Bowdoin Orient . cles, personals, anil items. Contributions must beaccompanied by writers name, as well as the signature whichhe wishes to have appended. Entered at the Post-Office at Brunswick as Second-Class Mail Matter. CONTENTS. Vol. XIX., No. 15, 1800, At Les Ebouleraents 205 Editorial Notes 205 Literary: Theme-Writing, 208 Ninety-Threes Opportunity 200 Base-Ball Practice 210 A Home by the Sea (poem), 211 Class Politics in the Fifties 211 Rhyme and Reason, 213 Exchanges 214 Collegii Tabula, . 214 Personal 216 College World 217 At Les Eboulements. The bay is set with ashy sails


Bowdoin Orient . cles, personals, anil items. Contributions must beaccompanied by writers name, as well as the signature whichhe wishes to have appended. Entered at the Post-Office at Brunswick as Second-Class Mail Matter. CONTENTS. Vol. XIX., No. 15, 1800, At Les Ebouleraents 205 Editorial Notes 205 Literary: Theme-Writing, 208 Ninety-Threes Opportunity 200 Base-Ball Practice 210 A Home by the Sea (poem), 211 Class Politics in the Fifties 211 Rhyme and Reason, 213 Exchanges 214 Collegii Tabula, . 214 Personal 216 College World 217 At Les Eboulements. The bay is set with ashy sails, With purple shades that fade and flee, And curling by in silver wales The tide is straining from the sea. The grassy points are slowly drowned, The water laps and over-rollsThe wicker peche; with shallow sound A light wave labors on the shoals. The crows are feeding in the foam, They rise in crowds tumultuously, Come home, they cry, Come home,come home!And leave the marshes to the sea. —Duncan Campbell In this issue those familiar with thecountenance of the Orient will notice oneor two slight changes. Two new depart-ments are added. One is an Exchange col-umn, which has always appeared to us oneof the most interesting portions of a collegepaper. The other possesses a slightly rhyth-mical flavor and in lieu of a better title islabeled Rhyme and Reason. Its aim willnot be to startle the literary world with any•soul-twisting soliloquies or meditations onthe hereafterness of the future. It willsimply try to impart a sort of informal met-rical jingle to some of the freaks and fanciesof youth. There will also appear a few un-important typographical improvements, and aslight change in the proportions of the attired, the Orient makes its courtesyat the beginning of the year, and begs yourindulgence for the following bit of sentiment: All hail to the grand old college And its sons so tried and true, To the vigorous young alumni And the old, gray-haired and few !


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