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Word: creationism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...situtation and a good judgment for details, Mr. Mitchell builds up a very well constructed play; but in conception and treatment of character he often fails so notably that his drama loses much of its ethical and aesthetic value. Becky, in particular, whom Thackeray made a perfectly animate literary creation, as far beyond analysis as a living woman, becomes in the play a bundle of catalogued qualities tied together with a cord...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Bowdoin Prize Essays. | 6/19/1901 | See Source »

...circulars aiming at the creation of a department library for the Department of Education have been drawn up and will be distributed in about a week. The establishment of a library in this department marks a distinct and important step in its advance, and is the beginning of a wider scheme which was prepared some time ago by Professor Hanus, but which cannot mature, probably for some years. One of these circulars outlines the growth of the Educational Department at Harvard and the other contains an appeal from the committee which was formed for the collection of funds. Their circular...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Library for Department of Education. | 6/14/1901 | See Source »

...comedian is in nature, and as such, has no limitation. Many great writers, including Victor Hugo and Lamartine, speak in praise of this art. The great aim and ambition of the art of the comedian, is to create. The person of the artist's creation laughs, weeps, hopes and sighs with us, because he lives with us, as a friend and compatriot. It is not the author alone who creates. The actor, by interpretation, creates also. He fits into the part and gives it individuality, making the part and the individual...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Art and the Comedian." | 4/26/1901 | See Source »

...musical programme for the Vesper Service this afternoon is as follows: "We March to Victory," Barnby; solo from Haydn's "Creation," Mr. E. M. Waterhouse; "Create in Me a New Heart...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Vespers. | 2/28/1901 | See Source »

Photographic work differs from the painter's in that the painter resorts to his own inner imaginative creation and moulds his production in every detail in accordance with it, while the camera worker can only what beauty he may find in nature. There is an element of selection in each case. The painter selects from the landscape only those elements that correspond to his imaginative ideal, while the photographer selects such a view as is in itself best arranged. The one selects all the details at will, the other such parts of nature as are best composed. Thus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture by Professor Norton. | 2/14/1901 | See Source »

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