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Word: creators (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...would be impossible to accuse the creator of Portia, Lady Macbeth, and Rosalind of being hostile to "women's rights." Yet "The Taming of the Shrew" is a healthy antidote for the overdose of feminism we are getting today. It is somewhat startling to hear a magnificent woman of Miss Marlowe's mould declaim: "The husband is thy lord, thy life, thy keeper." It might be profitable for young men to acquaint themselves with the strategy of shrew taming as employed by the Elizabethans, and depicted by Mr. Sothern...

Author: By D. F. Mcc. ., | Title: "TAMING OF SHREW" CURE FOR TOO MUCH FEMINISM | 11/6/1919 | See Source »

...members of Phi Beta Kappa held in the Trophy Room of the Union Monday night, it was decided to revive the prewar practice of holding dinners at regular intervals. For the annual banquet which is to be held in May, the following officers were elected:--R. E. Eckstein '20, creator; G. W. Allport '19, poet; and F. M. Carey '20, Latin Odist...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Officers Elected for Annual Phi Beta Kappa Dinner in May | 3/19/1919 | See Source »

...sincerity, namely, which is born of a delight in mere making and shaping. This delight and this sincerity are of a lower order certainly, but they are prerequisite. Romeo chants his real love for Juliet in the noble language he has learned in sonnetting the shadowy Rosaline. Romeo's creator strikes out that noble language clear and true only after long years of experimentation in technical devices and sonorous nothings. Dante, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Tennyson,--nearly all, indeed, who have most completely mastered the literary art,--have had their periods of aureate preciousness beside which anything in the undergraduate poetry...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Advocate Contains Artifice Justified By Achievement | 3/6/1917 | See Source »

...Advocate's contents. Mr. Larrabee's narrative of conversion and the mysterious ways of Providence is slow in starting and foggy in psychology. We have no faith in the hero's change of heart, for he is ever a creature of impulse and moves when and where his creator would have him. "Borrowing a Smile," by Mr. Clark, save that it is more firmly constructed than the other story, has little to recommend it. The moral is hackneyed, and the subject is just such a one as would suit a Munsey "storiette." To say that it is banal and trifling...

Author: By H. N. Hillebrand, | Title: Review of Current Advocate | 11/21/1913 | See Source »

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