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Word: poetically (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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From the "Students' Songs," a volume compiled by W. H. Hills, Harvard '80, we clip the following delicate piece of poetic effort. The music is even more inspiring than the records...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHAT YALE MEN SAY. | 6/1/1883 | See Source »

...indeed, from the upper stories of Sage, the eye can take in the country for miles up and down the valley. In the summer, when the hillsides are covered with verdure, and the sun, just dropping behind the western hill, lights up the valley with its farewell glories, the poetic part of the co-ed nature receives a stimulus which forms a powerful antidote to the prosaic effect of Calculus and Psychology...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CO-EDUCATION AT CORNELL. | 4/17/1883 | See Source »

...violins being especially admired. Mr. Henschel's rendering of the final allegro movement added much to the interpretation of the number. The symphonic poem, "The Tempest," which was conducted by the composer, aroused in its strong contrasts all the fire and brilliancy and all the subdued feelings which the poetic drama itself inspires. In "Lohengrin's Legend and Farewell," Mr. Chas. R. Adams gave one of the gems of the evening, and it is doubtful if Mr. Adams ever rendered a solo more pleasingly or with better effect...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 3/23/1883 | See Source »

...Charles Dickens who desired his friends, after his death, in editing his works to strike out here and there a phrase, so as to remove the rhythm and poetic motion of his prose compositions. If that editor of the Yale News who described "Eighty-four's Promenade," should leave such unlimited power to his biographers, we fear that the revised edition of his recent four-column article would suffer severe abridgment. That article is overflowing with poetic sentiments; the rich metaphors of Tom Moore are nowhere in comparison with this brilliant effusion of verbal pyrotechnics. Think, for instance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SWEET SINGER OF YALE. | 2/5/1883 | See Source »

Such a grand poetic scene could not be viewed by the dancers without something giving way. In this case it was not, as with Uncle Josh, the "gallus," which burst, but it was a beam of sunshine "bursting" from so many fair faces. Whether the explosion hurt anyone or not, the News dosen't say. The temperature of the hall, the radiant faces of our fair sympathizers, the brilliancy of New Haven gas, the continuous maze impelled simply by the light music, and the bad words uttered when some unfortunate wight stumbled over a lady's train...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SWEET SINGER OF YALE. | 2/5/1883 | See Source »

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