Word: forgottenness
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...freshness and childish innocence. Later in the same act he has a meeting with a lady of the Court, who is in love with his impetuous genius, but not with the man himself. In the course of the play, Alison, her silent love for Marlowe conquered, but not forgotten, weds her cousin to the bitter disappointment of Richard Bame, another suitor. Marlowe, in the meanwhile, has been proven an "atheist" and "blasphemer" through the efforts of the lady of the Court, who, by this time, had tired of the playwright's admiration, and he is debarred from the Queen...
Gentlemen of Machiavelli's suite--R. Prince Niccolo di Bernardo Machiavelli, a Cheerful liar and a Florentiue noble, A. E. Hutchinson '06 Lucrezia, his daughter, W. M. Tilden '05 Pathos d'Artagan de Marsac de Trop, a cadet of Gascony, B. Joy '05 ?, his absent-minded servant, who has forgotten other things about as well as his name, G. H. Field '06 Laura, maid-of-honor to Lucrezia, C. S. Bird, Jr., '06 Alfred Dante Petrarch, poet extraordinary to Machiavelli, W. P. Sanger '05 Father Tediu, confident as to the future life, but by no means averse to the present...
...years of observation of Harvard athletics I have never seen a coach who did not make mistakes. Even W. T. Reid, Jr., for whom most of us are shouting so hard just now (at any rate I am), did many things which caused severe criticism, but they were all forgotten when the team which he was coaching won from Yale, I suppose that playing Filley at end caused more talk than any other one thing this fall. It was attributed to favoritism. I know Filley. He is not the sort of man who becomes the beneficiary of unfair methods...
...hold the complete Christian view yet believe Christ the greatest moral example. But behind all morality is love and God is love. Some religious thinkers have forgotten ethics. For them, religion is but a ceremony. Religion and ethics are inseparable...
...definite terms the attitude of Yale University towards the nuisance of continued cheering. The CRIMSON takes the same view of the subject. It is hard to realize how two publications like the CRIMSON and the Yale News, voicing as they to the sentiments of their respective undergraduate bodies, have forgotten to make any mention of the fact that cheering is not so much due to an effort on the part of the spectators alone to "rattle" the opposing side, as it is to the effort of a few men who hold temporary positions as cheer leaders. Anyone who has witnessed...