Word: angeling
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Gifford (E); Sect. 31, E. L. Wheaton and H. F. Cameron (A), P. R. Danner and E. T. Wentworth (B), M. Cohen (C), R. S. Keebler (D), P. J. Stearns (E); Sect. 32, H. C. O'Brien and C. L. Rice (A), R. Stiles and E. Angel (B), W. G. Foye (C), B. F. Jones (D), H. F. Browne (E); Sect. 33, H. V. Bail and F. H. Beall (A), W. B. Martin and H. T. Gibson (B), J. C. Davis (C), E. J. Bryan (D), W. B. Richards (E); Sect. 34, J. L. Barrowsky and F. W. Candee...
...enters. He admits he is a fool but he tells not his beliefs about some things lest they be stolen from him. The "Fool" leaves and the philosopher continues his speculations. He is about to call his students when he sees standing in the aperture to his study an angel, and anatomical anger, of course, one really anatomically possible since it had no wings. This creature points significantly to the hour glass and warns the teacher, at the moment he would ring for his students, that he has but one hour to live; that his ultimate salvation, after penance...
...thoroughly convincing. "The Hour Glass" is, in feeling, setting, and lesson a morality of a half dozen centuries ago. Mr. Sinclair, the "Wise Man," overcame his slight accent; there was no disharmonizing detail in setting or in technique, and assuredly no actress could play the part of an angel more impressively and more movingly than did that remarkable actress, Miss Allgood; yet wihtal, though for the moment the play was suggestive, appealing and forceful, back of any appreciation of it was the indomitable doubt as to the place of an angel,--a messenger from the clouds,--upon the stage. What...
...English settlement in Maine. Mr. Schenck contributes a story, Fate and the Traitress, novel in situation. The reader is quite taken by surprise twice during the tale. A very good novel might well be made from this short story. Some rather blind verses on The Blind Angel, and reviews of recent books close the number...
...read "The Last Leaf" and "The Chambered nautilus," two of Mr. Holmes's most famous poems. The Harvard Glee Club and the Cambridge Latin School Orchestra will furnish the music. The Glee club will sing "Union and Liberty," music by Francis Boott '31, and words by Dr. Holmes, and "Angel of Peace," with words written by Dr. Homes for the National Peace Festival...