The Smith College Monthly, Volume 81900 |
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Page 157
... train to see his old aunt ? She hummed a tune of her childhood as she lifted the latch and entered the cottage . Passing through the dining - room , where her best preserves and pound cake awaited the arival of her guest , she gazed ...
... train to see his old aunt ? She hummed a tune of her childhood as she lifted the latch and entered the cottage . Passing through the dining - room , where her best preserves and pound cake awaited the arival of her guest , she gazed ...
Page 158
... Train delayed , so must go straight on . Jack . " Awfully sorry . She sank back into a chair . Her greatest pleasure was not to be . From without came the roar of the exultant surf rising and falling as the east wind shifted . The ...
... Train delayed , so must go straight on . Jack . " Awfully sorry . She sank back into a chair . Her greatest pleasure was not to be . From without came the roar of the exultant surf rising and falling as the east wind shifted . The ...
Page 175
... trains the mind and refines the taste tends to ennoble and develop the character ? Many of you know that beautiful little essay by Walter Pater entitled " The Child in the House , " and you will remem- ber how one beautiful morning ...
... trains the mind and refines the taste tends to ennoble and develop the character ? Many of you know that beautiful little essay by Walter Pater entitled " The Child in the House , " and you will remem- ber how one beautiful morning ...
Page 255
... trains , poured in upon the committee until the problem of packing became a serious one . A letter from Mrs. Booth has been received thanking the members of the committee and the girls who contributed for their kindness and generosity ...
... trains , poured in upon the committee until the problem of packing became a serious one . A letter from Mrs. Booth has been received thanking the members of the committee and the girls who contributed for their kindness and generosity ...
Page 256
... TRAIN AT EVENTIDE THE AWAKENING THE TIRED IDOLS Marguerite Cutler Page 1901 263 Nina Louise Almirall 1901 269 Esther Conant 1903 269 Katherine Fiske Berry 1902 274 THE FRIENDSHIP OF EMERSON AND CARLYLE Persis Eastman Rowell 1901 274 ...
... TRAIN AT EVENTIDE THE AWAKENING THE TIRED IDOLS Marguerite Cutler Page 1901 263 Nina Louise Almirall 1901 269 Esther Conant 1903 269 Katherine Fiske Berry 1902 274 THE FRIENDSHIP OF EMERSON AND CARLYLE Persis Eastman Rowell 1901 274 ...
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Common terms and phrases
66 Miss alumnæ announced her engagement answer asked Association Aunt Ellen Baron de Contrefort beautiful Bourdigne Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr College Carlyle Carol Weston characters Charles Martel child club Comedy of Errors Committee course Curtis Dorothy Edith Elizabeth Emerson ETHEL eyes face faculty fairy feel felt friends girl give graduate Hall hand Hardberd heart Il Cortigiano interest Jimmie Julius Cæsar kingdom of Judah lecture light living look Louise Mary Massachusetts meeting Mehitabel Melissa Micah Millfield Miss Channing missionary mother never night Phi Kappa Psi play President Professor Radcliffe Rikulf Roberta Sarah School seems senior Shakespeare's plain Shovels side sister Smith College Society spirit sure teaching teeing ground tell thee things thou thought tion train turned Tyler House undergraduate voice woman women words
Popular passages
Page 113 - A long pull, and a strong pull, and a pull all together ! [Cries, and drops his face on arm, upon table.
Page 331 - Not easily have we three come to this — We three who now are dead. Unwillingly They loved, unwillingly I slew them. Now I kiss them on the forehead quietly.
Page 402 - THERE was a little girl, who had a little curl Right in the middle of her forehead, And when she was good, she was very, very good, But when she was bad she was horrid.
Page 443 - Of all the cants ^which are canted in this canting world, the cant of criticism is the most tormenting.
Page 399 - Is it good, friend ? ' ' It is bitter — bitter,' he answered ; ' But I like it Because it is bitter, And because it is my heart.
Page 260 - Ask me concerning my sons; and concerning the works of my hands. ... I have created the earth, and created Man upon it. ... I have raised him up for righteousness, and I will direct all his ways. ... I will make a man more precious than fine gold : even than the golden wedge of Ophir.
Page 544 - THE answer of our Catechism next in order is the following — " The fall brought mankind into an estate of sin and misery." The chief design of this answer is to make the distribution of a subject, afterwards to be discussed. To say much upon it would only be to anticipate what is contained in the two subsequent answers. I shall therefore merely request you to observe the nature and manner of the statement made in this answer...
Page 399 - I saw a man pursuing the horizon ; Round and round they sped. I was disturbed at this; I accosted the man. "It is futile," I said, "You can never" — "You lie,
Page 240 - But I was thinking of a way To feed oneself on batter, And so go on from day to day Getting a little fatter. I shook him well from side to side, Until his face was blue: 'Come, tell me how you live,
Page 401 - I didn't mean your pocket, Mr, no: I mean that having children and a wife, With thirty bob on which to come and go, Isn't dancing to the tabor and the fife: When it doesn't make you drink, by Heaven!