Word: thought
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Cambridge Republicans will have a rally and parade on Saturday evening. It is thought that 2,500 men will be in line. An invitation is extended to the Republicans in the University to take part in the procession, but on account of the meeting at Tremont Temple on Friday and the large Boston parade on Monday, the students will probably not have formal representation in line on Saturday...
Many of the Republicans of the University are highly indignant at the assumption made by some of the speakers at the meeting of the Tariff Reform Association on Friday evening. It is asserted that the meeting could in no way be spoken of as representing the thought and feeling of the University as a whole, and in order to show the strength of the Republican element in the University it is proposed that a Republican club be organized. A call for a meeting of Republicans, now being circulated among the Law School men, has already found seventy signatures...
...studies in not having some of these magazines. Of course a picture gallery would be better than the periodicals. But even a picture gallery would not make up for many things that are to be found only in the periodicals. Much of the best art criticism and thought of the day appears in them, and is not afterwards put into book form. In course of time these periodicals, filled with all these thoughts and criticisms, would become great receptacles of accumulated knowledge, and so would be most valuable works of reference...
...promise that under the new board of editors, the interests of the paper will not be neglected. The articles are well written and are worthy of publication. The number as a whole, however, is not as interesting to the general reader as some of its predecessors. The work and thought of the essayist is given prominence almost to the exclusion of the writers of fiction. We have little fault to find with the matter presented but we think that if something in a lighter vein had been introduced among the sober products of the essayist the magazine would have been...
...Monthly. The writer examines the various forms in which the sonnet has appeared, traces the historical significance of each form and points out in what respects the sonnet has failed hitherto to fulfil all the needs of the poets' art. Mr. Dodge shows such a delivery of thought and criticism that we are led to believe that his pen will do valuable work in the near future...