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Word: archaically (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...surges could not harm. Condensation is sadly needed. Mr. Putnam would voice the emotions of a Nietzschean Superman trying to behave like an Elizabethan gallant, with disastrous results. His Sonnet (the form should not be divided like a Petrarcan sonnet, into octet and sestet) is a rash venture into archaic realms. Mr. Sanger's "Children's Land," faintly reminiscent of the song that thrilled the Brushwood Boy, is mildly pleasing though not distinguished. An occasional awkward line mars the smoothness of its metre. "Awakening," by Mr. Cram, wherein

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Current Advocate a Varied Number | 5/10/1915 | See Source »

Professor George H. Chase, of the Classical Department will speak on "Archaic Greek Art" in the Archaic Greek Art Room of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts tomorrow at 4 o'clock. All men in the University interested in this form of art are urged to attend. Mr. Clinton H. Collester, English instructor in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will also talk on Copley's painting of Mr. and Mrs. Izard in the gallery of early American paintings at 3.15 o'clock...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Chase on Greek Art | 10/24/1914 | See Source »

There are traditions and traditions, so called. Some of them are false. That archaic one that Freshmen should not smoke pipes in the street-at least we hope no Freshman, having resurrected it from stories of the past are foolish enough to consider it other than archaic--meant nothing. But that one which the united action of the present Junior class has boosted firmly on to the tradition shelf-Senior Dormitories-means more to the Harvard undergraduates than men who have not enjoyed its benefits can realize. Consequently the Juniors deserve the deepest praise for their action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BEST OF TRADITIONS. | 1/23/1914 | See Source »

...sufficient cause for self-assertion; it was, however, no affair of the undergraduate world. Yet a contingent of those half-baked boys must needs side with the strikers, making stump speeches about the rights of man, and joining generally in the hullabaloo. They were unfledged Radicals. In more archaic times they would very deservedly have been horsed and birched. 'Untruss, young...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD COMPARED WITH OXFORD | 9/19/1913 | See Source »

...apparently fully as varied, and as violent tastes, as the comic supplements assure us are the first characteristic of the modern college man. So England made a law which compelled students to cover their rainbow costumes with a dark robe. Oxford obeyed for a time, but forgot the archaic regulations in more lenient times; Cambridge has always kept them religiously until very recently. Within the last few months the required wearing of the gowns during certain times of the day--even to the restaurant or the theatre--has become irksome, and the student bodies are trying as hard to have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AESTHETIC AS WELL AS TRADITIONAL | 3/23/1912 | See Source »

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