The Yale Literary Magazine, Band 27,Ausgabe 8Herrick & Noyes, 1862 |
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Seite 263
... style . The result is , that literature has broken away from the harness in which it has long been jogging on in a ... styles which belong , exclu- sively , to the present . Conservatives may doubt whether there is a better and healthier ...
... style . The result is , that literature has broken away from the harness in which it has long been jogging on in a ... styles which belong , exclu- sively , to the present . Conservatives may doubt whether there is a better and healthier ...
Seite 264
... style , it was of necessity some- what frigid . The popular writer of to - day might say of the popular writer of those times- My dream was love , and his magnificence . We may congratulate ourselves that in our day , even the English ...
... style , it was of necessity some- what frigid . The popular writer of to - day might say of the popular writer of those times- My dream was love , and his magnificence . We may congratulate ourselves that in our day , even the English ...
Seite 265
... style ? It is true that solid , venerable respectability is characteristic of our Institution and everything connected with it ; that is , if we except pow - wows , jubilees , and a few other exuberances of youthful extrav- agance . We ...
... style ? It is true that solid , venerable respectability is characteristic of our Institution and everything connected with it ; that is , if we except pow - wows , jubilees , and a few other exuberances of youthful extrav- agance . We ...
Seite 279
... style of the poem was simple , yet beautiful , and in its arrangement and conception displayed a judicious and a refined taste . The Valedictory or Class Oration was pronounced by D. Henry Chamberlain , of Worcester , Mass . This ...
... style of the poem was simple , yet beautiful , and in its arrangement and conception displayed a judicious and a refined taste . The Valedictory or Class Oration was pronounced by D. Henry Chamberlain , of Worcester , Mass . This ...
Seite 282
... style . Prizes . The following prizes were announced by the President , in Chapel , June 25th , af- ter the Presentation exercises : English Composition , Class of '64 .— FIRST DIVISION . 1st Prize , S. C. Darling . 2d Prize , H. P. ...
... style . Prizes . The following prizes were announced by the President , in Chapel , June 25th , af- ter the Presentation exercises : English Composition , Class of '64 .— FIRST DIVISION . 1st Prize , S. C. Darling . 2d Prize , H. P. ...
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1st Prize 2d Prize AMBROTYPES Atalanta beauty Beethoven Society Biennial BOAT RACE boats brand and strong bright brand bright eyes C. W. FRANCIS Chapel Street character Charles Charles W Class Club College conflict DAGUERREOTYPES death decay DeForest destiny dignity dreams earnest everything fair lands faith Farmington Freshmen glory Glyuna grandeur hands in fair Haven Henry Chamberlain honor human Ideas and Moral indolence influence intellectual and moral LINONIA literature Long Wharf Mass MEERSCHAUM ment mind Moral Truths moustache N. Y. City natural forces Nereid North Middle Norwich Oration Penn physical poetry political Pow-Wow Presentation President principles progress Public Spirit quiet sanctum scrub races Secretary self-made Senior Sixty-Two social society Sophomore soul strength strong hand style success tendency thee things thoughts tion Undine Varuna vigor Wallace's Band Washington white hands WHITTELSEY William Wooden Spoon XXVII Yale Yale College
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 276 - ... accustoming yourselves to think and speak of it as of the palladium of your political safety and prosperity ; watching for its preservation with jealous anxiety ; discountenancing whatever may suggest even a suspicion that it can in any event be abandoned ; and indignantly frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any portion of our country from the rest, or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now link together the various parts.
Seite 254 - Heaven doth with us as we with torches do, Not light them for themselves ; for if our virtues Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely...
Seite 292 - Upon many a well-fought field; A braver and a nobler knight, Never the sword did wield. Sleep, soldier sleep ! from sorrow free, And sin and strife, 'tis well with thee; It is well, though many a tear Laments the fallen volunteer. Gather roses white and red And scatter them softly on his breast...
Seite 292 - ... in the Classical division in his class. He entered Yale College the following September, being at the time only fifteen years of age, and, if we remember aright, the youngest of his class. He possessed remarkable natural talents, and his industry and good conduct ever endeared him to his teachers. When the war broke out he enlisted as a private in Capt. Arthur's company, Col. McCarter's Regiment, the 93d PV, and served in the severe battles of Williamsburg and Fair Oaks. All know how the 93d...
Seite 296 - Who can swallow an elephant as well as a toad, and is noted for his great longevity. He'll swallow himself, crawl through himself, come out with great facility, Tie himself up in a bow-knot, snap his tail and wink with great agility.