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Word: hell (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Hell-O-Go-Damns--L. W. Summer '05 (captain), A. F. Whalen '06, W. T. Garfield '06, J. F. Murray '06, L. A. Moore '06, F. J. Galvin '06, E. S. Howland '06, H. C. Durrell '05, E. W. Jones '06, O. Matsakata '06, J. A. McAleer 2L., I. T. Cutter '03. R. MaC. Gallagher '06, C. E. Chapman...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Entries for Leiter Cup Series. | 4/16/1903 | See Source »

...under the influence of idealized love Dante views the whole spiritual world. The "Divina Commedia" offers unquestionably the best opportunity for studying his ideas and purposes. What Dante sees in his vision of Hell is the natural reaction of conduct upon character: the suffering which he portrays has not been arbitrarily inflicted, but is the logical result of sin. His mind, despite his liberal tendencies, was of the seventeenth century type. The grim symbolism of his Hell is as stern and terrible as human realism can contemplate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dr. Gladden on Dante. | 2/5/1903 | See Source »

...Purgatory of the "Divine Comedy," though less known, exhibits not less on- sight into life than the more awe-inspiring picture of Hell. There is, however, no bitterness, no helplessness in the disciplinary suffering of Purgatory, and in Dante's description of penance, we find no suggestion of the personal friendship of Christ

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dr. Gladden on Dante. | 2/5/1903 | See Source »

...Marvelous words he uttered often went to deaf, unheeding ears, but once his "follow me" entered the heart of Simon Peter on the shore of Galilee, and the lowly fishermen became the saint on whom a mighty church has based its authority, a rock against which "the gates of hell shall not prevail:" and once again his words came to John, and he too left the fishers' boats to become the apostle of God. Unstinted prodigality of gift, met now and then by the prodigality of return--this was the story of the life of Christ...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Chapel Service Last Night. | 10/7/1901 | See Source »

...show her grace and charm, and to exercise her supremacy. Society life is the life in which he lives in thought, and it is the subject with which he prefers to deal. To him there is something fascinating in the luxe of modern civilization, which, if too often the hell of less fortunate mortals, can yet be considered the paradise of the rich. Hervieu has described with minute imagery the whole fabric of civilization as some great and gorgeous temple, and in this temple rules, he says, the idol of all time, woman...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Second French Lecture. | 2/23/1901 | See Source »

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