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Word: irelander (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Career" comes to its end. We congratulate the editors for getting through with it, and we sincerely hope for their good as well as our own that they will not undertake to publish anything more in the same style. The number opens with an article on steeple chasing in Ireland. It is good reading and the illustrations are decidedly above the Outing standard, One of the best articles of the number is "Track Athletics at Yale" by S. Scoville, Yale '93. It covers all the principle events in athletics at Yale from 1869 up to date, with a number...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The March Outing. | 2/28/1893 | See Source »

When the town fell, he withdrew to his deanship at Ireland, embraced the Irish cause, and hurled her rage and wrongs against England. It was at this time that his "Gulliver's Travels" appeared. - beautiful, vivacious, intense in realization and grotesque in combination. Yet, though his best-known work, it is not his most meritorious nor his worst representative...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dean Swift. | 2/20/1893 | See Source »

...went to Cambridge University, where he spent seven years. After that he lived in nothern England, where he fell in love with one Rosalind. His suit was not fortunate, so he returned to London and there became very intimate with Sir Philip Sidney. Chance carried him to Ireland and here he was forced to pass most of his time, away from the London that he loved. Queen Elizabeth granted him a large estate near Cock, but he was never popular there and was eventually driven out. His castle was burned and one his children (for he had married an Irish...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Black's Lecture. | 1/17/1893 | See Source »

...most serious difficulty in the way of our reading, or speaking really well, is the fact that we are Anglo-Saxons, or rather, perhaps, Americans. In England there is a standard to which almost every one subscribes. In Scotland and Ireland this is less so, while in America there is almost an entire absence of such a standard, while France, through her Academies, is ahead of all other nations in this particular. If we are so behind, what better place is there to perfect our language and to set a standard than here at our University, where so many opportunities...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Copeland's Lecture. | 11/22/1892 | See Source »

...whole difficulty would seem to settle itself, if the present occupant of land could be made its proprietor. All of Ireland would be relieved, prosperity would begin, and there would slowly be brought about a restoration of a feeling of friendship between Ireland and Great Britain...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hon. Edward Blake's Lecture. | 10/28/1892 | See Source »

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