOL DAYS AND OTHER POEMS." | 6/20/1882 | See Source »

...social way) is to be traced to this small but important beginning of hers, and the supremacy that the college now holds in the matter of fashions is certainly due to it. If the revolutionary practice of wearing long hair had even once been admitted during its tender years, there is no telling what would have become of the college. The careful and nourishing development of centuries has brought to use the suave gentility of the festive "bangs;" had we started upon the other path, today we should undoubtedly be under the wild, weird sway of o'er barbarous aestheticism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD IN 1655. | 6/8/1882 | See Source »

...library, because the managers of that monthly see fit to continue to publish Col. Ingersoll's articles, and have, it is said, refused to grant to Mr. Jere Black space for more answers. The last number containing a paper from Col. Ingersoll, thought to be unfit for youths of tender minds to read, is kept securely locked up. "This course of action," says the last Orient, "in regard to the library, may commend itself to 'the powers that be,' but we venture to state that it certainly will never be endorsed by the greater part of the students in whose...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 6/3/1882 | See Source »

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