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Word: mans (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Parallel Bars. This is probably due to the fact that because one or two men excel on these pieces of apparatus, every one else thinks that there will be no chance for him, and therefore he will not enter. Now this is just the wrong spirit for a man to have, and we sincerely hope it will not be shown this year. Certainly we cannot all be spectators...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/11/1881 | See Source »

...evident this year as it has ever been. The subject is a very old one, but the annoyance is so great that the only way to correct it eventually, seems to be to speak of it periodically. Examinations can never be a very perfect test of what a man knows; hence, a few questions answered well are, in the majority of cases, a much better test than a number answered hurriedly. It is an impossibility, for instance, to do justice to fifteen questions, "and write as fully as you can in answer to each question," as was required...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/11/1881 | See Source »

...TRAVELLED abroad with a very genial companion who had graduated at Harvard some twelve or fifteen years ago. He was, at the time of our journey, a sedate man of thirty, plain in his person, and matter-of-fact in his ideas. He manifested no especial sentimentality in visiting the famous scenes and monuments of the Old World, and seemed on the whole somewhat of a cynic. We parted in Paris, he to devote several years to study and further travel, I to return to America and begin my life at the University. Just before we shook hands...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: POSTHUMOUS PAPERS. | 2/11/1881 | See Source »

...cannot think of it without an indefinable personal sense of terror, as if what he that night saw was impending over the life of every man, a sword hung by a thread. To his keen, sharp, sensitive temperament an apparition truly tragic was anywhere possible. And the phantasm which appeared to Shelley shortly before his death came from reading a weird drama by Calderon, - a work so rare as to be wellnigh inaccessible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SELF TO SELF. | 2/11/1881 | See Source »

Irresistibly was he held by the arm and drawn along. He had no more volition than a dead man. He could not speak - hardly see, now; but he could hear. It seemed as if all the distant clamors of the city were sounding along that single quiet street. Then he heard a clock strike...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SELF TO SELF. | 2/11/1881 | See Source »