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Word: friend (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...friendship for two persons-one a young man of great personal beauty, and the other a woman who fascinated him although neither beautiful nor intelligent. The main theme of the sonnets is the way in which the ravages of time may be checked. The poet promises eternity to his friend and attempts to preserve him from the accidents of time. In the first sonnets, Shakspere thinks only of the beauty of his friend, and, seeing that the individual must die, looks to the race for immortality and urges him to marry that his beauty may survive in his children. This...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Palmer's Lecture. | 3/21/1888 | See Source »

...degradation, he realized that, to attain a true immortality, life must be identified with conditions superior to mortality. Of the various kinds of immortality mentioned by the poet only the one which he thought most doubtful, namely his own reputation, still endures. We have no evidence that his friend had a son, and the sonnets have not preserved for us his name or even his appearance. The words "Time will come and take my love away" have indeed proved truly prophetic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Palmer's Lecture. | 3/21/1888 | See Source »

Henry Bergh, the well-known friend of dumb animals, has recently died in New York...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 3/16/1888 | See Source »

...large attendance. Colonel Higginson made a few introductory remarks, in the course of which he said: "It was the custom in Ben Jonson's days, upon the death of a writer, for his brethren of the profession to throw their pens into the grave. And to-night we, the friends of him, the anniversary of whose birthday we commemorate, lay down a few selections of our literary labors to his memory." At the conclusion of his speech, Colonel Higginson read a short poem called "Dame Cragie." The Rev. Augustus M. Lord, a poet of considerable repute, then gave Longfellow...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Authors' Reading. | 2/28/1888 | See Source »

Professor F. G. Peabody conducted the customary services at Appleton Chapel last evening. He took as his text the familiar passage, "Wake to yourselves, friends of the mammon of unrighteousness." The sermon was scholarly, impressive and full of interest. Professor Peabody said by the mammon of unrighteousness was meant the temporal business affairs of every-day life. We must regard them as an enemy, or a master, or a friend. Treating these matters as inimical, we violate the divine injunction to be faithful in the best of things. By allowing them to lead and control us we no longer serve...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 2/20/1888 | See Source »

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