Word: treatments
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...sureness of touch and a power over detail. The movement is swift and the plot is seemingly original. "A Journey's End," by C.F.C. Arensberg '01 is a conventional love story which contains some rather skilfully arranged dialogue. In "The Policeman," A. H. Gilbert '01, attempts a sympathetic treatment of low life, and, in seeking to accomplish this, he makes frequent use of cheaply sentimental phrases. "A Junior Partner," by C. R. Saunders '01, is a character study in which a mood is described rather than suggested. "The Revelation," by W. Stevens sC., is a remarkable bit of work...
...remaining articles the most striking and considerable is entitled "The English Drama, 1889-1899." The author, J. P. White '00, shows the wide and detailed acquaintance with the drama of the day necessary for the treatment of such a subject, and is clear and interesting...
...standing, on subjects to be selected by the writers themselves. The only limitation as to subject is that it shall be a contribution to "useful and polite literature" (this was the phrase used by Governor Bowdoin, who founded the prizes in 1790), and that it shall be appropriate for treatment in literary form. The subjects must be approved in advance, as conforming to these conditions, by the chairman of the standing committee of the Faculty on Bowdoin Prizes. The present chairman of that committee is Professor Taussig...
...chose in this a peculiarly objectionable means of attracting public attention. The young men who come here from Carlisle are among the best representatives of an unfortunate, but manly and dignified race; and they should receive from all spectators here, and especially from Harvard men, that courteous and respectful treatment which they are perfectly able to exact from the players who meet them hand to hand in the line-up. Of course no insult to the visitors was intended; but to make their customs an object of ridicule in so public a way, and in their very faces...
...first number of this year's Monthly not only is a capital one in itself, full of really valuable things, but also promises to be the first of a very successful series. It combines--as College magazines almost never do combine--suggestive treatment of contemporary questions with the furtherance of a distinct literary purpose...