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Word: hell (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...going to take a lot more spirit than was shown last fall, and a decided brace from the limp attitude of this spring, to out-fight the men who "are ready to go through hell-fire and brimstone for Yale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "ATROCIOUS INDIFFERENCE" NEXT FALL? | 6/16/1920 | See Source »

...take part in future wars, and their wives. I do not wish to take away from the glory of those brave men who fought in the war," he said; "it is only because the little acts of kidness which the performed for one another in the midst of that Hell,--when they showed their true mettle,--accentuates its horrors, that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SOLDIER-POET LAUDS BRAVERY OF CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS | 4/30/1920 | See Source »

...numerous protests against the abandonment of the Harvard Magazine its board of editors have decided to continue publication. The first issue of the second year, which will appear today, will-take the form of a "Back from Hell" number in logical sequence to the "Tombstone" issue...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Resurrected Harvard Magazine To Conduct Three Competitions | 3/26/1920 | See Source »

Rooms 1-10, 12, 14. "Hell's Belles."--W. V. M. Fawcett, W. H. Cary, Jr., B. D. Williams, W. A Duerr, A. Beebe, C. N. Macdonald, W. B. Leach, Jr., E. V. Otis, F. S. Church, C. J. Young, W. H. Kenyon, Jr., J. C. Burchard. Room 16, "Paracelsus"--T. C. Greene; rooms 17-28, "Sahara," A. French, G. Sutton, H. Perrin, J. R. Morss, P. E. Jackson, R. A. Morse, W. Fuller, C. F. Allen, Jr., H. A. Houghton, C. A. Page, J. Fiske, H. P. Taggard; rooms 29-32, "Kram-Kronies,"--G. W. Howe, C. H. Warner...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ALLOT ROOMS IN YARD TO MEMBERS OF 1921 | 3/22/1920 | See Source »

...poet Blake was the first Romanticist, printing his "Poetical Sketches" before Byron, Shelly, or Keats were born. In the "Argument" to his "Marriage of Heaven and Hell" (1790--the book which Swinburne called "about the greatest produced by the Eighteenth Century in the line of high poetry and spiritual speculation"--is the first Free Verse in English. At other times Blake attained a sort of "polyphonic prose...

Author: By S. F. Damon ., | Title: BLAKE'S ILLUMINATED BOOKS NOW ON EXHIBITION AT FOGG | 1/23/1920 | See Source »

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