Word: youth
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...life as in motion said Dr. Peabody. One is the answer to the prayer for peace, the other is the answer to the prayer for power. One is the religion of repose, the other is the religion of action. One is the religion of age, the other of youth. According to one the great word of the New Testament is the saying "I am the truth"; according to the other the most persuasive message of Jesus is the word "I am the door...
...contents of the current number of the Monthly are as follows: "Team Responsibility," by W. T. Reid, Jr., '01; "Jose," by C. H. Brown '05; "The Crest of the Wave," by O. Bates '05; "The Cloud of Youth," by S. Hale '05; "In Canon Largo," by P. P. Crosbie '05; "Dedication," by H. Hagedorn, Jr., '07; "Undergraduate Fiction," by W. R. Nelles '05; "Gretha, Daughter of Haldric," by R. E. Bates '05; "Poetry Dead," by J. H. Wheelock '08; "The Art of Arnold Bocklin," by J. H. Lathrop '05; "Night Song," by C. C. Washburn '05; "Harp-Play...
Following is the program for the Pop Concert at Symphony Hall this evening: 1.March, "El Capitan," Sousa 2. Overture, "Si j'etais Roi," Adam 3. Waltz, "Grubenlichter," Zeller 4. Selection, "It Happened in Nordland," Herbert 5. Gavotte. Linke 6. "La Belle au Bois Dormant," Tschaikowski 7. Symphonic poem, "The Youth of Hercules," Saint-Saens 8. March, "Tannhauser." Wagner 9. Overture, "Galatea," Suppe 10. Waltz, "Beautiful Blue Danube," Strauss 11. Selection, "Yankee Consul," Robyn 12. March, "Vienna Dude," Wagner
...Loeb. The medal, designed by Mr. V. D. Brenner, measures two by two and one half inches. The obverse represents the Muse of Poetry, who, after paying tribute to the departed in whose name the medal is given, is again inspired by the rising sun which represents the coming youth. The reverse has the seal of Harvard encircled by the words "Lloyd McKim Garrison Medal" and a plate for the name of the recipient...
...Sandys, to exaggerate the ignorance of the Middle Ages, and to forget that the revival of learning in Italy was brought about by a long succession of causes. The link between mediaeval and modern literature is Petrarch. Descended from Florentine ancestry, he was born in 1304. He spent his youth in exile, and was educated at the University of Bologna. His first great achievement was the discovery of Cicero's "Pro Archia" in 1333. He spent a quiet life at Vaucluse and Arqua, where he died in 1374. Petrarch saturated his life with a careful study of the classics...