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

...names of Harvard graduates engaged in various musical activities; a short poem to Edwin Grasse, the blind violinist who gave a concert here not long ago; two songs by Mr. S. F. Damon '14. "To Blossoms" and "A Quoi Bon Entendre," the first preferable in mood and workmanship; and finally book-review, editorial, and foreign correspondence...

Author: By A. T. Davison jr., | Title: CURRENT "MUSICAL REVIEW" | 3/20/1913 | See Source »

...Hancock's sympathetic interpretation of the song by J. A. Carpenter '97 is a timely tribute to a talented Harvard composer whose songs are beginning to receive appreciation of their atmospheric qualities and skilful workmanship...

Author: By Edward B. Hill ., | Title: THE MUSICAL CLUB CONCERT | 1/16/1913 | See Source »

...first poem by an American to take the Newdigate Prize. If it suggests that the author is not inevitably a poet, but rather a man of literary taste and poetic feeling, it cannot be alone among Newdigate Prize poems in this respect. It is everywhere sound in workmanship, dignified in manner, high in thought...

Author: By L. B. R. briggs., | Title: Review of Current Monthly | 10/3/1912 | See Source »

...club formed an agreeable element in the program. Of these, first mention should be given Mr. Foster's "On Beaches and Dunes" for its harmonic individuality and charm of original sentiment. Mr. Sweet's "Warum sind die Rosen so blass" was a close, second as regards sentiment and workmanship. As a whole, the club is heartily to be congratulated upon the signal success of its concert...

Author: By E. B. Hill ., | Title: MUSICAL CLUB CONCERT | 12/19/1911 | See Source »

...obviously to protect the commercial side of the enterprise until the national theatre and the national drama are so firmly established in popular favor and comprehension as to pay their own way. Another duty is to provide machinery for keeping alive such plays of literary value and artistic workmanship as may not immediately catch the ear of the great public, but which yet have signs of future life and growth in them. Again, it is plainly the duty of a national theatre to give performances of the classical masterpieces of the language. Once more, it is the duty...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture on "The National Theatre" | 2/2/1911 | See Source »

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