Word: forgottenness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...party most responsible for the decadence of this ancient art is the dry and dusty Law. Individuals in this world have become so bourgeois, so presale, that they no longer consider dispatching their quarrels out of court. It must not be forgotten, however, that there still remains a class of individuals who jealously guard the code of honor the individual nations. And fortunately they guard it so jealously that they are not satisfied by a mere throat wound...
...when the enemies of Vassar take to interior decoration we must look to our shame. Furthermore such an insidious attack is scarcely fair to our friends at Cambridge. The shock to their morale when they see room after room defiantly denouncing their beloved Aims Mater will not quickly be forgotten. They will realize suddenly that we are no longer bound by the ordinary inhibitions and fears: it is simply that Yale doesn't care. The virility of the thing, the inherent mauliness will take them unawares. When the system is really established every sort of reform may be aided...
...sparrow" brought an end to lago's pestulant plots yesterday morning when Professor Kittredge and 200 students in English 2 abandoned Harvard 6, unable to compete with the strange rasping that reverberated through the ventilator. About 10.30 o'clock the periodic screach commenced. Ten minutes later the class had forgotten Desdemona and Professor Kittredge had given up an attempt to set his lecture to music...
...worth repeating--and the picture that she made should be held up to many women as a horrible example of several breaches of theatre etiquette. A prize-fight was scheduled to come in the first act but for some reason was left out until later. It could have been forgotten entirely with little loss...
...forgotten portrait of Edgar Allan Poe by Rembrandt Peale, American painter of Revolutionary days, was discovered by Americans in the collection of Lord Lee of Fareham, former First Lord of the British Admiralty, who gave his estate, Chequers Court, to England, as a residence for its Premiers. The picture was painted in Philadelphia in 1833 and is now on exhibition at the Scott & Fowles Galleries, New York...