Word: whose
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...president of the Cercle, revised the play, and has reduced it in length from five to three acts. The play has probably never been put on the stage before, although large passages have been borrowed from it by Moliere. The fact that it was written by Cyrano de Bergerac, whose name Rostand has made so famous, also adds to its interest...
...Whose arms are strong, whose hearts are true...
...Reverend Edward Chipman Gould '53, Dv. '57, died in Boston last Monday night. He was born in Brookline, Feb. 29, 1832. After studying for some time the Theological School at Andover, he entered Harvard College, a and graduated in 1853 in the same class with President Eliot, whose cousin he was. He then entered the Harvard Divinity school, graduating in 1857. Since then he has been pastor of a number of Unitarian churches, at Marietta, O., Baltimore, Md., Canton and Waltham, Mass., and later at Brunswick, Me., where he exercised a great influence over the students of Bowdoin College...
Shattuck Hartwell '44, whose death occurred on Wednesday at his home in Boston, was born at Littleton...
...pedant, Granger, has a lovely daughter, Manon, for whose hand there are three aspirants, Chateaufort, a blustering swashbuckler, Gareau and La Trenblaye. Granger himself and his son, Charlot, are both in love with La Trenblaye's sister, Genevote. In the many amusing situations which result from this complicated state of affairs, Corbineli, Granger's body servant, plays an important part. He is the conventional servant of comedy who is always interesting himself in his master's private affairs, and it is he who originates all the clever tricks with which the play abounds...