Word: keys
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...enough for most people. Author Mackail has made himself the chronicler of London's "Tiverton Square" -one of those quiet upper-middle-class residential oases in the roaring metropolitan desert. Like Manhattan's Gramercy Park, the Square has a sacred enclosure to which only residents have a key, and within the pale stands the statue of some respectable and forgotten person. Children play there while their nurses gossip; from most of the Square's houses sober citizens go daily forth to do the work of City or Empire. Chronicler Mackail, more classic than Dickens, never leaving...
...analysis of what has brought about this change is more difficult. It is a complete turnabout from the immediate post-war attitude to college education. It is a registering of disgust toward the "collegiatism" of the twenties. The idea that a college education is a key to social life is also passing. It has rather become for many the key to a successful business life. In this respect the depression of the past two years undoubtedly has had a chastening effect on the student ambitious of a business life and has strengthened his seriousness of purpose...
...about which he wrote his most incisive criticism, of all those of Shakespeare, was most attractive to Coleridge. The present editor has put it very succinctly when he writes of Coleridge's diagnosis of the prince's irresolution: "In his own excess of thought over action he found the key to Hamlet's soul." And when he falls short of his customary excellence as a critic, as indeed he does in his estimate of Falstaff, the reason is still the same, that which his own nature lacked, in this case a real sense of humour...
Lawrence's secret, says Murry, was that he was a sexual weakling. "Lawrence was not a physically passionate man; he was not more passionate than the common run of men, but less passionate." This was the key to all his writing, to his whole life. Murry intimates that Bertha Coutts. one of the least lovely characters in Lady Chatterlcy's Lover, was really Lawrence's own wife, Frieda von Richthofen, whom Lawrence at times hated but could not do without. Murry thinks Lawrence's horror of the War, his sense of persecution and consequent hegira to Italy, Australia, Mexico...
Singles--Richard Inglis '33, defeated Pelletier (A), 6-0, 6-1; F. B. Broida '32, defeated Bourbonnais (A), 6-4, 6-4; H. W. Cole '32, won from Como (A), 6-0, 6-0; E. S. Underwood '32, defeated Riendeau (A), 6-1, 6-4; G. D. Key won from Ducharne...