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Word: pope (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...growth. - (2) By centralization of discipline: Satolli. - (b) Its policy. (1) Destroys individual liberty: W. E. Gladstone, Vatican Decrees and Civil Allegiance, p. 13. (2) Keeps Roman Catholics apart from other citizens: Parochial schools, and C. M. B. A. - (3) Is political and asserts supremacy over local government: Pope's Encyclical in Amer. Cath. Q., XIX, 785 (July...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English VI. | 11/19/1894 | See Source »

...yds.J. L. Coolidge, 18 yds.; H. D. Bannister, B. A. A., 20; F. W. Jones, Brown A. A., 40; C. B. Gleason, 35; G. Collamore, 10; A. Miller, N. A. A., 40; J. D. Delaney, W. A. C., 15; H. Emerson, 35; E. L. Pope, B. A. A., 50; J. Bordman, Jr., 23; W. W. Aldrich, Brown A. A., 35; W. H. Vincent, 8; R. L. Barstow, Jr., 40; J. F. McGrath, 40; G. W. Klett, Yale, 25; J. A. Rockwell, Jr., M. I. T., 35; E. Hollister, scratch; C. W. Hutchinson, St. Mary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Handicaps for Tomorrow's Games | 5/4/1894 | See Source »

...most commonly the case that a translator does not so much convert an author into his own language as into himself. How utterly unlike their originals are Pope's Homer, and Hoole's Tasso, Murphy's Tacitus and Francis's Horace? The greater the author, the more he suffers, because power of expression is always a chief part of the outfit of a great author. Certain phrases may be translated, like the famous: "They make a solitude and call it peace" of Tacitus, but who ever saw a satisfactory version of the concluding paragraphs of the Life of Agricola...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fragments from the Lectures of Professor Lowell. | 3/30/1894 | See Source »

...contrast and comparison with our own. Thus it was their knowledge of English authors that in great measure made Voltaire and Lessing such capable critics as they both undoubtedly were. In precisely the same way, I should say that Keats and Shelley might have profited by a study of Pope, because it would have made them feel conscious that exaggeration is always weakness, and would have taught them, as nothing else could, that felicity of expression and compactness of phrase have as absolute a value in the technic, as imagination in the substance of poetry...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 3/30/1894 | See Source »

...meeting of the Board of Overseers yesterday morning it was voted to concur with the President and Fellows in the following appointments: George Martin Lane, Ph. D., as Pope Professor of Latin, Emeritus, from September 1, 1894; Henry Lee, William S. Bigelow and Arthur A. Carey as Trustees of the Museum of Fine Arts; Morris H. Morgan, Ph. D., as member of the council of the library for three years; Frank Irwin as Instructor in Mathematics for the remainder of the academic year; and George F. Newton as Instructor in Designing and Drawing in the Lawrence Scientific School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Meeting of Overseers.. | 3/8/1894 | See Source »

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