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Word: hauntedness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Every day I walk by the huge, dumb, cement shell known as the Germanic Museum. For months it aroused in me no feeling but an ironic amusement, common, I fancy, to nearly everyone in Cambridge. But lately, since the last production by the 47 Workshop in Agassiz Theatre, when the...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 3/17/1920 | See Source »

This young lady is the most beautiful and popular of the ex-Czar's daughters, and has been haunted by camera-men and suitors with equal vigor. Many a noble in Europe has pined away because the Grand Duchess did not care for him, but all those romances are things...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MISS ROMANOFF | 11/27/1917 | See Source »

Perhaps the most popular of war books is "Over the Top." Last summer the R. O. T. C. found it cursory reading of a delightful kind. The author will speak in Symphony Hall this evening, so that members of the Corps who do not go will be haunted for days...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EMPEY. | 10/26/1917 | See Source »

The University does not remember a two weeks' Christmas vacation. It is a long time to be away from Cambridge just before mid-years; but it is a longer time to stay in Cambridge in the haunted solitudes of the deserted College. Yet the men who are doomed to that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FAREWELL CAMBRIDGE. | 12/20/1913 | See Source »

Of the poetry, Mr. J. S. Reed's sonnet on "Tschaikowsky" is marred by confused imagery; Mr. Wheelock's "From one Exiled Inland" conveys with pathos, yet not without a touch of exaggeration, the feeling of homesickness for the sea; and Mr. E. E. Hunt's ballital shows surprising success...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Monthly Reviewed by Prof. Neilson | 10/1/1907 | See Source »

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