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"miscellany" Definitions
  1. a group or collection of different kinds of things

1000 Sentences With "miscellany"

How to use miscellany in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "miscellany" and check conjugation/comparative form for "miscellany". Mastering all the usages of "miscellany" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In Macklemore and Ryan Lewis's recording studio is a wall of miscellany.
Bits of miscellany are haphazardly sorted in big plastic bins underneath the rummage.
It is a curious miscellany, perfectly fitted to the city's equally curious topography.
Michele was offering a startling miscellany inflected with a high-end vintage sensibility.
Industrial miscellany litters the town and forms the backdrop to the city's daily life.
"Comics and Stories" is a miscellany of rare "Peanuts" art, including storybooks and advertising.
The Blueprints series consists of a miscellany of documents meant to be filled in.
The clip shows a space filled by buckets, bins, tools, candles, rugs, and various miscellany.
And that extra space filled with (to use Kondo's categories) clothing, books, papers, and miscellany.
Having resigned myself to American basketball dominance, now and forever, historical miscellany furnishes the only surprises left.
I was so in awe of your magical and colorful stickers, stationery, lunch boxes, and other miscellany.
Some miscellany: 22A, "Not even Brenda," is BED (bolds mine) — the odds of the word Brenda, i.e.
Michele's collections for Gucci offer a startling miscellany of styles inflected with a high-end vintage sensibility.
Businesses will convene "swap shops" where people can exchange old clothes and other miscellany they don't want anymore.
Around Sara's bike was a sea of miscellany: piles of papers, coasters, binders, souvenir mugs, tangled Christmas lights.
His body is a miscellany of aches from his war wounds and his years in the prison camps.
Posters promoting new albums, tours and shows are mixed in with album art, zines, buttons and other miscellany.
It is even more of a miscellaneous miscellany than Du Bois's great work, and it is similarly profound.
The eccentric miscellany of materials share one important quality: they are tactile, textured, and exist in the third dimension.
Documents also listed costly philosophy books, worth some £2,500 ($3,100) altogether, plus a miscellany of smaller expenses costing thousands of pounds.
A web curtain woven from Japanese rope ties, it is embedded with bustiers, powder compacts and other miscellany of the trade.
However, despite finding dormant sea volcanoes, previously uncharted shipwrecks and a miscellany of sea junk, the missing Boeing 777 was not found.
It assembles goods for a miscellany of global tech firms but relies on Apple for over half of annual revenue, analysts said.
Numberplay This week's challenge was suggested by Greg Ross, creator and curator of the Futility Closet, the online miscellany of compendious amusements.
A sinking fund is a savings account used to cover planned, one-time expenses, like new tires, a future trip or holiday miscellany.
"See What Can Be Done" is a captivating miscellany, one that should entice even readers who usually see fit to bypass such collections.
Rather than going room by room, she says, start with clothes, then books, paper, komono (kitchen, bath, garage and miscellany) and finally sentimental items.
And, since we're working on a Panda, we can't forget the miscellany, the little widgets that a constructor can squeak in that defy categorization.
The ceaselessness gains coherence in the middle of the work, when the recorded score of miscellany, intermittently flooded with water sounds, turns to Bach.
On one side is a bench for spectators; on the other are a stool, makeup table, and a coat stand laden with vaudevillian miscellany.
Watch: Every spring, the Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center present the cinematic miscellany known as New Directors/New Films.
The revealer at 55A is "Miscellany ... or a description of the final words in 15-, 23-, 30-, 38- and 43-Across" or ODDS AND ENDS.
The digital sounds were a scattered, tinkling miscellany: cymbals, synthesizer tones and plucks on the samisen (a three-stringed Japanese instrument loosely resembling a banjo).
They are impressionistic records, a constellation of bits that accumulate in an appealing miscellany of objects and concepts — the moon, the 1970s, winter sounds, manholes.
To reach the widest possible audience, most cover similar material: a miscellany of models that are not always consistent with each other or even with themselves.
It shows the floor plan of a basic garden shed, but the gallery doesn't include the lawn mower, hose and miscellany shown in the Lowe's rendering.
We all have some ODDS AND ENDS that we deal with in our daily lives, and today Tom McCoy points out the "miscellany" in his grid.
They love Arsenal, they love each other and so, naturally, they have marked their lifelong union with as much Arsenal miscellany as they can get their hands on.
His passionate fans include an unlikely miscellany of artists: Eve Aschheim, Mark Greenwold, Catherine Murphy, Gladys Nilsson, Thomas Nozkowski, Jim Nutt, James Siena, Philip Taaffe, and Trevor Winkfield.
The artist has imposed a strict code of visual monotony upon this miscellany, painting all objects either dull white or dull grey — shades best described as drably institutional.
Instead, it's confused, full of songs that feel like concepts in search of a home, small theater pieces extruded from other imaginary productions and collected in one miscellany bin.
My favorite remains the idiosyncratically punctuated, numbered miscellany of what Fink calls "lyrical-philosophical prose poems," entitled "From Man to Man," published on the Lower East Side in 1919.
Mr. Stoudemire calls his mushrooming private miscellany of art — including a Jean-Michel Basquiat canvas, among some 70 other pieces — the Melech Collection, using a Hebrew word for king.
Critics' Notebook Every spring, the Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center present New Yorkers with the cinematic miscellany known as New Directors/New Films.
Douglas refers to her work as "The Art of Salmagundi," which draws its name from an old French and Middle English term that refers to a potpourri of miscellany.
But they can't replicate the feeling of collecting digital miscellany in our travels across the internet, remixing the material and sending it along to friends who might appreciate the find.
In the final gallery there is a miscellany of archival material, including "The Wandering Lake," a 1938 book by the Swedish explorer Sven Hedin that lent this exhibition its title.
First "Pseudodoxia Epidemica," from 1646, Browne's extended debunking of "vulgar errors," then his "Miscellany Tracts," which contains his glorious essay "Musaeum Clausum," perhaps the first English history of lost books.
The book is the work of a Swedish writer named Carl-Johan Forssen Ehrlin, whose author bio lists a miscellany of modish occupations: behavioral scientist, communications teacher, life coach, leadership trainer.
Whatever attitudes he expresses about policy are skin deep, an incoherent, impulse-driven miscellany of ethno-nationalism, isolationism, and an infatuation with authoritarian rulers who he views as partners in deal making.
The women who work alongside Ms. Furie and Ms. Miriam at Bloodroot are immigrants from Brazil, Congo, Haiti and Mexico, and each helps make the menu what it is: an international miscellany.
Steelers linebacker Bud Dupree was grateful for a pair of Jordan-brand cleats "gifted" by Bell, saying "wish you success" while trying them on: Bell also left behind a nice batch of miscellany.
Fiddling with a miscellany of instruments, encircling the room's profusion of mast-like wooden pillars, hopping, chanting or dancing in little tribes, they loosely weave and unweave an intermittently absorbing web of activity.
He was drawn to the same interests as his father, an avid collector of beautiful miscellany and the co-owner of a factory in Hangzhou, China, that began making tourbillon movements in 2000.
Buy at least two boxes if you're packing up mostly bedroom things and around-the-house miscellany, and add two more boxes for each room that has a lot of your stuff in it.
In addition to casual women's and men's clothing — with an emphasis on the former — the store carries local skin-care products from Bohemian Reves and miscellany such as funky candles fashioned from beer bottles.
Books of The Times Older writers find younger ones irritating, Martin Amis writes in "The Rub of Time," his fourth nonfiction miscellany, because their emergence is like a series of telegrams from the boneyard.
There might even be live clams piled deep on the shore, mixed into the miscellany of rusted fishing lures and tangled masses of monofilament line, beach glass, plastic toys, driftwood and other childhood treasures.
He emptied the bag of salvaged miscellany he'd brought to shoot, jotted a few cryptic words on bits of paper, and then pinned them together with old photos and other ephemera onto timeworn corkboards.
Sharing the same air as racks of Yeezy and Vetements are secondhand clothes, a selection of books and movies by women, toys, kitchenware and other miscellany that July solicited from the four charities' own shops.
Ms. Hall's aesthetic of extreme orderliness is largely a reaction to the magpie mind-set of her parents, whose Victorian house in San Francisco is piled high and haphazardly with miscellany dating back five decades.
In "Driving as Metaphor," one of the essays in "Coventry," her sharp new miscellany, the English writer Rachel Cusk expresses mild surprise that we don't yet have airbags outside our Vauxhall Corsas and Jeep Grand Cherokees.
What he considers the restaurant's signature dish — an extravagant miscellany of fruits, vegetables and flowers that changes with the seasons — will turn to various late-blooming tomato varieties and late-summer fruits such as plums and melon.
Jane Mount's Bibliophile: An Illustrated Miscellany is an absolute gift to book lovers, covering things like literary trivia, bookstore cats, profiles of bookish people, so many recommendations, and guides to beloved libraries and bookstores from around the world.
The first chapters of his novel "Jack Sheppard", based on the life of an elusive 18th-century criminal, were published in 1839 in the magazine Bentley's Miscellany, alongside the last instalment of his friend Dickens's story "Oliver Twist".
The exhibition is part of an exchange with the National Portrait Gallery to mark 160 years since both were founded (Moscow, in return for their cultural icons, received a miscellany of great Britons, from Elizabeth I to Dickens).
And if Ms. Schreier hadn't had that initial gut punch of desire for them, trumping pedigree, they might never have made it into her sartorial miscellany, and they wouldn't now be part of the Met — or our own imaginations.
The Gypsy Astronaut is a GIFs-only Tumblr with subjects ranging from 1920s silent film to Monty Python to Ghost World to David Bowie to miscellany so obscure it's impossible to imagine that the source video is even available on YouTube.
They encountered creatures like the platypus, an animal so bizarre—venomous, duck-billed, beaver-tailed, with the furry body of an otter but egg-laying—that George Shaw, the author of " The Naturalist's Miscellany ," believed it to be a crude hoax.
I don't think Etsy's top brass will prioritize the extermination of fangirl miscellany anytime soon, and Dave tells me that for as much noise eBay makes about its policy, he still sees plenty of mystery boxes that break the rules.
Another segment from "M Train" soars on heightened language, only to drop to earth with a complaint about Smith's aged joints, and a funny reverie about wrangling Virginia Woolf's walking stick from the New York Public Library's literary miscellany collection.
According to the 1864 miscellany Chambers Book of Days (a genuinely brilliant breakdown of fact, trivia, and history across a calendar year), apple bobbing has long been associated with predictions of future love, summoning a husband, and celebrating female fertility.
Slouching through the forest in his filthy uniform of yellow shirt and green combat trousers, while recalculating wind, humidity and temperature, Mr Hatfield recalls one of the original pioneers, an impression reinforced by the all-American miscellany he meets along the fireline.
The Vitesse has an unpadded laptop pocket that can accommodate a 15-inch MacBook Pro (though you can add your own sleeve), an accessible front zip pocket, and three small organizing pockets that are perfect for your keys, wallet, and other miscellany.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Along the 1,969-mile-long border between the United States and Mexico lie sneakers, teddy bears, toothbrushes, water jugs, tuna cans, and other miscellany — the objects left behind by migrants seeking better lives in a neighboring land.
A window opened above them and Jamie lobbed out something, which landed with a soft thud on the path: one of the carrier bags from Robyn's room, packed with a miscellany of clothes—and he'd thought to add the pair of plimsolls.
The bay's massive, centuries-old stone fortifications convey the zeal of the conquistadors, who leveraged Puerto Rico's strategic location to protect their vast interests in the New World (British and Dutch armadas, as well as a miscellany of pirates, were frequent threats).
The author and artist was odd, yes — for much of his life, he cohabited with as many as six cats at a time in an old sea captain's home on Cape Cod, where he collected such miscellany as antique irons, salt-and-paper shakers, and old photographs.
I like that the wire connecting the two buds is coated in braided cord, which makes it look more like something a person would incorporate into an outfit and less like something you would pull out of a pile of rubbery miscellany in a cable junk drawer.
A miscellany masquerading as a major statement, "Attention: Dispatches From a Land of Distraction" gives us sketches, musings, diaristic fragments, cultural criticism, reportage — politics, literature, music, travel; Trump, Barnum, Zizek, the internet — all capped by a titular history (of sorts) that weighs in at novella length.
The level to which they managed to saturate popular culture, appearing in memes, commercials, Halloween parties, and runway shows, as well as suburban mall screen-printing booths, Universal Studios theme parks, and on just about every type of home good, apparel, or Target-miscellany-bin-junk imaginable is intimidating.
Yet while you may not know Mr. Prelinger's name, you may have stumbled across his archival work through his collection of what he calls ephemeral films, a miscellany of industrial, educational and other works that include everything from old Chevrolet ads to campy educational shorts about careless, naughty teens.
Sterling even subtly subverts the history of Kettle's Yard itself, once home to the Tate curator and modern art collector Jim Ede, by invoking the spirit of his wife, Helen, with sound and scent installations and a line of "House of Helen" miscellany for sale in the gallery shop.
In Tommy Pico's latest (and final) installment of his Teebs trilogy, he delivers a thoroughly examined survey of junk: junk as miscellany, junk as food, junk as body parts, junk as baggage of the emotional and physical varieties, junk as all that scattered rubble that keeps us weighted in the past.
In "The War Against Cliché," the larger and entirely literary predecessor of this new miscellany, Amis almost never concedes a legitimacy to critical biography, more often registering disapproval of the enterprise, which he doesn't see doing much for Jane Austen or Malcolm Lowry or, when Andrew Field is the biographer, for Vladimir Nabokov.
Represented in depth in "Margherita Stein: Rebel With a Cause" are Michelangelo Pistoletto (he is also at the School), whose medium is mirror-finished polished steel, often with applied photo-silkscreens; Alighiero Boetti (embroidered textiles); Luciano Fabro (mainly stone, sometimes balanced in unexpected ways); and Jannis Kounellis (assemblages of hardware and miscellany).
As an artist who matured during the rise of the so-called "attention economy" — which has rewarded practices that combine a miscellany of ingredients into sometimes tenuous works of art — Josh Kline's anticipated new solo show at 47 Canal gallery demonstrates how a little editing and restraint can elevate unnerving sculptures to an indelible mise-en-scène.
The "Timeseum" is Mr. Dunlap's working title for a repository that will tell the story of The Times through a consolidated collection of archival documents and a display of journalistic miscellany — from the brass molds used to cast type in molten metal to a viewer used to impart the sense of three dimensions to our new virtual-reality stories.
"Exclusive: Leaked D.C.C.C. documents reveal effort to replace Shea-Porter with 'fresh face for 2016,'" said one of the first dispatches posted in New Hampshire, on Miscellany Blue, referring to Carol Shea-Porter, the Democratic candidate for the House, who ended up narrowly winning the seat, despite the intense criticism directed at her by Democratic leaders that was revealed by the leaks.
Here are Places to Start," principally search engines; "Collections for Journalists," a lot of government sites; "The Reference Desk," from the venerable Encyclopaedia Britannica to the upstart Wikipedia — "increasingly popular (but not uniformly accurate)"; "Telephone and Email Directories"; "Publications on the Net"; "Politics"; "The New York Region"; "Commerce"; "Travel"; "Entertainment/Culture/Pastimes"; "Sports and Recreation"; and finally "Demonstrations and Miscellany.
Action-wise, "The School for Objects Criticized AE" portrays a conversation between an opinionated group of miscellany: There's Daphne Spring, a children's Slinky toy and seductive realist; Penny Powder, an emotionally malleable, unformed sculpture; the pseudo-intellectuals Lucian Samasota and Osmin Moses, both tape players; Sergei Skoffavitch, a "neo-post-Marxist" bottle of bleach; the feminist Despina Hall, an electric toaster; and the doorman, a taxidermic skunk.
I maneuvered quickly through this section because though the majority of work here was visually stimulating with variegated and polished car tires — low, white furry daises with a motley assortment of glass objects positioned on top, and large mirrors on wooden stands — it all seemed like miscellany rather than a set of objects that could give me insight into the artist's concerns or obsessions.
This art-school band was a miscellany: its members ranged across social classes (Mr Ferry's father was a Durham farmhand and tended to pit ponies), origins (Phil Manzanera, the guitarist, spent his childhood in Central and South America) and, above all, talents (Mr Eno, who has since become a pioneering solo artist and revered producer, did not consider himself a musician in any conventional sense, but an experimental technician).
'Recollections of Canada. The Scenery of the Ottawa,' Bentley's Miscellany (1849): 489–497. 'A Winter's Journey,' Bentley's Miscellany (1849): 630–638. 'My First Winter in the Woods of Canada,' Bentley's Miscellany (1850): 152–160.
Nikša Ranjina's Miscellany, or simply Ranjina's Miscellany, is the oldest lyrical miscellany of Croatian vernacular lyric poetry, one of the most important pieces of Croatian Renaissance literature. Writer of the miscellany is a Dubrovnik nobleman Nikša Ranjina, who started copying down poems in his childhood. He started writing them in 1507 as a thirteen-year-old boy, and it is not known when he finished the piece. The resulting voluminous manuscript corresponds in character to English Tottel's Miscellany.
The Catholic Miscellany, successor to the U.S. Catholic Miscellany, the first Catholic newspaper in the United States, is the official newspaper of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston.
Botanical Miscellany was a short-lived botany magazine edited by William Jackson Hooker.Botanical miscellany Biodiversity Heritage Library. Retrieved 18 May 2015. Only three volumes appeared, in 1830, 1831 and 1833.
Illustration of Noah's Ark landing on the Mountains of Ararat (fol. 521a). Left, scenes with Abraham from Genesis, ch 18; right, David The North French Hebrew Miscellany or "French Miscellany" or "London Miscellany" (British Library Add. MS 11639) is an important Hebrew illuminated manuscript from 13th-century France, created c. 1278-98.Tahan's c.
For two years after the publication of the first Miscellany, Schott wrote a weekly miscellany column for The Daily Telegraph, and also produced special miscellany features on Christmas and the Olympics. For over a year he wrote a regular travel miscellany column for the UK edition of Condé Nast Traveler magazine. In 2005 and 2006 the Guardian featured special editions of G2 featuring extracts from Schott's Almanac. In 2008 Schott was appointed as a Contributing Columnist for The New York Times OpEd page.
Desert Island Books. Derek Wilson (2009). "Motherwell FC Miscellany". Pitch Publishing.
A Mathematician's Miscellany is an autobiography and collection of anecdotes by John Edensor Littlewood. It is now out of print but Littlewood's Miscellany is its successor, published by Cambridge University Press and edited by Béla Bollobás.
He also contributed to the Oxford and Cambridge Miscellany Poems in 1709.
'A Bristol Miscellany', Patrick McGrath (ed) p200: Bristol, Bristol Record Society, 1985 .
Ben Schott, Schott's Miscellany Calendar 2009 (New York: Workman Publishing, 2008), March 21.
LOCAL MISCELLANY.; THE WORKING MEN'S DEMONSTRATION. IMPORTANT INSURANCE CASE. COURT OF GENERAL SESSIONS.
"British Chronicle". In The Edinburgh Magazine, and Literary Miscellany. Edinburgh: Archibald Constable. p244.
The Phrenological Journal and Miscellany, no. 49, vol. 10 (1837)), p. 244; Google Books.
William Gordon Perrin (ed), Naval Miscellany, volume 146. Naval Records Society, 2003, p. 328.
Stephenson published his first poem, "Whales Are Hard to See," in the Davidson Miscellany 1973.
Because of the different genres represented it has been termed a "household miscellany."Dutton 18.
No attempts have been made until now to comprehensively collect the entirety of his miscellany.
Andrew Lang found a variant verse in Ramsay's Tea Table Miscellany from a sixteenth-century song.
He is the editor of Then and Now: NZ Potters Miscellany 1963-2009 and New Zealand Potter.
Rollins, Hyder Edward. Tottel's Miscellany (1557–1587). 1929. Rev. ed. 2 vols. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1965.
There the British naval commander an admiral, placed a guard of marines from his ship aboard Sarah to travel with her to Bombay.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Volume 23, (May 1827), p.688. She sailed on 6 December.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Volume 23, (April 1827), p.589.
Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany. p. 42. He led the club to the Western League title, their first in the professional game, in 1905 before retiring.Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany. p. 43. The most successful person to manage the club is Bob Jack, who was also Argyle's first professional player.
See main article: Siege of Blair Castle.The Scots magazine and Edinburgh literary miscellany, Volume 70, Part 1 (1808).
75 The Oratory included Smart playing as Mrs. Midnight, various songs and dances, animal acts, and "miscellany" acts.
Chesson & Woodhall, 1861, Bombay Miscellany, Volume 1, p.237 On 20 February 1866 he was made a G.C.S.I.
The Edinburgh magazine, or Literary miscellany, Vol. 6 (1795), p.480.Naval and Military Magazine, (1827), p.179.
The Trevelyon Miscellany of 1608, compiled by Thomas Trevelyon in London, England in 1608, is an illustrated manuscript miscellany containing handwritten notes and drawings (many hand-colored) on historical, religious, social and practical themes, adapted from a variety of sources, including the Bible and ancient and contemporary English writers. According to Dr. Heather Wolfe, Curator of Manuscripts and Archivist at the Folger Shakespeare Library, "the primary purposes of the Trevelyon miscellany ... are didactic and mnemonic. The extracts and examples from secular, allegorical, and Protestant texts are an enduring monument for improving one's moral conduct in this life and preparing for the next." The Trevelyon Miscellany of 1608, also known as Folger Shakespeare Library MS V.b.
'Marriage Contract Alexander Ogilvie and Marie Bethune', Maitland Miscellany, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1833), pp. 41-2 Mary Beaton eventually married Alexander Ogilvy of Boyne in April 1566.'Marriage Contract Alexander Ogilvie and Marie Bethune', Maitland Miscellany, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1833), pp. 37-49 They had one son, James, born in 1568.
Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany. p. 48. 13 other people have been in charge as a caretaker, including former players Steve McCall and Kevin Summerfield (twice).Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany. p. 45. Five managers have won major league championships with the club, of whom both Jack and Sturrock were successful twice.
See the entry for September 19 on Ben Scott, Schott's Miscellany Calendar 2009 (New York: Workman Publishing Company, 2008).
Whether some of the verses in the Miscellany were authored by Ranjina is not known, although it is possible.
Murray, Athol L., 'Pursemaster's Accounts', in Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, vol. 10 (SHS, Edinburgh, 1965), p. 35.
Grimald contributed forty poems to the original edition (June 1557) of Songes and Sonettes (commonly known as Tottel's Miscellany). Two of Grimald's poems printed in Miscellany, The Death of Zoroas and Marcus Tullius Ciceroes Death, are regarded as some of the first examples of English blank verse ever published. It is also possible that Grimald was an editor of the first edition of Miscellany. It is speculated that most of Grimald's work was removed from the second edition due to his recantation of Protestantism.
The Catholic Miscellany, successor to the U.S. Catholic Miscellany, the first Catholic newspaper in the United States, is the official newspaper of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston. It was founded by Bishop John England, the first bishop of Charleston in 1822. He had been assigned to the area the previous year.
A collection of her papers and other miscellany is held by the Archives of American Art of the Smithsonian Institution.
Persoonia comata was first formally described in 1855 by Carl Meissner in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany.
Singapore: Graham Brash Pte Ltd., 1982. # Mirror of a Hundred Hues: A Miscellany. Penang: The Asian Cultural Heritage Centre, 2001.
232, was given to the Folger Shakespeare Library by Lessing J. Rosenwald in 1945. Trevelyon later compiled another manuscript miscellany with some of the same illustrations, now owned by the library at Wormsley Park. An earlier manuscript miscellany (circa 1603) at University College London was identified in 2012 as also being the work of Trevelyon.
Perdita Manuscripts, Index of Perdita Womensexually objectifying poem from The Fugitive Miscellany playing euphemistically on a ladies' fashion accessory, the "muff". Miscellanies also presented themselves as performing an important cultural or curatorial role, by preserving unbound sheets, fragments and ephemera which otherwise would have been lost – and thus offering a unique insight into the vibrant literary life of the 18th century. A prime example of such curiosity-shop publications is The fugitive miscellany: a collection of fugitive pieces in prose and verse (1774),Internet Archive The fugitive miscellany.
Poems in the miscellany deal chiefly with the topic of love and are written prevalently in doubly rhymed dodecayllabic meter. Most of the poems are authored by Šiško Menčetić and Džore Držić, and a minority by other, unknown poets, representing the first generation of Dubrovnik Petrarchists. Miscellany is written in very readable handwriting, in a very pedantic and reliable way. Love is being celebrated and described in the miscellany not as much as a topic of poet's intimate perception, but rather as a form of social play governed by prescribed norms of conduct.
Naturalist's miscellany by George Shaw, E. Nodder Elizabeth Nodder was a 19th Century publisher of the illustrated The Naturalist's Miscellany. However, she is listed in the database of Scientific Illustrators as an artist. She and her husband, Frederick Polydore Nodder collaborated in the publishing of this work, until his death circa 1800, when she continued to publish further volumes in the series, with Richard Polydore Nodder (their son) as illustrator.Wikisource: Nodder, Frederick P. (DNB00) Retrieved 14 March 2018. George Kearsley Shaw, the naturalist, authored the texts of the miscellany from 1798-1813.
Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany, p. 15.Danes (2009), Complete Record, p. 87. "Capaldi joins Argyle for Dutch challenge". Western Morning News.
Located on in upstate New York,Julie Brickle, "Not your ordinary summer camp" The Catholic Miscellany (November 11, 1999) Charleston, SC.
Selections from a memorandum- book of household and travelling expenses with Sharp were printed by the Maitland Club (Miscellany, ii. 497).
In early 2009, Prophet acquired Richmond, Virginia-based Play, a creativity and innovation company.Elliott, Stuart. Accounts, People, Miscellany. New York Times.
William Miller Constable's Miscellany was a part publishing serial established by Archibald Constable. Three numbers made up a volume; many of the works were divided into several volumes. The price of a number was one shilling. The full series title was Constable's Miscellany of Original and Selected Publications, in the Various Departments of Literature, Science, and the Arts.
The Harleian Miscellany, vol. 1, p. 1. Edward Harley, the second earl, who had died only a few years before The Harleian Miscellany was published, was also a bibliophile who had greatly expanded the library.David Stoker, ‘Harley, Edward, second earl of Oxford and Mortimer (1689–1741)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005.
Evoking both the muses and the encyclopedia in its title, Musapaedia aptly brings together a variety of poems and authors into a single volume. A miscellany is a collection of various pieces of writing by different authors. Meaning a mixture, medley, or assortment, a miscellany can include pieces on many subjects and in a variety of different forms.Miscellany, n.
John Isaac Hawkins acted as president.Waterloo page on the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.The Phrenological Journal and Miscellany, no.
190, no. 10 (March 5, i960), 212. [Foreword to "Five last poems," by Dilys Laing.] "Dilys Laing (1906–1960)," Carleton Miscellany, vol.
The Vassar Miscellany. Vassar College.; 1891. p. 438. She won the Norman W. Dodge Prize at the National Academy again in 1902.
The fireside book; a miscellany. (Philadelphia), Vol. 1, p.397. On 1 August, Phoebe captured two settées, which a French squadron recaptured.
In 2005, Shirley and Simon Young became the first married outsider couple in history to obtain citizenship on Pitcairn.Pitcairn Miscellany, March 2005.
Winter Evening Thoughts, (1810). Cottage Poems, (1810). The Rural Minstrel: A Miscellany of Descriptive Poems, (1813). The Cottage In The Wood, (1816).
The British Quarterly Review. v.56 1872. pp. 536-538.The Fallacies of Darwinism. The Popular Science Review: A Quarterly Miscellany. v.
Miles Kerr- Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 36-7.
Martin Vargic is a Slovak artist and author, best known for his book "Vargic's Miscellany of Curious Maps", and "Map of the Internet".
The second and third editions have a long dedication to Lord Mansfield. In 1786, he produced a miscellany of anecdotes and dissertations, Sylva.
Taxonomy, distribution, and ecology of the genus Phaseolus (Leguminosae-Papilionoideae) in North America, Mexico and Central America. Sida, Botanical Miscellany 23: i–xviii,.
Thomas Trevelyon (born circa 1548) lived in England (probably London) and is believed to have been an embroidery pattern drawer. He is long known for having compiled two large manuscript miscellanies, the Miscellany of 1608 now in the collection of the Folger Shakespeare Library, and the Great Book of 1616 now in the library at Wormsley Park. A third miscellany, in the collection of University College London was identified as being in his hand in 2012, and dates to circa 1603. He spelled his surname "Trevelyon" in the Folger Miscellany and "Trevilian" in the Wormsley Great Book.
The Boston Miscellany of Literature and Fashion was a monthly literary and fashion magazine published in Boston, Massachusetts from 1842 to 1843. It also published book reviews and music. The initial issue of The Boston Miscellany was published in January 1842, with Nathan Hale, Jr. (sone of the journalist Nathan Hale) as its editor. Henry Theodore Tuckerman served as editor in 1843.
He translated two of Ovid's epistles in 1683. He wrote several original Latin poems and a translation of Juvenal's fourth satire. To Dryden's third ‘Miscellany,’ 1693, he contributed anonymously two amatory songs. His ‘Detestation of Civil War’ is expressed in a poem ‘To the People of England.’ One of his Dryden ‘Miscellany’ poems, ‘Floriana,’ had in 1684 celebrated the Countess of Southampton.
Her poetry was first published when she was fourteen in a bimonthly periodical of children's poetry called Juvenile Miscellany by editor Lydia Maria Child.
Scholars have described the Bowuzhi as "a miscellany of scientific interest" (Needham et al. 1980: 309) and "an important minor classic" (Greatrex 1987: 158).
Ellen M. Daigle. Traiteurs and Their Power of Healing: The Story of Doris Bergeron. Louisiana Folklore Miscellany 6 (4), 1991: 43-48.Dana David.
John Walpole Willis had chambers here.Robert Megarry and Bryan Garner. A New Miscellany at Law: Yet Another Diversion for Lawyers and Others. Hart Publishing.
Wild Cards is the final section which typically contains one or two pages of puzzle miscellany, such as word games, trivia, or chess problems.
However, according to some critics, the play lacked focus.Bruccoli, Matthew J, and Jackson R. Bryer (1971). F. Scott Fitzgerald in His Own Time: A Miscellany.
The species was first formally described by the botanist William Henry Harvey in 1855 as part of Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany.
From 1889 till 1893, she served as associate editor and business manager of the Round Table, a monthly magazine of literary miscellany, published in Texas.
Spjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14, pp. 1-208. Botanical Research Institute of Texas, Inc.
In 1548, Erskine travelled to mainland Europe to rescue one of his sons from captivity.'Pittodrie Papers', Miscellany of the Spalding Club (Aberdeen, 1842), 205.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 22, 61.
A Donald Wandrei Miscellany. Ed. D. H. Olson., St Paul, MN: Sidecar Preservation Society, 2001. A sampling of rare fiction, non-fiction, verse, humour and satire.
Their sight-seeing was recorded in an anonymous poem, A Scottish Journie.Firth, C. H., ed., Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, 2, (1904), pp. 272-287.
The Lacnunga is a 10th or 11th century miscellany in Old English, Latin and Old Irish, with health-related texts taking a wide range of approaches, from herbal medicine and other medical procedures, to prayers and charms. The lavishly illuminated late 13th century North French Hebrew Miscellany contains mostly biblical and liturgical texts, but also legal material, over 200 poems, and calendars.British Library catalogue online, North French Miscellany The large 9th-century Chinese text Miscellaneous Morsels from Youyang, contains various Chinese and foreign legends and hearsay, reports on natural phenomena, short anecdotes, and tales of the wondrous and mundane, as well as notes on such topics as medicinal herbs and tattoos. The Trevelyon Miscellany of 1608, an oversized illustrated manuscript of 594 pages, depicts a wide range of subjects including herbal cures, biblical stories, a list of the mayors of London, proverbs, calendars, and embroidery patterns.
Due to the sheer number and variety of miscellanies printed in the 18th century, there are few generalizations that can be made about them. From the polite (Allan Ramsay’s The Tea-Table Miscellany, 1724–27)Google Books The Tea-Table Miscellany to the partly obscene (The Merry Thought: or, The Glass-Window and Bog-house Miscellany, 1731–33)Gutenburg The Merry Thought: or, The Glass- Window and Bog-house Miscellany the central purpose behind nearly all printed verse miscellanies was the reader’s entertainment. However, they were also marketed with practical purposes in mind: as educative moral guides (Miscellanies, Moral and Instructive, in Prose and Verse, 1787),Google Books Miscellanies, Moral and Instructive, in Prose and Verse as repositories of useful information (A Miscellany of Ingenious Thoughts and Reflections in Verse and Prose, 1721–30), as elocutionary aids (William Enfield’s The Speaker, 1774–1820),Google Books The Speaker and as guides for poetical composition (Edward Bysshe's The Art of English Poetry, 1702–62).Digital Miscellanies Index, The Art of English Poetry Some miscellanies were even aimed at children, as A Little Pretty Pocket-Book (1744) demonstrates.
Prince Blucher, Johnston, master, left London on 24 September and arrived at Bengal on 13 February 1821.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Vol. 12, №68, p.193.
Evelyn Abbott, London : Longmans, Green, 1st ed. 1880, 2nd ed., 1898, Poetry for Poetry's Sake (1901), A Commentary on Tennyson's in Memoriam (1901), and A Miscellany (1929).
Cover of Barkham Burroughs' Encyclopedia, 1889. Barkham Burroughs' Encyclopaedia of Astounding Facts and Useful Information is an encyclopedia and miscellany first published in 1889 by Barkham Burroughs.
Melanie Barber, Gabriel Sewell, Stephen Taylor, eds. From the Reformation to the Permissive Society: A Miscellany in Celebration of the 400th Anniversary of the Lambeth Palace Library.
P. Hume Brown, Register of the Privy Council of Scotland: 1554-1660, 2nd series vol. 8 (Edinburgh, 1908), p. 355-364: Miscellany of the Abbotsford Club, vol.
1839, p. 327. While in Oregon Country in 1831, George Simpson, described Pambrun as "an active, steady, dapper little fellow."Williams, Glyndwr. Hudson's Bay miscellany, 1670-1870.
34), p.167. She had been on her way to Madras and Calcutta from London. She was condemned as unseaworthy.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany (April 1841; Vol.
The first Catholic newspaper in the United States was The United States Catholic Miscellany of Charleston, South Carolina. It was founded in 1822 by Bishop John England (1786–1842), who had experience as an editor in Ireland. It was renamed Charleston Catholic Miscellany when South Carolina seceded; it ceased publication in 1861 during the Civil War.Patrick Carey, An Immigrant Bishop: John England's Adaptation of Irish Catholicism to American Republicanism (U.
Gordon Sparks. May 2004. Retrieved 8 August 2010. are sourced to Cowdery & Curno (2009), up to and including the 2008–09 season,Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany, p. 25.
'' ::: The time'll come when everyone will know'' ::: The name of Champion the Wonder Horse! Julie Whitaker, The Horse: A Miscellany of Equine Knowledge, UK: Ivy Press (2007), 124.
From there he went on to Trinity College, Dublin University, where he directed plays, edited the magazine T.C.D. Miscellany, and promoted gigs, but dropped out without a degree.
Nikša Andretić Ranjina or Nicola Ragnina (1494–1582) was a writer and nobleman from the Republic of Ragusa (modern-day Dubrovnik), most famous as the compiler of Ranjina's Miscellany. Ranjina is the most famous for his manuscript collection of Croatian Petrarchian poems known as Nikša Ranjina's Miscellany. The manuscript itself was destroyed in World War II. The manuscript had two pieces and contained about 820 poems, with (recognized) authors such as Šiško Menčetić (about 500 poems), Džore Držić (~70 poems), Mavro Vetranović, Marin Krističević and Mato Hispani. Beside this well-known miscellany, he also compiled Ranjinin Lekcionar (started in 1508) (a collection of passages from the Bible), and the Dubrovnik chronicle Annali di Ragusa (1522).
Shaw, Karl. (2009). Curing Hiccups with Small Fires: A Delightful Miscellany of Great British Eccentrics. Pan MacMillan. p. 122. He lived on an exclusive diet of ham and milk.
In late April arrived to render assistance. After surveying the area, Podargus sailed into the Knysna and retrieved Emus cargo.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, (1818), Vol. 6, p.317.
In October 2020. 'I Knew This Place - a collection of more than eighty of his essay contributions to the RTE series Sunday Miscellany was published by The Harvest Press.
The distinctive façade of the former offices at the corner of Charles Street and Bath Street pictured here is still recalled in the Under the Clock column of miscellany.
He also writes regular features for The Times. Schott publishes a bespoke Miscellany Diary with the society printers Smythson of Bond Street, and a desk-pad diary with Workman.
The Ireland Rugby Miscellany (2007): Ciaran Cronin Mike Gibson, Willie Duggan, Philip Orr and Moss Keane all returned to New Zealand with the British Lions for their 1977 tour.
"Chinese Coronation: Coronation of Taou-Kwang, the new Emperor of China," pp. 332-335 in The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany.] (East India Company). Vol. 13 (1822 January–June).
Duchamp, Androgyny, Etc., (on Marcel Duchamp) was published by Editions Antoine Candau in Paris (1990). A Hans Bellmer Miscellany was published by Baum/Malmburg in Malmö, Sweden in 1993.
In preparing the volume, Hogg provided most of the songs with short explanatory headnotes. The contents are presented as a miscellany rather than with any formal categorisation.Ibid., xxiv‒xxv.
British Library, Add MS 43460 is a theological miscellany and was produced in Italy in the late 8th century. It contains works by St. Augustine, St. Jerome, and Commodianus.
Also emanating from the monastery is a small notebook or miscellany containing biblical texts and a note of an ordination in 1500. Both volumes are in the original bindings.
Spalding Club Miscellany, vol. 2 (1842), 180-181 (Latin). However, at this time James V's advisors and the Duke of Albany hoped to gain political advantage by contracting the King's marriage to Catherine de' Medici the young Duchess of Urbino. On his way to Rome to meet Albany in December 1531 to further the Urbino marriage with Pope Clement VI,Spalding Miscellany, vol. 2 (1842), 190-192 (text of Erskine's instructions n.
When residing in Florence he became a member of the society called Gli Oziosi. Greatheed was a contributor to the privately printed collection of fugitive pieces of the Gli Oziosi, the Arno Miscellany (Florence, 1784). The following year he contributed to the Florence Miscellany (Florence, 1785), a collection of poems by the Della-Cruscans. Greatheed was termed by William Gifford the Reuben of the Della-Cruscans, in his satirical Baviad and Mæviad.
Poughkeepsie Journal is published in that city. Vassar Miscellany News, associated with Vassar College, is published weekly. Also published in the county is the Beacon Free Press/Southern Dutchess News.
Charles Dickens c. 1837 The Mudfog Papers was written by Charles Dickens and published from 1837 to 1838 in the monthly literary journal Bentley's Miscellany, which he was then editing.
Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Gardens Miscellany, Vol. 6, London (1854). Bentham went on to identify a second species, Lysiloma latisiliquum (L.) Benth., which grows best in the Bahamas.
Sir William Hooker Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany was a scientific journal edited by Sir William Hooker that was published in nine volumes between 1849 and 1857.
In March 1965 in the Vassar Miscellany News it was announced that Ryberg was resigning from the University due to recent health concerns. She died in September 1980 in Gainesville, Florida.
43 The disused railway bridge in 2009 The station closed in 1968. The site has mostly been reclaimed by nature. Only the old railway bridge remains.Hutton, J. Taff Vale Railway Miscellany.
"New Writer in Residence Harmon Follows a Rich Legacy." The Miscellany News, February 20, 2013. Currently, Harmon is associate teaching professor in the Department of Humanities & Arts at Worcester Polytechnic Institute.
By 1872, the paper was renamed the Vassar Miscellany, as it was originally meant to be a mix—or miscellanea—of reporting, essays and poems. Though in its first years the paper published mostly the latter two genres, by the 1890s— with further funding for student organizations from new President of the College James Monroe Taylor—the Miscellany adjusted its focus to journalism. The paper made this transition complete on February 6, 1914, with the historic publication of its first issue as a weekly paper. The newspaper's 150-year history is chronicled in the book Covering the Campus: A History of the Miscellany News at Vassar College, written by Brian Farkas, a member of the Class of 2010 and Editor-in-Chief of its 142nd Volume.
Francis taught for one year in a seminary in Medford, and in 1824 started a private school in Watertown, Massachusetts. In 1826, she founded the Juvenile Miscellany, the first monthly periodical for children published in the United States, and supervised its publication for eight years. After publishing other works voicing her opposition to slavery, much of her audience turned against her, especially in the South. The Juvenile Miscellany closed down after book sales and subscriptions dropped.
In 1990, Bishop David B. Thompson returned the diocesan newspaper to its historic roots, renaming it The New Catholic Miscellany and moving it to Charleston. In March 1995, The Miscellany staff began producing the paper in-house and printing it locally. That same year, the paper won its first national award for excellence. Thompson was presented with the Bishop John England Award by the Catholic Press Association, a group of hundreds of magazines, newspapers and newsletters.
Mee became noted for his writing about history, particularly about Carmarthenshire. His works included Caermarthenshire Notes, and Miscellany for South-West Wales and a history of the Anglican parish church in Llanelli.
For the return trip she passed Saugor on 11 November. In December she loaded the 59th Regiment of Foot and conveyed them to Madras.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Vol. 1, p.525.
Gregor MacGregor (31 August 1869 – 20 August 1919) was a Scottish cricketer and rugby union player. He played rugby for Scotland and cricket for England.Bath, Richard, ed. (2007) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany.
D. MacCulloch (ed. and transl.), 'The Vita Mariae Angliae Reginae of Robert Wingfield of Brantham', Camden Miscellany XXVIII, Camden Society, 4th Series XXIX (1984), pp. 181-301, at pp. 257, 259, 261.
While imprisoned in the Tower he wrote Instructions to a Son (1661). Some of his speeches, including the one delivered on the scaffold, were published and are printed in the Harleian Miscellany.
The parish of Aldermaston forms a group with the local parishes of Wasing and Brimpton. The three share a monthly Parish Magazine featuring stories from churches, organisations, schools, businesses and various miscellany.
He was awarded prize in Bengali and great credit in other departments in the Public Examination at East India Company College.The Asiatic journal and monthly register for British and foreign India #57 on 3 December 1819. Begbie was appointed as Assistant to Magistrate of Northern Division of Bundelcund.The Asiatic journal and monthly register for British India and its dependencies #374 on 16 February 1821. On 10 August 1822 Begbie was appointed as Register of Civil Court of Northern Division of Bundelcund.The Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany #175 He married Margaret Anna (daughter of James Grant) at Allahabad on 30 August 1825.The Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany By East India Company #287 Frances Charlotte was their daughter.thePeerage.com A genealogical survey of the peerage of Britain as well as the royal families of Europe Begbie 26 November 1825 Begbie was appointed Deputy Collector of Banda.The Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany By East India Company #715 His wife died at Humeerpore.The Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany By East India Company #266 on 23 June 1828.
Dudley North wrote A Forest of Varieties (1645), a miscellany of essays and poems, another edition of which was published in 1659 under the title of A Forest promiscuous of various Seasons' Productions.
1741 and 1772. Many interesting letters written by him are printed in the ‘Catholic Miscellany’ for 1826 and 1827. There is a fine picture of him at Chillington, a life size, half length.
A detailed biography of Rutter has been written by A.W. Moore. This can be found in the Manx Note Book vol ii no.8 p159. Rutter's Ballads may be found in Mona Miscellany.
There are examples throughout history of eccentrics living on monotrophic diets. For example, George Sitwell ate only roasted chicken.Shaw, Karl. (2009). Curing Hiccups with Small Fires: A Delightful Miscellany of Great British Eccentrics.
The Civil Engineer and Architect's Journal, Volume 1: Oct. 1837 to Dec. 1838: Miscellany, London: William Laxton, 1838, p. 88. The U.K.'s Mechanics Magazine in March 1838 described it as follows:Roberts, Steven.
The majority of volumes have contained book-length texts (occasionally running into multiple volumes), or thematic groups of shorter texts; but they have also from time to time – both in the two original Camden Society series and in the three RHS Camden Series – been made up of two or more disparate shorter texts, under the series title Camden Miscellany. A total of 36 Miscellany volumes had appeared by 2015. Volumes are now published for the RHS by Cambridge University Press.
The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany reported in its April 1824, issue:The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany for April 1824, p. 473 online at books.google.com (accessed 28 January 2008) The founders included the Duke of Wellington and General Sir John Malcolm,_A Quiet Oasis in the Centre of London – main page of the Oriental Club's official web site (accessed 27 January 2008) and in 1824 all the Presidencies and Provinces of British India were still controlled by the Honourable East India Company.
Miles Kerr- Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 42-3. Stewart also handed out tips and gratuities when James visited the ships and at other times.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020) p. 41. James enjoyed another card game called 'maye' which he played at Kinneil House at Christmas 1588 with Roger Aston.
The Bibliographie de civilisation médiévale (BCM) is a multidisciplinary bibliographic database covering Europe, North Africa and the Middle East for the entire period from AD 300 to 1500. It aims to provide a comprehensive, current bibliography of monographs and listings of miscellany volumes published worldwide between 1958 and 2009. This way, it is compatible with the International Medieval Bibliography, which focuses on individual articles in journals and miscellany volumes. The database currently comprises over 65,000 records on every aspect of the Middle Ages.
Frontispiece and title page to The Merry Thought: or, The Glass-Window and Bog-house Miscellany,The Merry Thought: or, The Glass-Window and Bog-house Miscellany which claimed to include "the Lucubrations of the Polite Part of the World, written upon walls, in Bog- Houses" such as the one at left of the tavern shown Throughout the 18th century, the miscellany was the customary mode through which popular verse and occasional poetry would be printed, circulated, and consumed. Michael F. Suarez, one of the leading authorities on miscellanies, states: Including songbooks, the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature lists almost 5000 verse miscellanies which were printed between 1701 and 1800.George Watson (ed.), The New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature, 5 vols. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1971), II, cols. 341–429.
Angus Cameron (24 June 1929 – 1 April 1991) was a Scottish international rugby union playerBath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ) who played for Glasgow HSFP and Glasgow District.
She had decided to stay over-winter in Norway.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 1-2, 10, 93-4.
Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany, p. 45. Rory Fallon is the only player listed who has represented his country at the World Cup while with the club."Rory Fallon profile". International Federation of Association Football.
Danes (2009), Complete Record, p. 86. :I. : Mariner was the first player to win the award twice, and in consecutive seasons.Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany, p. 24. :J. : Won the award on two occasions. :K.
Only a road bridge marks the site where the platform once stood.Hutton, J. Taff Vale Miscellany. Oxford Publishing Company. 1988 The site of the goods depot (ST019937) is now occupied by a builder's merchant.
"Sisters in a Quest—Sister Carrie and A Thousand Acres: The Search for Identity in Gendered Territory." Midwestern Miscellany 22 (1994): 18–29. Rpt. in Contemporary Literary Criticism. Ed. Jeffrey W. Hunter. Vol. 144.
In 1654 he was made captain of the grey-coated foot-guards, who waited upon the Protector at Whitehall.Dictionary of National Biography volume lv p. 63 citing Cromwelliana, pp. 141, 143; Harleian Miscellany, iii.
H.J.R. Murray, British Chess Magazine, November 1908, Howard Staunton, part I . Retrieved on 2008-12-10.The transformation can be seen at The British Miscellany and Chess Player's Chronicle. Retrieved on 2008-12-10.
Radiocarbon dating of Mesolithic human remains in Ireland. Mesolithic Miscellany, 22(1), 22-41. Discoveries of food byproducts such as bone fragments van Wijngaarden-Bakker, L. H. (1989). Faunal remains and the Irish Mesolithic.
Journal of Botany, being a second series of the Botanical Miscellany 3: 218, Evosmia corymbosa The genus contains only one species, viz. Bothriospora corymbosa, native to Guyana, Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Perú and northern Brazil.
Tayler (1948) A Jacobite Miscellany, Roxburghe Club, p.184 His name was remembered in Scotland in a popular Jacobite air, "Lewie Gordon"; James Hogg identified its author as the Catholic theologian Alexander Geddes (1737-1802).
Public website accessed May 30, July 2, and July 31, 2011. Carpenter, Edwin, H.1973Early Cemeteries of the City of Los Angeles. In, Los Angeles Miscellany, Volume 2. Published by Dawson’s Book Shop, Los Angeles.
Peter Starbuck. A Drucker Miscellany. 2015. p. 119 Another employee was the Frenchman Serge Heranger,John Cunningham Wood, Michael C. Wood. F. W. Taylor: Critical Evaluations in Business and Management, Volume 4. 2002. p. 227.
Wide Awake — First published in Mirth: a miscellany of wit and humour, no.1, 1878. Adapted as the play Tom Cobb (1875). A Stage Play — First published in Hood's Comic Annual, 1873, pp. 98–103.
The Orkney 'Ba' Game', which has been played on Christmas Eve and Hogmanay every year since the mid-19th century, has some similarity to Cornish Hurling.Bruce, Michael (2004) A Scottish Miscellany. Lomond Books. . P. 160.
Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 135-6: Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 56, 65, 73.
Speckle-faced parrot in Ornithological Miscellany Birds described in 1876 include the tooth-billed bowerbird, Heuglin's gull, Chinese white-browed rosefinch, Sclater's crowned pigeon, Pohnpei flycatcher, mountain myzomela, streak-headed honeyeater and Maxwell's black weaver.
Retrieved 28 October 2016. Demos's sister, Dorothy Demetracopoulou, graduated from Vassar College in 1927.RAPHAEL DEMOS TO LECTURE ON PLATO'S SOCIAL PROGRAM. The Vassar Miscellany News, Volume XVIII, No. 39, 11 April 1934, p. 4.
Title page from the second edition of Harleian Miscellany (1753) The Harleian Miscellany is a collection of material from the library of the Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer collated and edited by Samuel Johnson and William Oldys between 1744 and 1753 on behalf of the publisher Thomas Osborne. Its subtitle was A Collection of Scarce, Curious, And Entertaining Pamphlets And Tracts, as well In Manuscript As In Print, Found In The Late Earl Of Oxford's Library, Interspersed With Historical, Political, And Critical Notes.
The Croatian renaissance, strongly influenced by Italian and western European literature, was most fully developed in the coastal areas of Croatia. In the Republic of Ragusa, (today's Dubrovnik), there was a flowering of vernacular lyrical poetry, particularly love poems. One of the most important records of the early works is Nikša Ranjina's Miscellany, a collection of poems, mostly written by Šiško Menčetić and Džore Držić. Poems in the miscellany deal chiefly with the topic of love and are written predominantly in a doubly-rhymed dodecasyllabic meter.
The first printing was in 1545. The standard modern text is Mervin R. Dilts's, of 1974. Two English translations of the Various History, by Fleming (1576) and Stanley (1665) made Aelian's miscellany available to English readers, but after 1665 no English translation appeared, until three English translations appeared almost simultaneously: James G. DeVoto, Claudius Aelianus: Ποικίλης Ἱστορίας (Varia Historia) Chicago, 1995; Diane Ostrom Johnson, An English Translation of Claudius Aelianus' "Varia Historia", 1997; and N. G. Wilson, Aelian: Historical Miscellany in the Loeb Classical Library.
They posit that all feeling is momentary so all past and future pleasure have no real existence for an individual, and that among present pleasures there is no distinction of kind. Claudius Aelianus, in his Historical Miscellany,Aelian, Historical Miscellany 14.6 writes about Aristippus: Some immediate pleasures can create more than their equivalent of pain. The wise person should be in control of pleasures rather than be enslaved to them, otherwise pain will result, and this requires judgement to evaluate the different pleasures of life.
Tornabenea is a genus of plants in the family Apiaceae.Tornabenea in the PlantList The genus was described by Filippo Parlatore in 1850.Filippo Parlatore (1850). Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 2: 370 (1850).
Robert himself had signed some of the letters that were to be cited as evidence.Dickinson, Gladys, ed., 'Report by De La Brosse and D'Oysel,' in Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, no.9, SHS (1958), pp.
Because Brew's horse, Barony Fort, was the fourth and final to complete the Foxhunters, an earlier competition, the horse was permitted to race in the Grand National.White, J. (2009). Horse racing miscellany. London: Carlton Publishing Group.
He gave a piano recital at the Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York on January 9, 1901.(1902-02-06). "The Vassar Miscellany, Volume 30, No. 3, December 1900", pg. 234. Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York.
Fred Hughes was born in Llanelli. Wales, and he was the father of the association footballer of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s for England and Liverpool; Emlyn Hughes.David Lawrenson (2007). "The Rugby League Miscellany [Page-6]".
There customs officers seized her "on the plea of having five slaves on board".Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, (1830), Vol. 1, p.85. On 29 January 1834, Captain John Barker sailed from Portsmouth for Sydney.
366 ; Harleian Miscellany, ed. Park, iii. 485. Oliver Cromwell appointed Sydenham a member of his council, and made him also one of the commissioners of the treasury on 2 August 1654.. Cites: Cal. State Papers, Dom.
James VI of Scotland influenced Jean Lyon to wed Lord Spynie, writing letters to both parties to urge their marriage.Lives of the Lindsays, vol. 1 (London, 1858), pp. 321-3: Miscellany of the Abbotsford Club, vol.
The succeeding son of this couple is further stated by this source to have been named Dubhghall, and is elsewhere attested as an historical landholder in Argyll.Campbell of Airds (2000) p. 49; Miscellany (1926) p. 209.
Often the commercial success of a miscellany would stimulate the publication of similarly titled, parasitic, and even entirely pirated works. Dublin booksellers, outside the jurisdiction of the Statute of Anne (1710) which had established copyright in England, could legally reproduce any popular miscellany that they thought would make a profit. Robert Dodsley’s hugely popular Collection of Poems by Several Hands (1748)Google Books Collection of Poems by Several Hands was copied entirely by Dublin booksellers in 1751, though it also underwent other, more minor piracies in the English literary market – such as unauthorized continuations, supplements, or companion texts attempting to exploit the reputation of the original.Michael F. Suarez, ‘The Production and Consumption of the Eighteenth-Century Poetic Miscellany’ in Isabel Rivers (ed.) Books and Their Readers in Eighteenth- century England: New Essays (London: Leicester University Press, 2001), 217-251, pp. 227-233.
When James VI came to Denmark she gave him a present of 10,000 dalers.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 35.
Her crew ran Emu ashore to prevent her sinking. In late April Podargus arrived to render assistance. After surveying the area, Wallis sailed Podargus into the Knysna and retrieved Emus cargo.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, (1818), Vol.
Twenty- two Gordons were killed,Bannatyne, Richard, Memorials of the Transactions in Scotland (Edinburgh, 1836), p. 194. including John Gordon of Buiky.'Walter Cullen's Chronicle of Aberdeen,' in Stuart, John, ed., Miscellany of the Spalding Club, vol.
His philosophical leanings were a great influence on the early education and political identities of his children and grandchildren.Georg Eisler, "My Father," in Hanns Eisler: A Miscellany, ed. David Blake (New York: Harwood Academic Publishers, 1995), 75.
Diuris picta was first formally described in 1853 by James Drummond and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet (picta) is a Latin word meaning "coloured" or "painted".
On 10 February 1835 Reade was appointed as Joint Magistrate and Deputy Collector of Belah.The Asiatic journal and monthly register for British India and its dependencies #244 On 8 September 1836 he was appointed as Magistrate & Collector of Goruckpore.The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany By East India Company #203 He was given additional responsibility, on 24 October 1836, as Deputy Opium Agent for management of provision of opium in Goruckpore.The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany By East India Company #292 He remained collector of Goruckpore (at least) till October 1844.
Two years after it received its first e-mail address, The Miscellany News went online in 1996. Today—after establishing its own domain independent from the Vassar College Web site in the summer of 2008—the Miscellany updates its site daily with online articles, photo essays, and videos. In the fall of 2009, the paper announced the launch of five blogs, which would complement its regular online and print content. While the print publication has a regular circulation of 1,000 copies, the Web site receives over 14,000 page impressions each week.
The species was described in a letter by Drummond, written to and published by William Jackson Hooker, which was sufficient to give him credit as its author.Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Gardens Miscellany. 5:119 (1853) per Hookers publication of Drummond's description, in his Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany (1853), was preceded by The Perth Gazette in 1852. citing The Perth Gazette, and Independent Journal of Politics and News 23 April 1852 The same newspaper printed a mention of the species, also by Drummond, in 1851.
It was a work of striking originality, and it was remarkable to receive an unsolicited submission like this in the mail. I immediately passed it to one of our editors, who signed it up." Schott's Original Miscellany was published with little fanfare, but after an article in the Guardian, in which the book was described as the book as the "publishing sensation of the year", sales increased, and within weeks Schott's Original Miscellany was at No. 1. Robert McCrum said of the book in The Observer: "Originality is like charisma.
He was there in 1784, studying Italian and lounging with the artistic crowd in the Tribuna, when he embarked upon a literary career by contributing to the Arno Miscellany and, in 1785, to the Florence Miscellany. These were collections of verse by Mrs. Piozzi, Greatheed, Parsons, and Merry, who rapidly became a recognised figure in Florentine society, and a member of the Accademia della Crusca. But his social success, his open liaison with the Countess Cowper, and the rivalry of the Grand-duke Leopold, made him an easy target for slander.
The 1867 poem relates to the arrival of the Galatea with the Duke of Edinburgh on a royal tour of the Australian colonies. Poems with dates were written between 1867 and 1893. :Another notebook has handwritten references to poetry published in the 'Adelaide Miscellany' & 'Observer Miscellany', with the year and issues, with some of her poems, written in another hand, dating from 1868–1875. :(The end of the volume has a draft of a letter written by her son William Strawbridge relating to the New Church.) :Also includes typescripts of poems and single pages.
See The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring dir. Peter Jackson, 2001 Entertainment Weekly called Sam Gamgee one of the "greatest sidekicks."Schott, Ben. Schott's Miscellany Calendar 2009 (New York: Workman Publishing, 2008), March 21.
"Bentley's miscellany". Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith (1853). In late September 1529 Suleiman the Magnificent launched the first Siege of Vienna, which unsuccessfully ended, according to Ottoman historians, with the snowfalls of an early beginning winter.
He also wrote copiously for periodicals, and acted as an editor. With Christopher Smart, he was employed by Thomas Gardner the bookseller to write a monthly miscellany, The Universal Visiter . Rolt died on 2 March 1770, aged 45.
Botanical Miscellany 2: plate LXXVI (76) line drawing of Lopholepis ornithocephala (called Holboellia ornithocephala)Grassbase - The World Online Grass Flora The only known species is Lopholepis ornithocephala, native to Sri Lanka and to India (State of Tamil Nadu).
Miscellany of the Abbotsford Club, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1837), p. 81 Anna may have been "Anna Kaas" who served the queen since her first days in Scotland.Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1589-1593, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), p. 373.
Hawkins and his wife adopted from the workhouse a child, James Chalmers, orphaned after his parents had entered the Poyais project of Gregor MacGregor; he died young.The Phrenological Journal and Miscellany, vol. 7 (1832),p. 14; Google Books.
Hakea meisneriana was first formally described by Richard Kippist in 1855 and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. Named in honour of Swiss botanist Carl Meisner who described many Hakea species.
Many countries declined to adopt the Hague-Visby Rules and stayed with the 1924 Hague Rules.The Jackson Parton Miscellany, 2nd ed. 202 Some other countries which upgraded to Hague-Visby subsequently failed to adopt the 1979 SDR protocol.
The author's manuscript of this miscellany still exists; it was never printed in full in Fauchet's lifetime, though he would recycle parts of it in his later printed works on the history of French poetry and French magistratures.
Calcutta Monthly Journal and General Register ... (1838), pp.494–495.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany (1838), Vol. 27, p.241.] The men on the longboat were later tried at Bombay for having piratically stolen 22 packages of gold leaf.
It is owned by a private firm, and has been maintained in a good condition.Hutton, J. The Taff Vale Railway Miscellany. Oxford Publishing Company. 1988 An old workman's hut still exists, but is now in a very poor condition.
Zoological Miscellany (London: Treuttel, Würtz & Co.) pp. 51—57. (Lophognathus, new genus, p. 53; L. gilberti, new species, p. 53). The species he described, Lophognathus gilberti, was named after English naturalist John Gilbert, the collector of the type specimen.
Hakea gilbertii was first formally described in 1855 by English botanist Richard Kippist and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany This species was named after John Gilbert the English naturalist and explorer.
Hakea megalosperma was first formally described by Carl Meisner in 1855 and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet megalosperma is derived from the Greek "referring to the large seeds".
King Egbert's victory The name Dore derives from the same Old English root as door, signifying a 'gateway' or pass between two kingdoms.Vickers, J. Edward MBE (1999). Dore. In Old Sheffield Town. An Historical Miscellany (2nd ed.), pp64–71.
The London Thornton Manuscript is a medieval manuscript compiled and copied by the fifteenth-century English scribe and landowner Robert Thornton. The manuscript was long considered a miscellany, but is more properly called a collection of spiritual texts.Keiser 177.
Bruguiera gymnorhiza by Frederick Polydore Nodder First published illustration of a platypus, by Frederick Nodder in 1799 Frederick Polydore Nodder (fl. 1770 – c. 1800) was an English illustrator, engraver and painter. Nodder illustrated George Shaw's periodical The Naturalist's Miscellany.
Bassendyne died 3 October 1577, before the work was completed. Among the debts mentioned as owing him in his willprinted from the Commissary Records, Edinburgh, in the Bannatyne Miscellany, ii. 191–204 is a sum of 400l. from Arbuthnot.
"1483-The Year of Three Kings". Retrieved 11 July 2011. Thomas Cranmer was consecrated in St Stephen's Chapel as Archbishop of Canterbury on 30 March, 1533.Stephen Taylor, From Cranmer to Davidson: A Church of England Miscellany (1999, ), p.
Railway station lavatories have never been noted for the luxury of their appointments, but the toilet of the former first class waiting room had a hot-water pipe coursing through the seat.Lambert, A, (2010) Lambert's Railway Miscellany Ebury Publishing.
To these and other works he added over 400 articles to the Dictionary of National Biography, and over 30 to the Encyclopædia Britannica, besides the Camden Miscellany, the English Historical Review, Archaeologia, the Cambridge Medieval History, and the London Topographical Record.
The Woolhope Club still organises a series of field meetings each year, with special interest groups for archaeological research, geology, and natural history. To mark the 150th anniversary of the club a book, A Herefordshire Miscellany, was published in 2000.
"Miscellany, June 15, 1942". (cited 2/28/2011). Upon retirement George Utley and his wife left Chicago and returned to his native Connecticut. He spent the next four years there until his death in Pleasant Valley on October 4, 1946.
Micrandra is a plant genus of the family Euphorbiaceae first described in 1854.Bentham, George. 1854. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 6: 371-372 descriptions in Latin, commentary in EnglishTropicos Micrandra Benth. It is native to South America.
Cephalosorus is a genus of flowering plants in the daisy family.Gray, Asa. 1851. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 3: 98, 152 in LatinTropicos, Cephalosorus A. Gray There is only one known species, Cephalosorus carpesioides, endemic to Western Australia.
Eddy, "Reply to McClure's Magazine," The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany, pp. 308–316. It became the key source for most non-church histories of the religion.Bercovitch 2005, p. 530ff; ; Gill 1998, p. 567; Gardner 1993, p. 41.
He also started a humor section (called "Miscellany") in Economic Inquiry during his tenure as editor. McAfee is also the author of a textbook on business strategy, Competitive Solutions: The Strategist's Toolkit, with insights for managers based on microeconomic foundations.
Although the late mediaeval Hystoria Fundacionis Prioratus Insule de Traile claims that Fergus founded the priory of St Mary's Isle,McDonald (1995) p. 199; Cowan; Easson (1976) p. 96; Gordon (1868) pp. 204–206; The Bannatyne Miscellany (1836) pp. 19–20.
He re-joined the college when Rev. Bicknell was appointed principal. Astronomy had been a hobby of Abraham's throughout his life. He wrote several articles on the subject for the Morning Star, Jaffna College Miscellany and the Royal Astronomical Society.
Banksia candolleana was first formally described in 1855 by the Swiss botanist Carl Meissner in William Jackson Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany from specimens collected by James Drummond. The specific epithet honours Meissner's countryman Augustin Pyramus de Candolle.
The Scots Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany. Remarks on the Edinburgh Exhibition of Painting, 1815, pg 334. Kidd later apprenticed with Gavin Beugo, a house painter and decorator. David Roberts, R.A. was a fellow-apprentice of Beugo and lifelong friend.
Whilst at Oxford, King was a member of the Football XI. He represented the team in the 1880 FA Cup Final.Paul Brown, The Victorian Football Miscellany (2013), p. 92.Final 1880 on FA-Cup Finals. Retrieved on 20 May 2020.
In September 1594 James VI gave them gold chains worth 1000 French crowns as a parting gift.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 77.
34, 89. Sinclair stayed with the king in Denmark and handed out rewards to shipbuiders in Copenhagen.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 37, 42.
Waring founded an English-language periodical, The Cambrian Visitor: a Monthly Miscellany at Swansea in January 1813, but it had to close in August that year.Photograph of document. Retrieved 25 April 2019. He moved to Neath in the following year.
Pimelea ammocharis was first formally described in 1857 by Ferdinand von Mueller and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet (ammocharis) is derived from ammos meaning "sand" and charis meaning "grace".
In 1817 O'Brien was reinstated in the Navy. He contested the court-martial with one of his grounds being that every member of the board was junior to him. Weir then assumed command of Cornwallis.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Vol.
Retrieved 16 February 2011. In February 1918, it discarded its miscellany of aircraft to standardise on the more capable Sopwith Camel fighter, continuing to defend Kent. By October 1918, it was operating its Camels as night fighters.Lewis 1959, p. 34.
670-674; also found in Texas Scrap-Book – Made up of the History, Biography, and Miscellany of Texas and its People, compiled by D. W. C. Baker, A. S. Barnes & Company, 1875, pp. 30-34; also printed in Frontier Times, Vol.
The longboat arrived at Saint Helena on 12 February after a voyage of over 1400 miles. An East Indiaman then took the survivors on to England.Lloyd's List №5380.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany ..., Volume 9 (April 1820), pp.388-9.
Robert Merry travelled to Florence where he edited two volumes, The Arno Miscellany (1784) and The Florence Miscellany (1785), the latter of which could be said to have started the Della Cruscan phenomena. It was a collaboration between English and Italian poets and contained poems in English, Italian, and French. The name is taken from the Florentine Accademia della Crusca, an organization founded in 1583 to "purify" the Italian language. Bertie Greatheed's "The Dream" opens the collection with an indictment of the current deplorable state of poetry and calls for a return to a Miltonic style.
In 1820 Ollier brought out Ollier's Literary Miscellany, with an article on the German drama by Julius Hare, and The Four Ages of Poetry by Thomas Love Peacock. The latter provoked Shelley's A Defence of Poetry, given to Ollier for the second part of the Miscellany, which never appeared. When Ollier's business was wound up shortly afterwards, the Defence came into the possession of John Hunt; he prepared it for publication in The Liberal, but that periodical also expired before it could be published. Ollier became, and long continued as, a literary adviser to Richard Bentley.
A patterned page from the Trevelyon Miscellany of 1608 Most medieval miscellanies include some religious texts, and many consist of nothing else. A few examples are given here to illustrate the range of material typically found. The Theological miscellany (British Library, MS Additional 43460) was made in late 8th century Italy with 202 folios of patristic writings in Latin. The 9th-century Irish Book of Armagh is also mostly in Latin but includes some of the earliest surviving Old Irish writing, as well as several texts on Saint Patrick, significant sections of the New Testament, and a 4th-century saint's Life.
Forster was nominated for a Grammy for his work producing Tom Chapin's 1998 album In My Hometown. Beginning in 1999, Forster began working on a collaborative album with Chapin. This album, entitled Broadsides: A Miscellany of Musical Opinion, was released in 2010.
252, 256-7, 277. He was given 666 Danish dalers from the queen's dowry to fund this diplomatic mission.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 36.
Louise Wetherbee Phelps and Janet Ennig. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press (1995), p. 261. Barbauld also collaborated with her brother John Aikin on the six-volume series Evenings at Home (1793). It is a miscellany of stories, fables, dramas, poems, and dialogues.
M. W. Farr, 1959 # Tradesmen in early-Stuart Wiltshire : a miscellany, ed. N. J. Williams, 1960 # Crown pleas of the Wiltshire eyre, 1249, ed. C. A. F. Meekings, 1961 # Wiltshire apprentices and their masters, 1710–1760, ed. Christabel Dale, 1961 # Hemingby's register, ed.
The Gentleman's Journal, or Monthly Miscellany, November 1692, cited in Rimbault's edition, London: Musical Antiquarian Society Publications, 1848, p. 2. It has been suggested that Purcell himself was the countertenor soloist, but this appears to be a misunderstanding of a contemporary account.
Lopholepis is a genus of South Asian plants in the grass family.Decaisne, Joseph. 1839. Archives du Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle 1: 147 in French, in footnoteHooker, William Jackson. 1831. Botanical Miscellany 2: 144-146 descriptions in Latin, commentary in EnglishHooker, William Jackson. 1831.
Both of these presenters have re-joined the Dublin City FM line-up with Jazz Mine ( Saturdays 5PM ) and Midweek Music Miscellany ( Wednesday morning 11.30 ) presented and produced by Sean Brophy while The Soul Kitchen ( with Chris Maher ) airs Thursdays at 10PM.
The intersection of Lonesome and Hardup was ranked as the fourth wackiest street intersection name, according to a 2006 poll by the Car Connection website.See the entry for September 19 on Ben Scott, Schott's Miscellany Calendar 2009 (New York: Workman Publishing Company, 2008).
An entire chapter is devoted to a discussion of role-playing and various wizard-character stereotypes, and a "Wizardly Lists" miscellany is included at the end of the book. Other sections detailed in the book include "Combat and the Wizard" and "Spell Commentary".
Its signal box was taken out of use in 1965 Passenger closure followed in 1968 when the line was truncated at Penarth . No trace of the station survives. The site is now occupied by a telephone exchange.Hutton, J. Taff Vale Railway Miscellany.
Bentley's Miscellany, Volume 45]: Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith, eds. London: Richard Bentley, New Burlington St., 1859.Rev. F. Jacox, About Ejuxria and Gombroon: Glimpses of Day-Dreamland. In Cues from All Quarters, Or, The Literary Musings of a Clerical Recluse.
The Pitcairn Miscellany is a monthly newspaper available in print and online editions. Dem Tull was an online monthly newsletter published between 2007 and 2016. ; Telecommunications: Pitcairn uses New Zealand's international calling code, +64. It is still on the manual telephone system.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 77-8, 87. In 1596 Bille was again sent as ambassador to Scotland, and arrived at Dunbar on 10 June.
"Sporting Miscellany", The Baltimore Sun, pg. 6, 12 April 1897 On December 21, 1897, Matthews won a twenty-round points decision against Mike Leonard at the Rienzi Athletic Club in Rochester, New York. Leonard faced most of the better welterweights of his day.
The obovate leaves are usually 15 to 60 mm long and 2.5 to 8 mm wide. The species was first formally described by Carl Meissner in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855, from material collected by James Drummond.
The club won the Southern League championship in 1913 and finished as runners-up on two occasions,Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany, p. 42. before being elected to the Football League in 1920, where they compete to this day,"Plymouth Argyle" . The Football League.
1 (Edinburgh, 1858), p. 94: Maitland Miscellany, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1833), pp. 101-102. The Regent tried to insist to the minister James Lawson that Gourlay should not be punished, and publicly declared he had allowed Gourlay to export cereals despite the scarcity.
207; Campbell (1911) p. 278. Dubhghall's son-in-law, a man also named Dubhghall, is identified by the Craignish History as the third of the name to represent the Craignish Caimbéalaigh.Campbell of Airds (2000) pp. 47–49; Miscellany (1926) pp. 200–207.
Liu was born in Beijing, China. He attended high school at Shanghai High School and received his bachelor degree from Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York. While in college, he was the managing editor of the campus daily, the Vassar Miscellany News.
According to a poll conducted by Public Policy Polling in September 2013, Tomblin had an approval rating of 47 percent with 35 percent disapproving, up from 44 percent in 2011.Jensen, Tom (September 25, 2013) – "West Virginia Miscellany". Public Policy Polling. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
3 (London, 1889), pp. 400-1, 427. Sophie's loan or gift was recorded in an account made by John Maitland of Thirlestane.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 35.
The volume included his imaginative study A Nonsense Miscellany, a seaside scene that incorporated Baron Munchausen, Struwwelpeter, and a variety of characters from the works of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear. Folkard was still actively illustrating 10 days before his death in February 1963.
According to a later chronicle, the History of the Estate of Scotland, the besiegers' guns were placed at the same distance of "twoe fflight shott" from South Leith church as Mount Pelham. The chronicle calls the location "Clayhills".Wodrow Miscellany, vol.1 (1844), p.84.
Arcady Ensemble has recorded five albums including three under the Crescendo label: A Baroque Messiah (1999), Welcome Yule! (2001), and the opera Ruth (2007); one album under Phoenix Records: A Beckett Miscellany (2002); and a holiday album for Ruby Productions: Peace on Earth (2000).
Hyalochlamys is a genus of Australian flowering plants in the daisy family.Gray, Asa. 1851. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 3: 98, 101-102 genus description in Latin, species description and commentary in EnglishShort, P. S. (1983). A revision of Angianthus Wendl.
"How Good is Noel Coward?", The Daily Express, 11 October 1934, p. 8 In 1935 a production was planned at a small provincial theatre with a reputation for staging new works, but the plans were not realised."Miscellany", The Manchester Guardian, 2 December 1935, p.
Lovecraft Remembered is a collection of memoirs about American writer H. P. Lovecraft, edited by Peter Cannon. It was released in 1998 by Arkham House in an edition of 3,579 copies. Nearly all the memoirs from previous Arkham publications of Lovecraft miscellany are included.
Thesis, Mangalore University, 1991. On returning to India Chettur was appointed Principal of Government College, Mangalore in 1922. In 1925 he married Subhadra Chettur, the youngest daughter of Appu Nedungadi. He founded and edited A Government College Miscellany, a college literary and artistic magazine.
Hutton, J. Taff Vale Railway Miscellany. 1988. Oxford Publishing Company. The Great Western Railway downgraded the station to a halt in 1935, a fate shared by most other stations on the branch. It closed in 1954, fourteen years before the rest of the branch.
Lord of the Dance, A Moncreiffe Miscellany, edited by Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd encompassed his genealogical world-view.Debrett's Peerage Limited, London, 1986. He was elected a Fellow of the American Society of Genealogists in 1969. He was an incorrigible snob; he even called himself Master Snob.
19 part 1 p.213, and Maitland Miscellany, vol.4. pp. 94-5, 98-9. He took part in the unsuccessful embassy to England in November 1560 to treat for the marriage of Elizabeth I of England to James Hamilton, 3rd Earl of Arran.
Some neighbours were furious and Buckley was forced by three priests to go on his knees and burn the book in his own fireplace. Cross was one of the contributors of spoken essays to the RTÉ Radio series Sunday Miscellany.Walsh, Ronnie, ed. (1975) Sunday Miscellany.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588–1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 77–8, 87. The ambassadors' departure in three great ships with a salvo of 60 cannon shots was noted by William Fowler.
Another Joseon document, Literary Miscellany of Seongho, states that the poor used soybean sprouts to make juk (rice porridge). According to Complete Works of Cheongjanggwan, an essay collection from the Joseon era, soybean sprout was one of the main foods consumed during times of famine.
Peter Wyatt Kininmonth (23 June 1924 – 5 October 2007) was a Scottish international rugby union player, who played for and the Lions.Bath, Richard (ed.) (2007) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany. Vision Sports Publishing Ltd. . p. 118 He also played for Oxford University and Richmond RFC.
Vermilacinia tuberculata is a fruticose lichen known only from Morro Bay along the Pacific Coast of CaliforniaSpjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14 The epithet tuberculata is reference to the tuberculate surface of the lichen.
The genus was first described by Nathanael Matthaeus von Wolf in 1776 and currently has approximately 350 species. Eragrostis setifolia was classified as a species by Nees in 1843.Hooker, W. J. (Ed.). (1843). Hooker's journal of botany and Kew Garden miscellany (Vol. 1).
When the French vessel Titus arrived on her way to Chandernagow and Bengal, Captain Beck picked up the castaways and took them with him. Titus and her passengers arrived safely in Calcutta around 7 August.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Vol. 5 (February 1818), p.196.
Yellowwood was first formally described in 1830 by Charles Fraser from an unpublished manuscript by Allan Cunningham who gave it the name Oxleya xanthoxyla. The description was published in William Jackson Hooker's Botanical Miscellany. In 1927 Karel Domin changed the name to Flindersia xanthxyla.
Other volumes followed in 1685, 1693, 1694, 1703, and 1708, and the collection, which was several times reprinted, is known as both as Dryden's Miscellany and Tonson's Miscellany. During the ensuing year Tonson continued to bring out pieces by Dryden, and on 6 October 1691 paid thirty guineas for all the author's rights in the printing of the tragedy of Cleomenes. Joseph Addison's Poem to his Majesty was published by Tonson in 1695, and there was some correspondence respecting a proposed joint translation of Herodotus by Boyle, Richard Blackmore, Addison, and others. Dryden's translation of Virgil, executed between 1693 and 1696, was published by Tonson in July 1697 by subscription.
Writing anonymously to conceal his dissent, he published a short tract entitled "Some Miscellany Observations On our present Debates respecting Witchcrafts, in a Dialogue Between S. & B." The authors were listed as "P. E. and J. A." (Philip English and John Alden), but the work is generally attributed to Willard. In it, two characters, S (Salem) and B (Boston), discuss the way the proceedings were being conducted, with "B" urging caution about the use of testimony from the afflicted and the confessors, stating, "whatever comes from them is to be suspected; and it is dangerous using or crediting them too far".Some Miscellany , etext.lib.virginia.
In 1794, Karamzin abandoned his literary journal and published a miscellany in two volumes entitled Aglaia, in which appeared, among other stories, The Island of Bornholm and Ilya Muromets, the latter a story based on the adventures of the well-known hero of many a Russian legend. From 1797 to 1799, he issued another miscellany or poetical almanac, The Aonides, in conjunction with Derzhavin and Dmitriev. In 1798 he compiled The Pantheon, a collection of pieces from the works of the most celebrated authors ancient and modern, translated into Russian. Many of his lighter productions were subsequently printed by him in a volume entitled My Trifles.
Bentley's Miscellany, second edition of March 1837 Memoirs of Grimaldi, originally by Joseph Grimaldi but heavily revised by Dickens, under his regular , "Boz", and published by Bentley In October 1836, Bentley entered the periodical market. He founded Bentley's Miscellany, which first appeared in January 1837, and selected Charles Dickens, known at the time for his Pickwick Papers, as editor. Dickens also agreed to contribute a serialised novel to the periodical and to sell two novels to Bentley. The periodical was "an immediate success" – 11,000 copies were sold in 1837 – largely as a result of the serialisation of Dickens's Oliver Twist, illustrated by George Cruikshank.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 93-4: Miles Kerr-Peterson, A Protestant Lord in James VI's Scotland (Boydell, 2019), p. 51: HMC Salisbury Hatfield, vol. 3 (London, 1889), p. 438.
We therefore shake our heads and say 'Ah! You should have seen Grimaldi!'""You Should have seen Grimaldi", Bentley's Miscellany, Issue 19, 24 May 1846, pp. 160–61 Another writer commented that his performances elevated his role by "acute observation upon the foibles and absurdities of society.
Hemingway authorized his own currency, which he called the "scruple". It consisted of trinkets such as fish hooks, carob beans, shark teeth, and other miscellany. A flag was sewn by Doris Hemingway, which, along with other memorabilia, was donated to the Harry Ransom Center in 1966.
She attended Chapel Hill High School and Vassar College. At Vassar, she was an English major and prolific writer for the school newspaper The Miscellany News, serving as features editor and editor in chief during her senior year. Walker lived in London for a year after college.
On 29 June 1835 Adonis, Hawks, master, was sailing from Mauritius to China when she wrecked on a reef near the Maldives and her crew abandoned her. The specie she was carrying and her crew were saved.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany (March 1836), Vol. 19, p.231.
The regulation appears among a brief miscellany of regulations concerning ethical behaviour, covering issues such as consideration of the deaf, an "evil tongue", not bearing grudges, the impartiality of justice, and leaving gleanings for the poor demonstrate similar concerns against exploiting individuals, but focus on different issues.
The Aphyllophorales is an obsolete order of fungi in the Basidiomycota. The order is entirely artificial, bringing together a miscellany of species now grouped among the clavarioid fungi, corticioid fungi, cyphelloid fungi, hydnoid fungi, and poroid fungi.Kirk PM et al. (2008). Dictionary of the Fungi (10th Ed.).
He was an ardent lover of literature, and published in 1830 a volume of poems entitled Antediluvian Sketches. This was highly praised and was followed in 1840 by the Gipsy King and other poems. Many of Howitt's poems appeared first in Tait's Magazine and William Dearden's Miscellany.
The journal is a series of peer-reviewed scientific papers and is a source of information about current research in botany worldwide. Botanical Miscellany is published as an occasional series of monographs in which each edition is devoted entirely to a comprehensive study of one topic.
Retrieved 8 September 2010. :R. : Holds club record for appearances made; eighth overall for goals scored.Cowdery & Curno (2009), Miscellany, p. 157. :S. Won the Player of the Year award three times. :T. : McElhinney led the club to promotion from the Third Division in the 1985–86 season.
So he left his job at Revlon. While writing he made radio documentaries to generate funds to feed his family. Among these are Singing Ark (which won a Jacobs Award) and the Dylan Thomas documentary Flowering Flood. He featured on RTÉ Radio 1's Sunday Miscellany.
Decimus Valerius Asiaticus (around 5 BCP.J. Sijpesteijn, "Another οὐσία of Decimus Valerius Asiaticus in Egypt", Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 79 (1989), p. 19347 AD,Alston, Aspects of Roman History AD 14-117, p. 92 ) was a prominent Roman SenatorWiseman, Talking to Virgil: A Miscellany, p.
The first, produced by Richard Bentley, the owner of Bentley's Miscellany, appeared in July 1841, as a 3-volume set illustrated by George Cruikshank. Two American editions and a French edition were published in the same year. Routledge published three further editions, in 1842, 1857, and 1878.
Civil Defence stalwarts receive rare honour, 10 March 2011. The medal was awarded in Hong Kong until the territory was transferred to China in 1997.M.A.Tamplin. Hong Kong: A summary of Long Service Medals ending 1997. Miscellany of Honours number 11, 1997, page 24, Autumn 1987.
Scrub leopardwood was first formally described in 1857 by Ferdinand von Mueller who published the description in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany and gave the plant the name Strzeleckya dissosperma. In 1929, Karel Domin changed the name to Flindersia dissosperma in Bibliotheca Botanica.
Stow, John, and Mottley, John "A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster, Borough of Southwark, and Parts Adjacent" pg. 46 Aubrey had both men, along with five other rioters, beheaded without trial and their heads mounted on London Bridge.Bentley, Richard "Bentley's Miscellany, Vol. 5" pg.
Arethusa, a naiad like Kyane, is associated with a spring and pool in Syracuse (Siracusa); Kyane is said to dwell in a river bearing her name in southeastern Sicily. She had as a partner the river god Anapos (or Anapis).Aelian, Historical Miscellany 2. 33Nonnus, Dionysiaca 6.
261–264, 290–2, & 324 in Brent, Joseph (1998), Charles Sanders Peirce: A Life, 2nd edition. Peirce in turn wrote in 1906Peirce, C.S., "The Founding of Pragmatism", manuscript written 1906, published in The Hound & Horn: A Harvard Miscellany v. II, n. 3, April–June 1929, pp.
Appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in the 1959 New Years Honours, Burrell was raised to vice admiral on 24 February and became First Naval Member, the Chief of the Naval Staff (CNS). He succeeded Vice Admiral Sir Roy Dowling.Rose, The Navy Miscellany, pp.
'Register of the Kirk Session of Stirling', Maitland Miscellany, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1833), p. 131 She had inventories of the contents and furnishings of Brechin Castle made in 1611 and 1622.Michael Pearce, 'Approaches to Household Inventories and Household Furnishing, 1500–1650', Architectural Heritage XXVI (2015), p.
"Juan Zurita Stops Belloise in Fourth", The Fresno Bee, Fresno California, pg. 31, 1 February 1945 Zurita died on Thursday, March 23, 2000 in Mexico City after being in a coma for several days. He was 82."Miscellany", The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, California, pg.
Many of these soldiers wore green and white Tudor colours. Surrey marched to Doncaster in July and then Pontefract, where he assembled more troops from northern England.J. D. Mackie, 'The English Army at Flodden' in Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, vol.8 (Edinburgh 1951), pp.
The postwar immigrants founded the Belarusian Congress Committee of America here in 1951. In the 1950s they reestablished the Belarusian Orthodox parish of St. Eufrasinnia, that previously existed in Germany. A Belarusian cemetery was opened in 1953, that houses also Radasłaŭ Astroŭski.South River, A Belarus Miscellany.
About an equal number of Hilo's inhabitants lost their lives. From 21 November to 1 December she was at Honolulu with 800 barrels. Reportedly Admiral Cockburn put into Oahu after her crew refused to do any more duty.The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany (June 1838), Vol.
Specimens of Lagetta lagetto, the lacebark tree, together with a sample of lacebark cloth and a whip made using lacebark. Plate IV from William Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany, vol. II, 1850. Lagetta lagetto is a small, narrow, pyramidal tree, growing between tall.
Hood's Magazine and Comic Miscellany was a monthly journal originally published by Thomas Hood. A total of 61 issues were published from January 1844 to June 1849. Hood made most of the original material for it. After his death in 1845, Charles Rowcroft became the editor.
However, the Jephson family's historian provides no evidence of this.Maurice Denham Jephson, An Anglo-Irish Miscellany, Allen Figgis, Dublin, 1964. The family lived in England in genteel poverty; Roger's mother died when he was nine. They returned to Ireland to County Antrim to live near paternal relatives.
Amblyopappus is a genus in the daisy family described as a genus in 1841.Hooker, William Jackson & Arnott, George Arnott Walker . 1841. Journal of Botany, being a second series of the Botanical Miscellany 3(22): 321-322 descriptions in Latin, commentary in EnglishTropicos, Amblyopappus Hook. & Arn.
The characteristics of the style, described by Murray as a "miscellany of grammatical eccentricities, convoluted sentences, neologisms, and verbal fetishisms", are by themselves enough to set Pierre off as "a curiosity of literature."Murray, Henry A. (1949). "Introduction" and "Explanatory Notes." Herman Melville, 'Pierre; or, the Ambiguities.
A Literary and Pictorial Miscellany. Advertisement for "Memoirs of Harriette Wilson". London: 1839. p.88 He remained at that address from 1839 until the late 1860s; although a couple of printer notices list addresses of 11 Holywell St. in 1842 and 5 Holywell St. in 1857.
Unfortunately, the Miscellany was never published. Only the Royal National Theatre in Belgrade produced two of Vujić's works on the occasion of its 30th anniversary, thus paying homage to the "father of the Serbian theatre". Between the two world wars, his works were not staged in Serbian professional theatres.
In the 19th century, a waste book entitled the Promus of Formularies and EleganciesBritish Library MS Harley 7017. A transcription can be found in Durning-Lawrence, Edward, Bacon is Shakespeare (Gay & Hancock, London 1910). was discovered. It contained 1,655 hand written proverbs, metaphors, aphorisms, salutations and other miscellany.
The British label Signum Classics released a recording of the "Oriental Miscellany" in 2015 featuring the harpsichordist Jane Chapman. It received international attention. Jane Chapman had studied the music in a project supported by the Leverhulme Trust. She played a 1722 Jacob Kirckman instrument in the Horniman Museum, London.
Sir Edward Lake's Account of His Interviews With Charles I. On Being Created A Baronet, And Receiving An Augmentation To His Arms, edited by T. P. Taswell-Langmead for Camden Society's Miscellany. vol. iv, 1858.p.19. He was not given back his lands but was given a baronetcy.
Lt.-Col. George Alexander Walker Lamond (23 July 1878 - 25 February 1918) was a Scotland international rugby union player.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany, p. 109. (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ) He later joined the British army as an officer, but he died during World War I.
Francis and Eliza was at the Cape in late July, and on 31 August was at St Helena. She arrived at Mounts Bay, Ireland, on 8 October, under the command of Captain Kennedy. William Harrison had died on the voyage.The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, (November 1816), Vol.
Diodontium is a genus of flowering plants in the daisy family.Mueller, Ferdinand Jacob Heinrich von. 1857. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 9: 19 There is only one known species, Diodontium filifolium, native to Australia (Western Australia, Queensland, and Northern Territory).The Plant List Diodontium filifolium F.Muell.
The species was first formally described by Bruce Maslin in 1992 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany. Review of Acacia victoriae and related species (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: Section Phyllodineae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. The only synonym is Racosperma alexandri as described by Leslie Pedley in 2003.
Oldfieldia is a plant genus under the family Picrodendraceae, the only member of its subtribe (Paiveusinae). It was described as a genus in 1850.Bentham, George & Hooker, Joseph Dalton. 1850. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 2: 184-186 description in Latin, commentary in EnglishTropicos, Oldfieldia Benth.
Coleocoma is a genus of flowering plants in the daisy family.Mueller, Ferdinand Jacob Heinrich von. 1857. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 9: 19-20 in LatinTropicos, Coleocoma F. Muell. There is only one known species, Coleocoma centaurea, native to Western Australia and the adjacent Northern Territory.
His work has been broadcast on RTÉ Radio 1's The Book On One, Sunday MiscellanySunday Miscellany 24 November 2013, RTE. and the Francis McManus Award series.Francis McManus short story, RTE, 2 November 2015. In 2017, Ploughshares published O'Callaghan's story A Death in the Family as a Ploughshares Solo.
Honor Virtutis Praemium (London, printed by William Stansby, 1614), in T. Park (comp. & ed.), Contents of the Harleian Miscellany, New Edition, Vol X, 2nd Supplementary Volume, (White and Cochrane/John Murray, London 1813), pp. 1-11, at p. 10. It has been mistakenly referred to as her epitaph.
Mary Hutton was an English labouring class writer from Yorkshire. Born in Wakefield on 10 July 1794, she moved to Sheffield when young and spent most of her life there. She was the author of three poetry collections, the last of which was a miscellany of prose and verse.
20 The station closed in 1918, after a mere fourteen years. No trace remains of the station today. The Llandough Sidings no longer exist, and the site was wasteground by the late 1980s, with the location of Llandough Platform marked by a signpost.Hutton, J. The Taff Vale Railway Miscellany.
Though the publication started out covering both agriculture and literature, it eventually became a "home literary miscellany."Mott, Frank Luther. A History of American Magazine, 1865-1885, p. 99 (1938) It did serialize some notable works including Edward Payson Roe's A Chestnut Burr and Edward Eggleston's The Hoosier Schoolmaster.
Other notable pieces include "Dolce sogno, deh le porta" and "Volgendo, a me lo sguardo" for Gualtiero. These three arias were very popular and were reprinted, for example in Richard Neale’s A Pocket Companion for Gentlemen and Ladies (London, 1724) and in The British Musical Miscellany (London, 1735).
7 (Edinburgh, 1966), pp.189-90 no. 1264. In 1588 James VI gave him a gift of 20 French gold crowns, and a further £200 in October.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p.
Hakea flabellifolia was first formally described in 1855 by Swiss botanist Carl Meisner and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. It is named from the Latin flabellum-small fan and folium-a leaf, referring to the fan shaped appearance of the leaves.
Gott was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1887 to Edward Alonzo Gott and Stephanie Ortman.Stites, M. Susan and Lea Ann Sterling, Historic Cottages of Mackinac Island. 2001. p.127. He attended Detroit University School, a predecessor of University Liggett School in Grosse Pointe Woods, Michigan.D.U.S. Miscellany. 1905. p.
The Naval Chronicle, 1805 Vol. 14, p. 182 Bazely never again served on active duty, retiring to Edinburgh and gradually advancing as a retired admiral until he reached the rank of full admiral shortly before his death in April 1809.The Scots Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany, 1809 Vol.
According to the eighteenth-century Craignish History, a daughter of Dubhghall married a member of the Craignish branch of the Caimbéalaigh kindred (the Campbells).Campbell of Airds (2000) pp. 47–49; Argyll: An Inventory of the Monuments (1992) p. 258 § 119; Simpson (1960) pp. 12–13; Miscellany (1926) p.
The review was founded in 1907 with the name of Revista de Estudios Franciscanos (1907–11).With the occasion of its centenary, Valentí Serra de Manresa made a balance of the review in an article that was published in the review itself: Valentí Serra de Manresa, Un segle d'aportacions al franciscanisme de la Revista Estudios Franciscanos (1907–2007), EF 109 (2008). 225–254. Since then it has had different names: Estudios Franciscanos (1912–22), Estudis Franciscans (1923–36) and then again Estudios Franciscanos (since 1947). Some special volumes have been published separately: Homenaje al cardenal Vives y Tutó (Homage to Cardinal Vives y Tutó) (1913), Miscel·lània tomista (Thomist Miscellany) (1924), Franciscàlia (1928), and Miscel·lània lul·liana (Lullist Miscellany) (1935).
Nikša Ranjina's Miscellany is nowadays chiefly mentioned with regard to Menčetić's and Držić's name, which is in fact misleading. Had not Ragusan noblemen compiled his manuscript, their poems would still be known from younger sources. Ranjina's Miscellany is above all an important source of anonymous texts it has preserved and which do not make appearance in other sources. Without it, an insight into the production of smaller poets from the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th century, not known by name nowadays and probably not all that important, could not have been gained, and that insight is valuable for establishing the type, dynamics and the development of the contemporary Dubrovnik literary life.
Mr. Dickens wrote the first numbers to his plates. / Seymour was one of the greatest artists since the days of Hogarth" (1697–1764). [Franklins Miscellany, 1836]. "The head of the production of two clever artists …the one, a long established favourite; the other, Mr. Seymour, a gentleman of far superior talent.
Phil Young is a native of Dunmanway in west Cork and now lives in Dublin. She graduated from Trinity College, Dublin, with an MPhil in Anglo-Irish literature, has had a number of short stories and articles published in various magazines and has featured on the RTÉ radio programme 'Sunday Miscellany'.
The manuscripts from the Brogyntyn Library include a medieval psalter and a version of Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniæ, both from the thirteenth century, a fifteenth century miscellany in Middle English, a volume of the Welsh laws of Hywel Dda, and pedigrees, genealogy and heraldry of families in Wales.
To William Douglas, Earl of Morton, she wrote news of Charles I and Parliament, and the death of her daughter Anne, Countess of Warwick, in 1638.Miscellany of the Maitland Club, vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1843), pp. 363-5, the original letters are in the National Library of Scotland, Morton Papers.
The Register-Guard. Oct 19, 2010 He was named senior class president in 1966.Miscellany. The Register-Guard. Nov 1, 1987 After graduation, Jernstedt spent two years in private business and then joined the athletic department at his alma mater, where he served in administrative positions between 1969 and 1972.
He returned to the club after the Second World War to work as a trainer and a scout, and later caretaker manager. Skyes died in Morriston Hospital on 4 September 1974 at the age of 76.Carra, Chris (2015). Swansea City Miscellany: Swansea Trivia, History, Facts and Stats (1st ed.).
The Sketchbook includes in its miscellany musings on Shakespeare, old folk tales, reflections on sea voyages, on literary celebrities, and much more besides his American tales. See Irving 1906. and choosing to focus entirely on Irving's observations of English life that occupy the greater portion of the collection.Hazlitt 1930, vol.
Miletić's miscellany is considered as the oldest known songbook of urban poetry. Miletić has recorded a famous ballad "Omer and Merima" only five or six years after Alberto Fortis recorded it for the first time. He has also recorded a text of the poem Pašhalija composed by Jovan Avakumović in 1775.
Born in Wales to a Welsh mother and a Sierra Leonean father, Wilson played rugby union for Cardiff RFC as a fly-half before moving north to play professionally in rugby league. Wilson once scored five drop goals in a match for Swinton.David Lawrenson (2007). "The Rugby League Miscellany [Page-6]".
Scotland, vol. 12 (Edinburgh, 1970), 128–134: Holinshed, Raphael, Chronicles: Scotland, vol. 5 (London, 1808), 634: Bannatyne Miscellany, vol.1, Edinburgh (1827), 23–29, 'Progress of the Regent of Scotland', from a manuscript now in the National Library of Scotland: CSP. Scotland, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1900), nos. 700, 703, 716, 717.
207 ff., at p. 222 (Google).K. Fincham (ed.), 'Annual accounts of the Church of England, 1632–39', in M. Barber, G. Sewell and S. Taylor (eds), From the Reformation to the Permissive Society: A Miscellany in Celebration of the 400th Anniversary of Lambeth Palace Library (Boydell and Brewer, 2010), pp.
It is a large collection of small tables, with some seven-figure logarithms. This he dedicated to William Jones. The same year he started the publication of The Mathematical Miscellany, containing analytical and algebraic solutions of a large number of problems in various branches of mathematics. His preface to vol.
1 O'Connell escaped punishment but three of his teammates – Sandy Turnbull, Arthur Whalley and Enoch West – and four Liverpool players later received lifetime suspensions from The Football Association.The Man Utd Miscellany (2007) Andy Mitten During the war, O'Connell remained a United player and also guested for Clapton Orient, Rochdale and Chesterfield.
281 At RAF Habbaniya, No. 4 Flying Training School RAF (4FTS) had a miscellany of obsolescent bombers, fighters and trainers. Many of the 84 aircraft were unserviceable or were not fit for offensive use. At the start of hostilities, there were about 1,000 RAF personnel but only 39 pilots.Wavell, p.
Daud Khan, the Mughal Empire's local subahdar of the Carnatic, besieged and blockaded Fort St. George for more than three months.Blackburn, Terence R. A Miscellany of Mutinies and Massacres in India p. 11 The governor of the fort, Thomas Pitt, was instructed by the East India Company to sue for peace.
Stillwell, John E. Historical and Genealogical Miscellany: Data Relating to the Settlement and Settlers of New York and New Jersey, Vol. IV. New York, N.Y.: [s.n.], 1903. John Mott moved to the Trenton area and purchased two flour or grist mills located along the River Road several miles north of Trenton.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 53. James VI and Anna rode on the sands of Leith in view of their ships lying at anchor.Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 305-6.
Here he taught JM Coetzee, who had a high opinion of him. He initiated a course in creative writing and included South African authors in his courses (which was unusual at the time). He also started the journal A Literary Miscellany, with Jonty Driver. Here he was known as Guy.
They arrived in two galleys rowed from Kinghorn.Athol Murray, 'Pursemaster's Accounts', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society X (Edinburgh, 1965), pp. 41-2. During the 1650-51 invasion of Scotland by English forces under Oliver Cromwell, Ravenscraig was invaded, attacked and damaged.Lamont Brown Fife in History and Legend 2002, p.149.
Boyle also wrote for the Woman's Way magazine as a gardening editor as well as various other articles. She also wrote to the Irish Times letters page and for Radio Éireann's Sunday miscellany. Boyle was a guest of the Late Late Show more than once. Boyle wrote Every Common Bush.
Gastrolobium leakeanum is one of about 100 species of Gastrolobium. It was first described by James Drummond in the Perth newspaper, The Inquirer on 6 December 1848. Drummond was a prolific contributor to Perth newspapers. The species was subsequently described in William Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany.
Angus William "Gus" Black (6 May 1925 – 14 February 2018) was a Scottish international rugby union player, who played for and the Lions.Wallance, Matt (20 February 2018) Obituary – Gus Black, Scotland and British Lion Rugby international. HeraldScotland. Retrieved on 11 July 2018.Bath, Richard (ed.) (2007) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany.
Hakea pycnoneura was first formally described in 1855 by Carl Meissner and the description was published in William Jackson Hooker's book Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany from a specimen collected by James Drummond. Named from the Greek pycnos - close and neuron - nerve, referring to the veins in the leaf.
4, p. 54. James VI gave his wife Helen Somerville £333 from the English subsidy money around this time.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 56. He served as ambassador to Holland from 1591.
Named after the founder of the Catholic press in America and Thompson's predecessor, the award is "for outstanding performance as a publisher". It was presented exactly two weeks before the 175th anniversary of paper. In 2002, the word New was dropped from the nameplate and the paper became The Catholic Miscellany.
Composite novels have been referred to as a number of other genre-names including short story cycle, framed miscellany, multi-faceted novel, story-novel, short story blend, double-novel, short story compound, short story composite, composite, anthology novel, para novel, triptych, mosaic novel, loose-leaf novel, and short story sequence.
Nakamura Yoshikoto was a government bureaucrat, entrepreneur, and politician in late Meiji period Japan. He served as second Chairman of the South Manchurian Railway Company, Mayor of Tokyo, Railroad Minister, and was a member of the House of Peers. He was also known as Nakamura Zekō.Soseki, Spring Miscellany and London Essays.
At St. Mary's in 1784 Robinson began the series of discourses on sacred biography by which he was best known. The earliest appeared in the Theological Miscellany of 1784, and the whole series was eventually printed under the title of Scripture Characters (1793, 4 vols.; 10th edit. 1815; abridgment, 1816).
David Masson, Register of the Privy Council of Scotland, vol. 5 (Edinburgh, 1882), p. 521. In previous years the goldsmith Thomas Foulis and cloth merchant Robert Jousie accounted this money.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 1-94.
The species was formally described in 1855 by Victorian Government Botanist Ferdinand von Mueller, based on plant material collected from "rocky declivities in springs near the Grampians". The description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet (spinosa) is derived from the Latin spinosus meaning "thorny".
Sir Edward Lake died on the 18th of July 1674."INTRODUCTION."Sir Edward Lake's Account of His Interviews With Charles I. On Being Created A Baronet, And Receiving An Augmentation To His Arms, edited by T. P. Taswell-Langmead for Camden Society's Miscellany. vol. iv, 1858.p.vi He died at Bishop Norton, Lincolnshire.
In April 1886, Dr. John E. Earp, formerly head of Indiana Asbury University, a Methodist-affiliated college in Greencastle, Indiana, was tapped by the board of trustees as the first President of the Southwest Kansas Conference College."Local Miscellany," Newton Daily Republican, vol. 2, whole no. 425 (April 23, 1886), pg. 1.
Cephalopholis formosa was first formally described as Sciaena formosa in 1812 by the English naturalist George Shaw (1751-1813) with the book he wrote with the illustrator Frederick Polydore Nodder, The Naturalist's Miscellany, or coloured figures of natural objects; drawn and described from nature with the type locality given as Vizagapatam in India.
On 13 April 1734 he was instituted to the rectory of Wath-juxta-Ripon on the presentation of Charles, Lord Bruce, whose chaplain he was. In 1740 Hildrop became one of the regular contributors to the Weekly Miscellany. He died on 18 January 1756. He was a friend and correspondent of Zachary Grey.
"All I do is get the cheques," he said. "I was to be co producer but I don't really like the idea. Africa's kind of a strange place for a New York boy to be; it didn't seem to fit in with the character."MISCELLANY: Race reshuffles The Guardian 13 Feb 1973: 15.
His books are noted for specifying the precise design tools (fonts, leading, etc.) that he employs. He has regularly acknowledged the influence of the work of Edward Tufte in influencing the look and feel of his books. In 2004, he won a D&AD; award for the design of Schott's Food & Drink Miscellany.
Gronow was the coach for rugby union team Morley R.F.C. in the 1930s, however when a history of the club was produced some years later, due to his previous rugby league associations, he was identified as 'unknown' in a team photograph.David Lawrenson (2007). "The Rugby League Miscellany [Page-59]". Vision Sports Publishing.
He designed theatre sets for the Abbey, Gate, Olympia and Gaiety Theatres as well as for the stage in London. He acted in and produced several plays. From 1969 to 1974 Ryan was editor of The Dublin Magazine. He was a broadcaster, being a long-time contributor to Sunday Miscellany on Radio Éireann.
"A Virtuoso's Collection" is the final short story in Mosses from an Old Manse by Nathaniel Hawthorne. It was first published in Boston Miscellany of Literature and Fashion, I (May 1842), 193-200. The story references a number of historical and mythical figures, items, beasts, books, etc. as part of a museum collection.
The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America (2001), New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, (hardcover), (paperback) p. 226, 274. In fact, it was within these philosophical discussions that pragmatism is said to have been born.Peirce, C. S. (1929), "The Founding of Pragmatism", The Hound and Horn: A Harvard Miscellany v.
Lagarosiphon is a genus of aquatic plants described as a genus in 1841.Harvey, William Henry. 1841. Journal of Botany, being a second series of the Botanical Miscellany 4: 230-231 descriptions in Latin, commentary in English, line drawing as illustration It is native to Africa and Madagascar. ;Species # Lagarosiphon cordofanus (Hochst.) Casp.
Hakea circumalata was first formally described by botanist Carl Meisner in 1855 and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet (circumalata) is derived from the Latin word circum meaning "around" and alatus meaning "winged" referring to the seed which is surrounded by a wing.
Vermilacinia vesiculosa is a fruticose lichen known only from a vertical rock face north of Punta Canoas along the Pacific Coast of Baja California.Spjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14 The epithet vesiculosa is in reference to the bladder-like swellings on the thallus.
On the 10 October 1589 the Danish envoy Steen Bille and Andrew Sinclair arrived in Leith] with her letters. She had decided to stay over-winter in Norway.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 1-2, 10, 93-4.
The total loss was valued at £43,011.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, Vol. 2 (July 816), p.38. Tremenheere went on to command Penang on her voyage from the shipyard where she was launched at Penang to London, where the British Royal Navy took her into service under the name HMS Malacca.
10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 98-9:Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 22-3: See also the unpublished royal treasurer's accounts. Asbhy seems to have got on well with another diplomat from Navarre, François de Civille.
It was first described as Racosperma adenogonium by Leslie Pedley in 1987 and then described by the Richard Sumner Cowan and Bruce Maslin as Acacia adenogonia in 1990 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany. Species related to A. deltoidea (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: Section Plurinerves) from Western Australia as published in the journal Nuytsia.
486, 491-3. Keith was involved in collecting the gifts of money which Queen Elizabeth gave to James VI, and made account of the money on 17 May 1586.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p.
Bentley continued alone profitably in the 1830s and early 1840s, establishing the well-known periodical Bentley's Miscellany. However, the periodical went into decline after its editor, Charles Dickens, left. Bentley's business started to falter after 1843 and he sold many of his copyrights. Only 15 years later did it begin to recover.
Petalostigma is a genus of plants under the family Picrodendraceae and the monogeneric subtribe Petalostigmatinae, first defined by von Mueller in 1857.Mueller, Ferdinand Jacob Heinrich von. 1857. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 9: 16-17 in LatinTropicos, Petalostigma F. Muell. It is native to New Guinea and Australia.
Miscellany, ii. He is referred to in the list of priests and recusants apprehended and indicted by Captain James Wadsworth and his fellow pursuivants between 1640 and 1651. It is there stated that he was found guilty "and since is dead", from which it may be inferred that he died in prison.
The Juvenile Miscellany was a 19th-century American bimonthly children's magazine published in Boston, Massachusetts between 1826 and 1836. It was founded by Lydia Maria Child. Publishers varied over the years, but the original publisher was John Putnam. Sarah Josepha Hale edited the magazine as a monthly between September 1834 and April 1836.
Authors of folk-stype poems abundantly and consciously lean on the poetry of the contemporary oral poetry, incorporating sporadically elements of non-folk origin, such as the rhyme form or the elements of more "scholarly" concepts of loving relationship. The manuscript of the Miscellany was published in two critical editions: the first by Vatroslav Jagić in 1870 and the second by Milan Rešetar in 1937, in a completely reorganized edition in which some obsolete Jagić's assumptions were abandoned. Both of the editions were in the Academy's series of Stari pisci hrvatski ('Old Croatian writers'), and expanded with the poems originating from younger manuscripts. The original of Ranjina's Miscellany was held in the library of Zadar gymnasium and has been destroyed during the Axis bombings in the WW2.
The fictional town of Mudfog was based on Chatham in Kent, where Dickens spent part of his youth. When Oliver Twist first appeared in Bentley's Miscellany in February 1837, Mudfog was described by Dickens as the town where Oliver was born and spent his early years, making Oliver Twist related to The Mudfog Papers, but this allusion was removed when the novel was published as a book.Bentley's Miscellany, 1837 At the conclusion of his first contribution, about the mayor of the provincial town of Mudfog, Dickens explains that "this is the first time we have published any of our gleanings from this particular source", referring to The Mudfog Papers. He also suggests that "at some future period, we may venture to open the chronicles of Mudfog".
It grows in gravelly, sandy or loamy soils, in an area between Eneabba to Jurien Bay and inland to Watheroo. It was first described by Carl Meisner in 1855 in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany Volume 7. In 1995 it was recognised as 'Rare' in J.D.Briggs & J.H.Leighs Rare or Threatened Australian Plants.
In 1775, he married Mary Ashfield. Lawrence raised a unit of 500 loyalists which later became part of the 1st Battalion of the New Jersey Volunteers. In 1777 he was taken prisoner by General John Sullivan on Staten Island;Historical and Genealogical Miscellany, John E. Stillwell, M. D., Vol. III; New York, 1914, p.
Several of the Cambridge Colleges had interests in these lands.W. Cunningham, Common rights at Cottenham & Stretham in Cambridgeshire Camden Miscellany Vol. XII (Camden Society, London 1910), at pp. 177 ff. and pp. 193–227. Sir Francis died on 21 March 1595/96 at Madingley, aged 65, and was accorded an heraldic funeral at Madingley church.
The libellus was first published as part of the Collection included in An Old Icelandic Medical Miscellany [Ms. Royal Irish Academy 23D 43] in 1931 by Henning Larsen. A translated edition (An Early Northern Cookery Book) that combines the four surviving versions was published by the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in 2001.
The same joke was used in theatrical Greek comedy,, citing Lamia O'Sullivan, Lara (2009), pp. 53–79, esp. p. 69 and generally.:"This is a pejorative expression, not a formal classification, but it is still meaningful"; "..labeling of a dangerous woman as a lamia was not uncommon.. Aelian records.. a notorious prostitute.. (Miscellany 12.17, 13.8)".
Pechell sent the vessel into Halifax.The Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany ..., Volume 8, p.516. In 1819 Belette carried on to Bermuda the mails that the packet boat Blucher had brought to Halifax. In the summer of 1820 Bellette patrolled Passamaquoddy Bay on the border with the United States to stop the illegal plaster trade.
Once a week 1: 323–327Anon. (1852). A few words on the mushroom tribe. The Home friend, a weekly miscellany of amusement and instruction 1: 265–273 The original edition contained colour plates by the noted mycological illustrator Anna Maria Hussey. A second (posthumous) edition was published in 1863, edited by mycologist Frederick Currey.
38 In spite of these appointments, Cornbury expressed concern about the health of Bowne and others and their ability to serve in Council to the Lords of Trade in 1703 and 1706.Historical and Genealogical Miscellany, John E. Stillwell, M. D., Vol. III; New York, 1914, p. 40 By 1708, Captain Andrew Bowne was dead.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Carl Meissner in 1855 in New Proteaceae of Australia as part of William Jackson Hooker's work Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet honours Richard Kippist, who was once the librarian of the Linnean Society and was particularly interested in Australian plants.
Annie I. Cameron, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1593-1595, vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1936), p. 190. James VI gave Marie a ring set with 11 diamonds, worth £300 Scots in May 1595.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 82.
Thorp's Charge delivered at York on 20 March was published both in York and London in 1649; and was reprinted in vol. ii. of the Harleian Miscellany (edits. 1744 and 1808). It is a work of apologetics, justifying the king's execution and vindicating the proceedings of parliament by quotations from the works of republican writers.
The term "freshman's dream" itself, in non-mathematical contexts, is recorded since the 19th century.Google books 1800–1900 search for "freshman's dream": Bentley's miscellany, Volume 26, p. 176, 1849 Since the expansion of is correctly given by the binomial theorem, the freshman's dream is also known as the "child's binomial theorem" or "schoolboy binomial theorem".
Lancer pirates? > M. Zenith – Moorcock's Miscellany. Moorcock later said, "As I've said in my introduction to Monsieur Zenith: The Albino, the Anthony Skenes character was a huge influence. For the rest of the character, his ambiguities in particular, I based him on myself at the age I was when I created Elric, which was 20".
Home Chimes was published 1884–1894 by Richard Willoughby, London, price 1/-. It was a (first weekly, then monthly) miscellany, mostly fiction by little-known authors. See Magazine Data File The first edition remained in print from 1889 until March 1909, when the second edition was issued. During that time, 202,000 copies were sold.
Within the European Union, the term "wine" in English and in translation is reserved exclusively for the fermented juice of grapes.Harding, G. A Wine Miscellany, pp. 5-9. Clarkson Potter Publishing (New York), 2005. . Within the United States, wine may include the fermented juice of any fruit26 U.S.C. §5381: "Natural wine". Accessed 9 November 2013.
James VI gave him a jewel and a ring with a diamond set in a star.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 56, 65. Hotman left Edinburgh and stayed at Whittingehame Tower on 20 August 1589 with Richard Douglas.
In 1595 Plat gave further results in 'A Discoverie of certain English Wantes which are royally supplied in this Treatise. By H. Plat, of Lincolnes Inne, Esquire,' London 1595 (reprinted in the Harleian Miscellany, vol. ix.). In the same year he issued 'Sundrie New and Artificiall Remedies against Famine. Written by H. P., Esq.
Miscellanea Malacologica is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering malacology, specifically papers on the taxonomy, nomenclature, and zoogeography of mollusks. The journal is published by Marien Faber (Duivendrecht, the Netherlands) and was established in 2004. The name of the journal is Latin for "malacological miscellany". The journal is a large format publication with color illustrations.
Salsette left Madras on 29 September 1807 and arrived in Portsmouth in early 1808, having brought with her Lord William Bentinck, the late governor of Madras.The Scots magazine and Edinburgh literary miscellany, Vol. 70, Part 1, p.67. At Portsmouth she underwent repairs from January 1808 to 17 March and then sailed to the Baltic.
James VI of Scotland stayed in the castle in 1590 after his marriage to Anne of Denmark. James VI gave 2,000 Danish dalers to the officers and servants in the castle.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 38-9.
An early influence was his teacher at Hindu College, Calcutta, David Lester Richardson. Richardson was a poet and inspired in Dutt a love of English poetry, particularly Byron. Dutt began writing English poetry aged around 17 years, sending his works to publications in England, including Blackwood's Magazine and Bentley's Miscellany. They were, however, never published.
He was for a time editor of the United States Catholic Miscellany, founded by Bishop John England. Bishop Reynolds appointed Lynch pastor of St. Mary's Church and vicar-general. Upon the death of Bishop Reynolds in 1855, Lynch became administrator of the diocese, and succeeded him as bishop. He was consecrated as bishop in March 1858.
Cyril Connolly's short story "Bond Strikes Camp" first appeared in the April 1963 issue of The London Magazine. Although a parody, the story clearly mentions Bond by name and code number. An expensive, privately printed edition of only fifty copies was done for the Shenval Press in 1963. Soon after, the story appeared in Connolly's miscellany collection Previous Convictions.
However, it was not successful and soon ceased to be published, at the same time as the "Jaime y Padilla" society disintegrated. In 1915, Fortino associated with Aurelio Cortés, a famous merchant of the Guadalajara downtown Mercado Corona, with whom he established a grocery store and miscellany located on Calle Corona, an establishment that burned down.
Miscellany of the Scottish History Society. Volume 2. Edinburgh. p. 149. Lesley also alleged there had been a plot to murder Moray on his return as he passed through North Allerton, but because Norfolk had persuaded Moray to be more favourable, the assassination was called off.Haynes, Murdin, A Collection of State Papers, Volume 2, p.51.
In 1829, he began to publish The Worcestershire Miscellany, of which, only five numbers and a supplement appeared. It was issued in book form in 1831. On 12 January 1829, he founded the Worcester Literary and Scientific Institute, of which he was joint secretary. He gave up business early in life, and devoted all his energies to local botany.
In 1813, George Shaw named the genus Apteryx in his species description of the southern brown kiwi, which he called "the southern apteryx". Captain Andrew Barclay of the ship Providence provided Shaw with the specimen. Shaw's description was accompanied by two plates, engraved by Frederick Polydore Nodder; they were published in volume 24 of The Naturalist's Miscellany.
Following The Beautiful and Damned, Fitzgerald hoped to secure financial wealth for him and his wife. The play's text was published in book form by Scribners on April 27, 1923, in a print run of 7,650 copies, each sold for $1.50.Bruccoli, Matthew J, and Jackson R. Bryer (1971). F. Scott Fitzgerald in His Own Time: A Miscellany.
Some criticised him for straying from the original meaning, which he had intentionally done, where he felt the occasion demanded. Medwin's skill lay in bringing alive Aeschylus's characters through believable dialogue that uses traditional metres and measure. Medwin's output in the middle years of the 1830s was prodigious. He contributed a series of short stories to Bentley's Miscellany.
The last of his five caps was a Six Nations match against England at Twickenham on 3 March 2001. He also played for Glasgow Warriors.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ) He retired from professional rugby in 2004 at the age of 26. His brother Gordon Bulloch was also capped for Scotland.
The college magazine dates back to 1837 when The Colombo Academy Miscellany and Juvenile Repository was published on a monthly basis during the time of headmaster Rev. Joseph Marsh. The Royal College Magazine, the official school magazine, was first published in 1893 and was printed at the Times of Ceylon Press. Its first editor was E. W. Perera.
The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, July 1824. In 1827 he returned to England due to ill-health and was awarded a pension of £150 a year from the East India Company. After spending some time in Paris he settled in London, lodging with widowed basketmaker Catherine Scott and her children in Haymarket.The Times, 8 February 1840, page 7.
Makhmutov Nail Mazitovich published the first miscellany «Beloved school – we are your children». He collected photos, biographies of teachers and classmates, school leavers’ memories about dear school. The second book «Intermovement in Bashkortostan» was written about student construction brigades of the 1980s. The book is composed of interviews of ex-student construction brigade members – successful leaders.
In Glasgow Carrick took to writing, producing several humorous Scotch songs, and a Life of Wallace for the young. Later he contributed articles to The Day, a Glasgow daily paper which lasted only six months; and published 1830, his extended Life of Sir William Wallace of Elderslie, 2 vols. (vols. liii. and liv. of Constable's Miscellany).
New Delhi: Gov. Pr, 1976. p. 11 The National Democratic Front contested the 1946 municipal, Representative Assembly and French National Assembly elections.Marxist Miscellany, Volume 1-4. New Delhi: People's Publishing House, 1970. p. 18 The 1946 election manifesto of the National Democratic Front called for French India to become a fully autonomous unit within the French Union.
Sir Edward Lake's Account of His Interviews With Charles I. On Being Created A Baronet, And Receiving An Augmentation To His Arms, edited by T. P. Taswell-Langmead for Camden Society's Miscellany. vol. iv, 1858.p.16.Foster, Peerage and Baronetage 1882, p.369 He was captured and imprisoned at Great Crosby, Lancashire, but escaped after seven weeks.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 52. Anna of Denmark was welcomed by speeches to her lodging on the first floor of the King's Wark, where she stayed for five days. A speech of welcome was made by James Elphinstone.Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol.
"From the Vita Pauli to the Legenda Breviarii: Real and imaginary animals as a Guide to the Hermit in the Desert", Animals and Otherness in the Middle Ages: Perspectives Across Disciplines, Oxford, Archaeopress (BAR International Series 2500), 2013, p. 41, fn. 40 The legend was recorded in Croatia in the 16th century."Legend of St John Chrysostom", Zgombic Miscellany.
The Spalding Club Miscellany, vol. 2 (Aberdeen, 1842), pp. 188-9, James V to Erskine, 23 February 1535. Soon after, Oliver Sinclair was installed as captain, and the surviving accounts for the period 1537–1539 record that George Sempill was the master mason, carrying out the repairs under the direction of John Scrimgeour, the King's Master of Works.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin as part of the work Acacia miscellany. The taxonomy of fifty-five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as described in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified in 2003 as Racosperma asepalum then transferred back to the genus Acacia in 2006.
On the morning of the 12th, the Margate hoy Lord Nelson and the pilot sloop Liberty saved the rest. The Court of Directors of the EIC presented the crew of Lord Nelson with 500 guineas for their "gallant and daring rescue of 105 men" from the wreck.Gentleman's Monthly Miscellany, Vol. 1, Issues 1-5, p.191.
His poems were circulated at court and may have been published anonymously in the anthology The Court of Venus (earliest edition c.1537) during his lifetime, but were not published under his name until after his death; the first major book to feature and attribute his verse was Tottel's Miscellany (1557), printed 15 years after his death.
A Moorish skull-cap, "coated with varnish and set in silver" and bearing the inscription "First adventure of Captain John Benbow, and gift to Richard Ridley, 1687" is referred to in 1844 by Charles Dickens in Bentley's Miscellany where he speaks of Shrewsbury's history, and the 1885 Dictionary of National Biography also relates the story.Stephen, p. 208.
Popillia cupricollis can reach a length of about .John Edward Gray The Zoological Miscellany Body is smooth and elongate in shape with quite stout black legs. Pronotum is shining metallic blackish with coppery reflections (hence the Latin species name cupricollis meaning coppery neck), while elytra are orange. The punctures at the sides of pronotum are coarse and strong.
Rossendale is home to a unique dancing troupe, the Britannia Coconut Dancers, formed in the mid-19th century, and who traditionally dance along the local roads every Easter. Haslingden Halo There has been a long tradition of dialect poetry and writing in Rossendale.A Bacup Miscellany : Prose and Verse by Local Writers Past and Present. Ed. Harry Craven.
136-37, p. 136.Anthony Lambert, Lambert's Railway Miscellany, London: Ebert, 2010, , p. 13.Gerald L. Wood, Guinness Book of Pet Records, Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Superlatives, 1984 /Sterling, 1985, , pp. 75-76."The Paddington Cat", in Philip Wood (ed.), A Passion for Cats, The Cats Protection League, Newton Abbot / North Pomfret, Vermont: David & Charles, 1987, , p. 92.
The Gorički zbornik () or the Gorica's Almanac or Gorica Miscellany or the Manuscript of Gorica is a Serbian medieval manuscript collection written by Jelena Balšić and monk Nikon of Jerusalem in period between 1441 and 1442 in the church Jelena built on the island Gorica on Skadar Lake. Its name is derived from the name of the church.
The Saturday Book was an annual miscellany, published from 1941 to 1975, reaching 34 volumes. It was edited initially by Leonard Russell and from 1952 by John Hadfield. A final compilation, The Best of the Saturday Book, was published in 1981.John Hadfield (1981) The Best of the Saturday Book, Hutchinson The publisher throughout was Hutchinson's.
Christ Church Library contains one of the largest collections of early printed books in Oxford outside the Bodleian Library. The library was described in 1946 as 'a heterogeneous collection of about 100,000 works'Hiscock, W.G. A Christ Church miscellany. Oxford: printed for the author, 1946, p. 111. and this is the figure which has generally been quoted since.
370 Subsequently, Lindsay was one of the staunchest supporters of Regent Moray. In the forged Conference about the Regent Moray he is represented as saying: "My lord, ye know of ould that I was moir rude than wyse. I can nought gyve you a verie wyse counsell, but I love you weill aneuche."Bannatyne Miscellany, vol. 1.
Josiah Relph, whose imitations of Theocritan Pastorals self-consciously introduce the demotic for local colour. Although written about 1735, they were not published until after the author's death in A Miscellany of Poems (Wigton, 1747).Online archive The Rev. Robert Nelson followed him in the same tradition with A choice collection of poems in Cumberland dialect (Sunderland, 1780).
McBride, M. F. "Thomas Shadwell on Music and Dance in Restoration England." English Miscellany: A Symposium of History, Literature and the Arts 28. (1979): 197–206. and the uniqueness of The Virtuoso lies primarily in its highly relevant satire on contemporary science and on the Royal Society, which, founded in 1660, was of great interest to Restoration audiences.
"'The Lake Gun" is a satirical short story by James Fenimore Cooper first published in 1850. The short story was commissioned by George E. Wood for $100, and published in a miscellany titled The Parthenon. It was reprinted in Specimens of American Literature in New York in 1866. The short story satirizes political demagoguery, focused on William Henry Seward.
Their numbers increased until their peak of importance in the 18th century, when over 1000 English poetry miscellanies were published,"About", Digital Miscellanies Index before the rise of anthologies in the early 19th century. The printed miscellany gradually morphed into the format of the regularly published magazine, and many early magazines used the word in their titles.
He was most recognised for Grongar Hill, one of six early poems featured in a 1726 miscellany. Longer works published later include the less successful genre poems, The Ruins of Rome (1740) and The Fleece (1757). His work has always been more anthologised than published in separate editions, but his talent was later recognised by William Wordsworth among others.
A year later, more clubs were added to the division and it was split in two, Third Division North and Third Division South. Argyle were placed in the latter."1921–22 Third Division South" . Statto. Retrieved 25 May 2010. The club finished as runners-up for six consecutive seasons between 1922 and 1927,Cowdery & Curno, Miscellany, p. 57.
The miscellany also bears witness of the popularity of the first generation of Dubrovnik love poets, i.e. it is an important evidence of the early spread - almost dominance, of vernacular love lyrics in Dubrovnik. It was obviously at the beginning of the 16th century a well-established phenomenon having developed a series of completely formal conventions.
Myriopteron is a species of plants in the family Apocynaceae first described as a genus in 1844.Griffith, William. 1844. Calcutta Journal of Natural History and Miscellany of the Arts and Sciences in India 4: 385Tropicos, genus Myriopteron It contains only one known species, Myriopteron extensum , native to Southeast Asia, India, and southern China.Flora of China, Vol.
In 1935 Dunbar was commissioned to provide the illustrations for The Scots Week-End and Caledonian Vade-Mecum for Host, Guest and Wayfarer (ed. Donald and Catherine Carswell, Routledge, London, 1936). The illustrations to this miscellany consist of pen and ink frontispiece, vignettes and tail pieces. This commission led to a more significant production, Gardeners' Choice (Routledge, London, 1937).
Hakea auriculata was first formally described by botanist Carl Meissner in 1855 as part of the William Jackson Hooker work Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet (auriculata) is derived from the Latin word auricula meaning "lobe of the ear" or "little ear" referring to the shape of the base of the leaf.
Vermilacinia rigida is a dark green, rare fruticose lichen that occurs in fog areas along the Pacific Coast of Baja California, known only from two locations about 100 km north of Guerrero Negro.Spjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14 The epithet, rigida, is in regard to its stiff thallus branches.
Vermilacinia pumila is a whitish green fruticose lichen that occurs in fog areas along the Pacific Coast and offshore island of North America.Spjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14 The epithet "pumila" is in regard to the dwarf form of the thallus, in contrast to V. combeoides.
A copy is included in the historical miscellany at the Huntington Library, HM 1342. Peter is known to have written three poems because he lists them all at the end of De balneis Puteolanis in the following elegiac couplets: The second poem of the three listed here, the mira Federici gesta ("remarkable deeds of Frederick") is lost.
He spent time with Mary Ruthven, Countess of Atholl, a sister of his first wife, and gave her money. He visited St Andrews and was in Stirling with his daughter in November. His master cook William Murkie had worked for Anne of Denmark.'Household Account of Ludovick Duke of Lennox', Miscellany of the Maitland Club, vol.
When all is finally set to rights, the kittens receive their mother's approval and some pie. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 16150. The poem was published in England in 1827 in a mock review by William Ewart Gladstone, writing as Bartholomew Bouverie, in The Eton Miscellany.W. E. Gladstone, The Eton Miscellany (Eton: 1827), p. 71.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1992 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany 6. Review of Acacia victoriae and related species (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: Section Phyllodineae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified by Leslie Pedley in 2003 as Racosperma synchronicium then transferred back to the genus Acacia in 2007.
Athol Murray, 'Pursemaster's Accounts', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society X (Edinburgh, 1965), p. 43. In July 1540, at St Andrews, she was sent seven hanks of coloured silks and cloth to embroider samplers, and in December 1540, she was given a missal and a matins book.Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 7 (Edinburgh, 1907), pp.
She wrote articles for Rural Manhood, The Church School Journal, The Vassar Miscellany, and other publications. Gogin resigned from the YWCA in 1927. She returned to school work, and by 1933 became principal of the Santa Barbara Girls' School in California. The school closed in 1938; she taught at the Marlborough School in Los Angeles after that.
In 1843, as the economy worsened as a result of the Crimean War, he was forced to sell Bentley's Miscellany to its editor, Ainsworth. By 1855, Bentley's finances were in such dire straits that his firm was in danger of failing.Wallins, 50. In 1857 Bentley auctioned off copyrights, plates, steel etchings and remainders to pay debts.
The following is a list of items with recorded Factory Records numbers. The list primarily consists of music releases but also includes promotional graphics, film, etc. However, the list was not confined to creative output. A party (FAC 83), a lawsuit (FAC 61) and a cat (FAC 191) appear on the list along with other miscellany.
Baron Georges Cuvier, Edward Griffith, and Edward Pidgeon - The Mollusca and Radiata (1834) - The Naturalist's Miscellany: or Coloured Figures of Natural Objects This rare species is unusual in that it has a double series of long, curved spines on the posterior slope of each valve. A closely related species from the Eastern Pacific is Pitar lupanaria.
From the list of his stock given in his will it would appear that he carried on a very extensive bookselling business. He was married to Katherine Norvell, who afterwards married Robert Smith, bookseller, and died in 1593. He had no sons, but in his widow's willBannatyne Miscellany, ii. 218–20 a daughter, Alesoun Bassendyne, is mentioned.
Blood is a 2001 album by the Microphones. It was handmade, and limited to 300 original copies. Included on the album were recordings and alternate versions of songs later found on The Glow Pt. 2, in addition to sound collages, field recordings and other miscellany. Also included was a cover of Björk's "All Is Full of Love".
The first 17 volumes were a reprint of the 1939 edition, the 18th was a miscellany and the last two were a copy of Websters New Illustrated Dictionary. The 1946 edition, however, was thoroughly revised by William H. Hendelson. The quality of the work was much improve, though it still was considered sub-par compared to its competitors.
Its tracks, most of which were previously unreleased, are divided into seven "chapters": Folk, Rocking Out and Kids on disc one and Love Hurts, Miscellany, Hollywood and The Big Picture on disc two. Years in the Making was co-produced by Wainwright and Dick Connette, who produced High Wide & Handsome, Wainwright's 2009 tribute to legendary banjo player Charlie Poole.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany Taxonomy of some Western Australian phyllocladinous and aphyllodinous taxa (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae). as published in the journal Nuytsia. The species as reclassified as Racosperma cerastes in 2003 by Leslie Pedley but returned to the genus Acacia in 2006.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the workAcacia Miscellany 13. Taxonomy of some Western Australian phyllocladinous and aphyllodinous taxa (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma cummingianum in 2003 by Leslie Pedley and then classified back to the genus Acacia in 2006.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany Taxonomy of some Western Australian phyllocladinous and aphyllodinous taxa (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae). as published in the journal Nuytsia. The species as reclassified as Racosperma carens in 2003 by Leslie Pedley but returned to the genus Acacia in 2006.
M. Bateson, Camden Miscellany IX, pp. 73-78. His commitment to the Elizabethan religious settlement seems to have been absolute and he enjoyed the confidence of Archbishop Young, assisting at the consecration of Young’s suffragan, Robert Barnes, in 1567.John Strype, The Life and Acts of Matthew Parker, The Clarendon Press, 1821, Vol. I, p. 477.
John Baines (1787–1838), was an English mathematician. Baines was born in the parish of Horbury, Yorkshire, in 1787. From 1810 at least, he sent mathematical contributions to periodicals, including Ladies' Diary, the Gentleman's Diary, the York Miscellany, and other similar periodicals, which were noted for their geometrical and algebraic problems. He wrote to the Northern Star from Nottingham.
Based in Toronto, in its later years Descant published two themed issues per year, and a winter and summer miscellany issue. From 2007 to 2014, Descant sponsored the Winston Collins/Descant Prize for Best Canadian Poem. The list of contributors to Descant includes numerous now-famous Canadian authors.Becky Robertson, "Descant magazine announces final issue", Quill & Quire, December 10, 2014.
Forests and other oak species have gained different sobriquets in modern usage. Toponyms that derive from the same root word, dob, are often confused with similar Slovene words — particularly dober and dobra, both meaning "good." In contrast to the term dobrava's specificity, however, dober and dobra may be used variably, as names for a miscellany of places.
On 27 November 1814 Salsette saved the Cornwallis, of Calcutta. A severe gale had dis-masted Cornwallis and Salsette had brought her into Trincomalee. The Vice Admiralty Court awarded Salsette 7.5% of the value of the vessel and her cargo, which were estimated at upwards of £90,000 sterling.The Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany, (Feb 1816), Volume 1, p.192.
Dick Swanson was born in 1934 and was raised in Illinois. In his youth, he worked at newspapers owned by his uncle. He later became a staff photographer at the News-Gazette in Champaign, Illinois while at the University of Illinois. Life magazine first published one of his photos, a Miscellany called A Bubble that has Ears, in 1957.
Oxford University Portrait Rooms, Alden's Illustrated Family Miscellany and Oxford Monthly Record, Vol. XI, No. 122, October 1864. Bracher lived over the premises with his wife and two children.The High, Oxford: 24–31 , High Street, Oxford , UK. Henry Taunt, later another well-known photographer, joined Bracher at the age of 14 as a member of staff in 1856.
Besides editing Robert Dodsley's The Preceptor (2 vols. 1748), he issued a translation of Sallust's Catiline's Conspiracy and Jugurthine War (London, 1757]). The work was commended in the Bibliographical Miscellany and other reviews, and a fourth edition was edited by Abraham John Valpy in 1830. His classical library was sold by T. Payne on 1 March 1787.
City Crimes was published in the newspaper Sporting Chronicle on September 1, 1849, under the pseudonym "Greenhorn." It was then published again in two parts, with the first part being published in June 1850 in Police Gazette. City Crimes was also included in a book list in The Miscellany in 1857, though Thompson himself was never explicitly mentioned.
While at the Ruskin School of Drawing Macdonald taught part-time at Radley College and took in private students, this to supplement his salary which was, for twenty years, provided by Ruskin. Between 1890 and 1908 he was Keeper of the Oxford University Galleries."Summer Miscellany", Lancaster University, 4 July – 27 September 2009. Retrieved 1 March 2019.
Naval Chronicle, Vol. 25, pp.164-170. They identified a place in a narrow strait between an islet called the Gunner's Coin and the beach where the fleet could anchor and where boats could land through an opening in the reef.Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany for British and foreign India, China, Australasia (1836), Vol 36, p. 157.
Today, The Miscellany News continues in the tradition started by the editors of 1914, publishing every Thursday morning of Vassar's academic year. The paper is typically 20 pages long each week and consists of six sections—News, Features, Opinions, Humor and Satire, Arts and Sports—which each contain innovative and professionally reported pieces concerning issues of interest on and off campus. The paper's staff consists entirely of Vassar students. Though roughly 40 undergraduates contribute to each issue of the Miscellany, Editorial Board members work most closely with the paper, developing story ideas, assigning articles and helping to shape the finished product; in addition to directing the daily operations of the paper, the Editor in Chief and his or her Executive Board work to guide the overall direction of the news organization.
"Viking Gild" had been considered at the outset but rejected for its "association with temperance societies". The first volume of the journal, Saga-Book, appeared in 1895; the first volume of Old Lore Miscellany is dated 1907-08; in welcoming that, the Pall Mall Gazette praised the society for "fresh and meritorious work".Orkney and Shetland Miscellany of the Viking Club, Volume 1, Ed. Alfred W. Johnston and Amy Johnston, London: Viking Club, 1907, p. 54. In 1908, a correspondent reported approvingly in the American Journal of Philology on the Society's "very large" membership including "many names prominent in the literary life and the scientific world of England, Scotland and the North" and on its publications and expenditure of "large sums of money" on expeditions as far afield as Denmark.
Penguin Books India. Johnstone was President of Madras Cricket Club in 1947 towards the end of his playing career. As a player he was described as "an excellent all-round cricketer", who batted left-handed, often opening the batting, bowled right-arm medium pace and was an "excellent" and "brilliant"Muthiah S (2000) Madras Miscellany, The Hindu, 2000-04-10.
The Fables of Phaedrus, University of Texas, p.31 In addition the fable was included among the handful translated by Ashley Cowper in 1769Poems and Translations, pp.93-4 as well as being updated to modern business conditions in a miscellany titled Aesop in a Monkey Suit: Fifty Fables of the Corporate Jungle.David Lignell, “The Executive and the Consultant”, p.
The book is a parchment manuscript of the end of the tenth century, containing a miscellany, or florilegium, of religious texts that were apparently selected for private inspiration. The meticulous hand is Anglo-Saxon square minuscule. It was found in the library by Friedrich Blume, in 1822, and was first described in his Iter Italicum (Stettin, 4 vols., 1824–36).
The goldsmith Thomas Foulis provided gold chains as diplomatic gifts for Munk and the other Danish envoys.James Thomson Gibson- Craig, Papers Relative to the Marriage of King James the Sixth of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1836), p. 34, Appendix p. 16: Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 56.
All of the foregoing works – barring The Joy of Teares – were edited by William Tough for the Scottish Text Society (2 vols., 1898). The Joy of Teares was published in the Scottish Text Society Miscellany volume of 1933, pp. 161–78. Mure was also a music-lover, and his lute-book and ‘cantus’ partbook are preserved in Edinburgh University Library (La.III.
539: Bannatyne Miscellany, Edinburgh vol. 1, (1827), 1–6 Another schoolmaster to the young heir was Arthur Lallart, who would later be interrogated in London for having gone to Scotland in 1562.Calendar State Papers Domestic 1547–1580, (1856), pp. 201, 203 Henry was said to be strong, athletic, skilled in horsemanship and weaponry, and passionate about hunting and hawking.
The other half was purchased at an advance in 1690. Tonson afterwards said he had made more by Paradise Lost than by any other poem. In the earlier part of his life Tonson was much associated with Dryden. A step which did much to establish his position was the publication in 1684 of a volume of Miscellany Poems, under Dryden's editorship.
Thryptomene micrantha, commonly known as ribbed thryptomene, is a shrub in the family Myrtaceae. The species is endemic to south-eastern Australia. It grows to between in height and produces white flowers between late winter and early summer. The species was first formally described in 1853 by English botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany.
The Edinburgh Magazine, or Literary Miscellany, for July 1797, p. 231 (1797.) Shortly before the French expedition to Ireland in support of the Irish patriots, the Kangaroo was driven by bad weather into Bantry Bay, and had soon after sighted a French fleet, which Boyle believed to consist from nineteen to twenty-two sail.A History of England in the Eighteenth Century.
Alexander had two brothers and a sister. Her brother Robert Jocelyn Alexander, also a poet, was killed when the RMS Leinster was torpedoed on 10 October 1918. Her mother died in 1895. Alexander wrote for The Spectator, the Belfast Telegraph and The Times and wrote Lady Anne's Walk which was a miscellany of reflections based on the sketches of Lady Anne Beresford.
These are about 5 mm in diameter and appear between April and October in New South Wales and September to December in Tasmania. The species occurs on peaty soils in association with Leptospermum glaucescens, Sprengelia incarnata and Ranunculus species. The species was first formally described by English botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker in 1847 in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany.
The books are pious and collect together consoling thoughts from Christian, Classical, and philosophical literature. In 1714, she produced A miscellany of poems, compos'd, and work'd with a needle, on the backs and seats &c.; of several chairs and stools. According to near contemporaries, Frances Norton did a great deal of needlepoint work on furniture in Abbots Leigh (where the Norton estate was).
Archibald Constable died in 1827, and the Miscellany was taken over by a consortium of Aitken, Henry Constable, and a London publisher. When the publisher went bankrupt in 1831, the project became relatively dormant. The entire list was later advertised by the London firm of Whittaker & Co. There were 80 volumes in all, the first appearing in 1826 and the last in 1835.
Marguerite Wood, Extracts from the Burgh Records of Edinburgh: 1589-1603, vol. 6 (Edinburgh, 1927), p. 9. Lyall was involved in buying a jewel given by the Earl Marischal to Anne of Denmark at her proxy marriage to James VIMiles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 26.
Other ways to unlock collectible stickers include tagging friends, using key phrases in checkins (such as "Congratulations" or "Happy Birthday'") and more. Aside from the 100 Collectible stickers, over 100 Bonus stickers have been released to celebrate various occasions and miscellany. Many sticker releases coincide with holidays, world events, or particular achievements. The "Superuser" sticker is only available to Superusers.
Gibb travelled with James VI to Norway and Denmark, and with his fellow valet William Stewart was recorded making payments and gifts of Danish dalers from the queen's dowry, and settling the king's losses at card games.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 39, 41-42, 51.
Miscellany (Puncho) Damaskin () is a chronicle of church-liturgical books. Later, the damaskins became church collections with teaching words and lives. They appeared at the end of the 16th century in the western Bulgarian lands and existed until the middle of the 19th century. For the most part, the damaskins were written in a simple, accessible language for ordinary people.
In 1742, Cooke took part in Colley Cibber's fight over control of the theaters. He wrote The Bays Miscellany, or, Colley Triumphant. He also wrote dialog for the mute plays of John Rich and Cibber's Harlequin. In 1744, he adapted his Le Lutrin piece as The Battle of the Poets as a one-act play to be inserted into Henry Fielding's Tom Thumb.
In 1693 he wrote, anonymously, The Oracles of Reason. It was a miscellany of essays, some by Charles Gildon (whose presence in the volume may or may not have been intended by Blount). The essays expressed doubts about the Book of Genesis, denied the possibility of revelation, denied miracles, and suggested that there might be many worlds with life on them.
Libinia emarginata described by Leach in Zoological Miscellany in 1815. Elford Leach was born at Hoe Gate, Plymouth, the son of an attorney. At the age of twelve he began a medical apprenticeship at the Devonshire and Exeter Hospital, studying anatomy and chemistry. By this time he was already collecting marine animals from Plymouth Sound and along the Devon coast.
Thazhekad,Thazhekad is the Anglicized form of the Malayalam name "Talekkad"; see T. K. Joseph, "Malabar Miscellany", parts V & 6, in Indian Antiquary, February 1928, pp. 24-31. is the site of one of the earliest St Thomas Christian communities in Kerala. Once a prosperous inland port, during heyday of Muziris. The landscape was changed with the great floods of 1341AD.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1999 as part of the work Acacia miscellany. The taxonomy of fifty-five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma blaxellii in 2003 by Leslie Pedley then transferred back into the genus Acacia in 2006.
It warned of the danger in the deep influence supposedly exerted on a patient by the mesmeriser. She began in 1840 to contribute sketches and short stories to Bentley's Miscellany and other periodicals, including the great rival to Bentley's, Henry Colburn's New Monthly Magazine.Notes on Isabella Romer on the University of Missouri Victorian Short Fiction site. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
"The Last Scene", engraved by George Cruikshank in 1839 to illustrate William Harrison Ainsworth's serialised novel, Jack Sheppard. The caption reads: "Blueskin cutting down Jack Sheppard". In reality Blueskin was already dead by the time of Sheppard's execution. Jack Sheppard is a novel by William Harrison Ainsworth serially published in Bentley's Miscellany from 1839 to 1840, with illustrations by George Cruikshank.
Eddy, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany, 309. He developed a reputation locally for being disputatious; one neighbor described him as "[a] tiger for a temper and always in a row."Bates and Dittemore 1932, 4–5. McClure's described him as a supporter of slavery and alleged that he had been pleased to hear about Abraham Lincoln's death.
Hakea florulenta was first formally described in 1855 by Carl Meissner from a specimen collected near Moreton Bay by Frederick Strange (1826 - 1854), who was killed by Aborigines whilst collecting near Mackay. The description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet (florulenta) is a Latin word meaning "abounding in flowers" or "flowering profusely".
The work is a description of Cathar sects and doctrines, and was regarded as a great authority during the Middle Ages. The edition of Gretser (Ingolstadt, 1613) is much interpolated, so as (except interceding pages of chapter six) to be more a miscellany on late 13-century heretical factions, collected from various sources by an anonymous German inquisitor in Austria after Reinerius' death.
Accessed online 11 July 2008. There is a miscellany of light industrial, warehouse, wholesale, and retail businesses along 15th Avenue West, as well as a few professional offices and some housing. There continues to be a small shopping and dining neighborhood at West Dravus Street, the former Grand Boulevard. Near the Magnolia Bridge on 15th is the Center for Sex Positive Culture.
Alfred William Begbie was a British civil servant in India.The Bengal directory and annual register #41 He got nominated to East India Company College,East-India Register and Directory #xxxvii 14 January 1818. Begbie passed the Public Examination with great credit from College at Haileybury in Hertfordshire.The Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany By East India Company #105 on 28 May 1818.
His published works are the Philosophia mentis et sensuum (with the addition of natural theology and ethics, Rome, 1702), De primatu beati Petri (in the second series of the miscellany printed from the manuscripts in the library of the Roman College, Rome, 1867), and a little pamphlet containing Daily Prayers for a Happy Death (in Latin, Vienna, 1742; also in German, Augsburg, 1856).
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1999 in the article Acacia miscellany 16. The taxonomy of fifty-five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. The only synonym is Racosperma acanthaster. The tree is found as part of Eucalyptus woodland or mallee shrubland communities.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 199 as part of the work Acacia miscellany. The taxonomy of fifty-five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma aristulatum in 2003 by Leslie Pedley, then transferred back to the genus Acacia in 2005.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 1-2, 10, 93-4: Miles Kerr-Peterson, A Protestant Lord in James VI's Scotland (Boydell, 2019), p. 51. An English man at court, Thomas Fowler wrote that Steen Bille was well "travelled, and some time in England."HMC Salisbury Hatfield, vol.
Prince Hamlet holding the skull of Yorick. 19th century statue by Ronald Gower in Stratford-upon-AvonNumerous cultural references to Hamlet (in film, literature, arts, etc.) reflect the continued influence of this play. Hamlet is one of the most popular of Shakespeare's plays, topping the list at the Royal Shakespeare Company since 1879, as of 2004.(Crystal, David, & Ben Crystal, The Shakespeare Miscellany.
Edward Barnes."Madras Miscellany", by S Muthiah, The Hindu, 16 October 2011 Several faculty members from the Department of Botany and Zoology have since served as curators of the campus. They are Dr. K.R. Venkattasubban, Mr. Giles Lal, Dr. D.E.P. Jeyasingh, Dr. P. Dayanandan, C.Livingstone, Dr. G.Ebenezer, and Dr. Manu Thomas. Dr.Selva Singh Richard from Botany Department is the current Curator of MCC.
10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 88, 94: Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 27. He took part in a wedding ceremony at Kronborg on 20 August 1589 which involved him sitting on Anne of Denmark's bed as a proxy for the king.David Chrytraeus, Epistolae (Hanovia, 1614), pp.
4 (Edinburgh, 1881), p. 471. Queen Elizabeth gave a further 625 gold crowns to spend on Holyrood.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 55. Schaw was also responsible for the elaborate ceremony greeting her arrival at Leith and the decoration of Holyrood Abbey for her coronation.
The Market Place was renamed Cathedral Square and the adjacent Gates Memorial Fountain moved to Bishop's Road Gardens in 1963, when the (then weekly) market was transferred to the site of the old cattle market.Skinner, Julia (with particular reference to the work of Robert Cook) Did You Know? Peterborough: A Miscellany (pp.33, 25 & 16) The Francis Frith Collection, Salisbury, 2006.
He was admitted to the Inner Temple in 1841, and was called to the bar in 1846. After a short career as a barrister he concentrated again on journalism. He was parliamentary reporter of the Morning Herald, contributing also poems and sketches to Bentley's Miscellany and other magazines. In 1852 Sheehan was proprietor and editor of The Independent of London and Cambridge.
Banksia tricuspis was first formally described by Carl Meissner in 1855 from specimens collected by James Drummond and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. The specific epithet (tricuspis) is a Latin word meaning "having three points", referring to the three teeth on the leaf tips. This species is placed alone in series Banksia ser. Tricuspidae.
Collectanea Topographica et Genealogica is an eight volume miscellany of previously unpublished material related to genealogy collated by Sir Frederic Madden (1801-1873), Rev.Bulkeley Bandinel (1781-1861) and John Gough Nichols (1806–1873), that was published quarterly from 1834. The editors' own summary of the contents of all eight volumes appeared at the end of the final volume, page 457.
He joined the Shanghai Association for Dramatists, and made a number of plays, including The Young Mistress's Fan, which was adapted from Oscar Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan. The play was tremendously popular and was highly influential to the development of modern drama in China. In 1925, Hong Shen published the film script Mrs. Shentu in the Shanghai magazine Eastern Miscellany.
The species was fist formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1999 as part of the work Acacia miscellany. The taxonomy of fifty- five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae. as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma plautellum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 and then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2014.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1999 as a part of the work Acacia miscellany. The taxonomy of fifty-five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae. as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma profusum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006.
2 (1827), 259 note, quoting Stow's Survey of London on St Michael, Cripplegate ward. A payment of £12-9s-10d was made for the "sertying ledying and sawdryng of the ded course of the King of Scottes" and carrying it York and to Windsor.J. Mackie, 'The English Army at Flodden', in Miscellany of the Scottish History Society vol. 8 (Edinburgh 1951), p.
"Miscellany, Feb. 9, 1959", Time Magazine, February 1959, accessed 1 August 2011 She later was elected to the Tribal Council, serving on it until 1986."Obituary of Virginia Shanta Klinekole", LaGrone Funeral Chapel of Ruidoso Website, accessed 1 August 2011 The tribe repeatedly re-elected Wendell Chino as president; he served a total of 43 years, until his death on November 4, 1998.
The TPJC Link, originally known as Tplink, is the college's quarterly magazine. Written and managed by a team of student writers, the magazine is distributed to all staff and students for a nominal fee, deducted annually under a general miscellany fee. Since the January–March 2008 issue, the magazine has extended its coverage of college events from a 12 to 16-page spread.
Moray then took Lochmaben Castle, which the Laird of Drumlanrig was left to hold, and then captured Lochwood and Lochhouse before returning to Edinburgh via Peebles. At Dumfries, a number of Lord Maxwell's supporters surrendered.Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 12 (Edinburgh, 1970), pp. 128–134: Holinshed, Raphael, Chronicles: Scotland, vol. 5 (London, 1808), 634: Bannatyne Miscellany, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1827), pp.
After service in the Army, he published his first volume of poetry in 1946. From 1947 to 1966, he was a professor of English at Carleton College. While at Carleton he renewed his magazine under the name the Carleton Miscellany and published many first-time poets such as Charles Wright. He taught at the University of Maryland College Park until 1984.
Within a year of the publication of volume one, Allan Ramsay was inspired to publish his "Tea-Table Miscellany" (1724) in Edinburgh. "A Collection of Old Ballads" is the first printed collection to aim for songs that were genuinely old folksongs, but there are no tunes to the 159 texts. In a few cases the names of tunes are indicated.
The Gymkhana has various departments, for example, Sports Department – including Cricket, Volleyball, Basketball, Hockey, Indian Games, Tennis, football, Badminton & indoor games among others – Cultural & Youth Festival Department, the Miscellany Department which brings out the college magazine Varnasaptaka annually, the Debate & Wall paper department, and the Reading Room department. The college has a Science Association, in addition to Study Circles in different departments.
In 1720, Hammond edited A New Miscellany of Original Poems, Translations, and Imitations, by the Most Eminent Hands, viz. Mr. Prior, Mr. Pope, Mr. Hughes, Mr. Harcourt, Lady M[ary] W[ortley] M[ontagu], Mrs. Manley, &c.;, now first published from their respective manuscripts. With some Familiar Letters, by the late Earl of Rochester, never before printed (preface signed ‘A. H.’), London, 1720.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Richard Sumner Cowan and Bruce Maslin in 1999 as part of the work Acacia miscellany. Miscellaneous new taxa and lectotypifications in Western Australian Acacia, mostly section Plurinerves (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma auripilum in 2003 by Leslie Pedley then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006.
Fulcher also started in 1838 a monthly miscellany of prose and verse entitled Fulcher's Sudbury Journal, but this was not continued beyond the year. He made an effort to treat pauperism poetically, publishing The Village Paupers, and Other Poems.London, 1845. "The Village Paupers", in heroic couplets, betrays in almost every line the influence of Crabbe and of Oliver Goldsmith's The Deserted Village.
The Book of the White Earl is an Irish religious and literary miscellany created c. 1404-1452\. The Book of the White Earl, now Bodleian Laud Misc. MS 610, consists of twelve folios inserted into Leabhar na Rátha, aka The Book of Pottlerath. It was created by Gaelic scribes under the patronage of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond (1392–1452).
Robert was a courtier of James IV of Scotland, and was bought expensive clothing for his role in 1494. He was First Usher of the Royal Chamber in 1495.' Accounts of Duncan Forrester of Skipinch' in, Ninth Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, SHS (1958), 66. In 1496 he was paid an £80 salary as chief of the King's Artillery.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 45. Uraniborg was an extremely expensive project. It is estimated that it cost about 1% of the entire state budget during construction. Upon losing financial support from Frederick II's successor, Christian IV of Denmark, Brahe abandoned Hven in 1597.
Margaret Burnham Kelly graduated from the Wheeler School in June 1925. Margaret Burnham Kelly entered Vassar College in the fall of 1925 and studied art and mathematics. Kelly was a member of the track team and a news editor for The Vassar Miscellany News. She was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and graduated from Vassar with an AB in the spring of 1929.
The High Court held that Rylands involved ‘quite unacceptable uncertainty’. It said that Blackburn J’s formulation had been ‘all but obliterated by subsequent judicial explanations and qualifications’. And at the time of Rylands, negligence liability was limited to ‘a miscellany of disparate categories of cases’ and only with Heaven v PenderHeaven v Pender (1883) 11 QBD 503. and Donoghue v Stevenson,.
Elfrida Fouldes was a lifelong member of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). She served on the Meeting for Sufferings of London Yearly Meeting (an executive committee) from 1939 to 1985; from 1969 to 1974 she was its Clerk.A Quaker miscellany, p. 176.As Clerk of "Sufferings", Vipont wrote to The Times concerning chemical weapons, published 6 April 1971, p.
Reynolds was also a major figure in the Chartist movement. In 1846, he founded two magazines, Reynolds' Miscellany (RM) and The London Journal (LJ). In 1849, he founded Reynolds's Political Instructor, which in May 1850 became Reynolds Weekly Newspaper, the leading radical newspaper of the post-Chartist era. It long survived him, ending publication in 1967 as the Sunday Citizen.
To the Masoretic midrashim belong also the explanations of passages read and not written, or written and not read which have been edited from an old grammatical and Masoretic miscellany in the Manuel du Lecteur of Joseph Derenbourg (Paris, 1871), and in Jacob Saphir's Eben Sappir,ii. 218 et seq., Mayence, 1874 and reprinted by A. Jellinek.In his B. H. (v. 27-30).
Face Chronograph The volumes are grouped in a relatively chronological order and include four major areas: Biblical History, History of Rome, History of Byzantium and Russian history. The titles and contents of the 10 volumes are: # Museum Miscellany (Музейский сборник, State Historical Museum) – 1031 pages, 1677 miniatures. Sacred Hebrew and Greek history, from the creation of the world to the destruction of Troy in the 13th century BC. # Chronograph Miscellany (Хронографический сборник, Library of the Russian Academy of Sciences) – 1469 pages, 2549 miniatures. History of the ancient East, the Hellenistic world, and ancient Rome from the 11th century BC to the 70s in the 1st century AD. # Face Chronograph (Лицевой хронограф, Russian National Library) – 1217 pages, 2191 miniature. History of the ancient Roman Empire from the 70s in the 1st century to 337 AD, and Byzantine history to the 10th century.
The book consists of 50 songs with their airs, along with a simple accompaniment. A second volume, in two volumes octavo, had another 50 added. The two editions are interesting and valuable, although Sir John Hawkins described him as "a tradesman" and said that his collection was injudicious and incorrect. The words of the songs were largely taken from Allan Ramsay's Tea-Table Miscellany, published in 1724.
From New Guinea he had a survey of war-time poetry, "Australian Poets of This War" published in The Australian Quarterly. His own first volume, A Soldier's Miscellany, was accepted for publication but delayed until 1945 by the war-time paper shortage.Eric Irvin, "Australian Poets of This War", The Australian Quarterly Vol 16, no 2 (June, 1944), pp 89–94, accessed 1 October 2011.
An older William Herndon. By the time he was free to release his own biography of Lincoln, a miscellany of personal problems, including continued financial problems and his alcoholism, left him unable to formulate the stacks of papers into a coherent text. A young man named Jesse W. Weik who had corresponded with Herndon became a good friend. They then collaborated on the biography of Lincoln's life.
Hugh Eric Allan Johnson (born 10 March 1939, in London) is a British author and expert on wine. He is considered the world's best-selling wine writer. A wine he tasted in 1964, a 1540 Steinwein from the German vineyard Würzburger Stein, is considered one of the oldest to have ever been tasted.G. Harding "A Wine Miscellany" pg 22, Clarkson Potter Publishing, New York 2005 H. Johnson.
A translation by Scrope of the epistle of Sappho to Phaon was inserted in Ovid's Epistles translated by Various Hands, numerous editions of which were issued between 1681 and 1725, and it was reprinted in Nichols's Collection of Poems., Cites: Nichols 1780, i. 6–10; Pope, Works, ed. Elwin and Courthope, i. 93–103. Other renderings of Ovid by Scrope are in the Miscellany Poems of 1684.
Her elder daughter, Lady Grizel Murray of Stanhope, had in her possession a manuscript in prose and verse of her mother's songs. Some of them had been printed in Allan Ramsay's, Tea-Table Miscellany. The most famous of Lady Grizel's Scots songs, "And werena my heart light I wad dee", originally appeared in William Thomson's Orpheus Caledonius, or a Collection of the Best Scotch Songs (1725).
The earliest text may be "The Gypsy Loddy", published in the Roxburghe Ballads with an assigned date of 1720. A more certain date is 1740, the publication of Allan Ramsay's Tea-Table Miscellany, which included the ballad as of "The Gypsy Johnny Faa". Differences between the two texts suggest that they derive from one or more earlier versions. They were followed by several printings, often copying Ramsay.
From his eighteenth year Norton began to compose verse. With Jasper Heywood he was a writer of sonnets. He contributed to Tottel's Miscellany, and in 1560 he co-authored, along with Thomas Sackville, the earliest English tragedy, Gorboduc, which was performed before Elizabeth I in the Inner Temple on 18 January 1561. Gorboduc was revised, as The Tragedy of Ferrex and Porrex in 1570.
Wiseman, Talking to Virgil: A Miscellany, p.75 The elder Asiaticus in 35 served as a suffect consul and again in 46, served as an ordinary consul.P.J. Sijpesteijn, "Another οὑσἱᾳ of D.Valerius Asiaticus in Egypt", Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 79 (1989), p. 194 He was the first man from Gaul to attain the consulshipFreisenbruch, The First Ladies of Rome: The Women Behind the Caesars, p.
Lincoln Record Society (2010). The British Palladium: Or, Annual Miscellany of Literature and Science for the Year 1765, vol. 12, p. 63. Reprint: Ulan Press (2012) Plaques on the north aisle north wall are to those of the parish killed in the First and Second World Wars, and to those of the 1st Airborne Signals who fought in 1942–45 campaigns in Italy and North Africa.
Eamon Joyce from Miscellany News commented that "upon hearing the song, it's embedded in your head for weeks." Bob Waliszewski of Plugged In stated that Lewis "pledges lifelong commitment" on the song. In 2018, Stacker ranked it at number 10 in their list of "Best pop songs of the last 25 years", noting Lewis' "ethereal voice over a heavenly backdrop of synthesizers and understated drum beats".
Blackwood's Magazine was a British magazine and miscellany printed between 1817 and 1980. It was founded by the publisher William Blackwood and was originally called the Edinburgh Monthly Magazine. The first number appeared in April 1817 under the editorship of Thomas Pringle and James Cleghorn. The journal was unsuccessful and Blackwood fired Pringle and Cleghorn and relaunched the journal as Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine under his own editorship.
Films and Filming Volume 25 (1978), p. 33 In 1980 Oldfield became a minor but notable figure in the Star Wars saga, appearing as Rebel fighter pilot Hobbie Klivian in The Empire Strikes Back and delivering the line to Carrie Fisher “Two fighters against a Star Destroyer?”Richard Oldfield profile at scifiscarborough.co.uk, accessed 1 December 2017Empire Movie Miscellany: Instant Film Buff Status Guaranteed (2012), p.
Through his 1741 edition of The British Telescope, he described the path of the forthcoming 1769 transit of Venus as curved, and planetary movement as elliptical, attracting the attention of the Royal Astronomer journal.The British Palladium: Or, Annual Miscellany of Literature and Science for the Year 1765, vol. 12, p. 63. Reprint: Ulan Press (2012)The London Magazine, Or, Gentleman's Monthly Intelligencer (1768), vol.
The Dwight Schrute character has had a very positive reception, and is often cited as one of the most popular characters on the show. According to Entertainment Weekly he is one of the "greatest sidekicks."Ben Schott, Schott's Miscellany Calendar 2009 (New York: Workman Publishing, 2008), March 21. In TV Guide's list of the top 100 characters in television history, Dwight was ranked 85th.
Mischodon is a genus in the family Picrodendraceae, described in 1854.Thwaites, George Henry Kendrick. 1854. Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany 6: 299-300 description in Latin, commentary in EnglishTropicos, Mischodon Thwaites The only known species is Mischodon zeylanicus, a tree native to southern India, Sri Lanka, and the Andaman Islands.Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant FamiliesBalakrishnan, N.P. & Chakrabarty, T. (2007).
Hercigonja was born in Croatia's capital Zagreb in 1929. After finishing primary and secondary school in Sisak, he received a degree in Slavic studies at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Zagreb. He received his Ph.D. in 1970 with the thesis Jezik glagoljaške neliturgijske književnosti 15. stoljeća i Petrisov zbornik ('Language of the Glagolitic non-liturgical literature and Petris' miscellany').
16 (London, 1715), p. 263: Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 77-8, 87. In March 1595, Scottish Jesuit Father James Myreton, brother of the Laird of Cambo, was detained at Leith and brought to King James VI. He said he was sent from Pope Clement VIII and Cardinal Cajetan.
It remains the only scholarly collection of Finch's poetry, and includes all of the poems from Miscellany Poems and poems retrieved from manuscripts. Further, Reynolds's impressive introduction did as much to re-establish Finch's reputation as Wordsworth's previous praise. Later, The Wellesley Manuscript, which contained 53 unpublished poems, was released. Literary scholars have noted Finch's distinctive voice and her poems' intimacy, sincerity, and spirituality.
Another student publication, The Radiator, which The Spectator marks as its origin, appeared in 1848. A weekly publication, The Radiator described itself as, "A Weekly Miscellany of General Literature, Science, and Foreign and Domestic Intelligence." The publication was a collection of short stories, historical sketches, poetry and news excerpts gathered from both foreign and domestic news outlets. The College yearbook, The Hamiltonian was first published in 1858.
Eddy responded that this was untrue and that her father had been an avid reader.Mary Baker Eddy, "Reply to McClure's Magazine" , Christian Science Endtime Center, undated.Mary Baker Eddy, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and Miscellany, Christian Science Publishing Society, 1913, 308. According to Eddy, her father had been a justice of the peace at one point and a chaplain of the New Hampshire State Militia.
Hale was president of the Sheffield Society of Architects between 1909 and 1911 and at the same time was involved at the University of Sheffield's Architectural Department."The Chapels Society – Miscellany 1- Sane if Unheroic: The Work of John William Hale", N.D. Wilson, The Chapels Society, , gives detailed biography. The Rutland Works railway spring shop at Neepsend. Now home to the Church – Temple of Fun.
His influence extended to the General Baptist congregation at Lutton, Lincolnshire, which had become universalist (1790). This introduced him (1797) to William Vidler, to whose periodical, the Universalist's Miscellany, he contributed (in the last half of 1797) a series of letters (reprinted Edinburgh, 1797). Vidler and he exchanged visits, and he made Vidler a unitarian (by 1802). At this time Wright wrote much on universalism.
Sean won 35 Irish titles. The parish has also been home to some fine tug of war teams and many prize greyhounds have been bred or trained locally. It is the birthplace of the Munster poet Tadhg Gaelach Ó Súilleabháin (Timothy O'Sullivan) (1715–1795), author of The Pius Miscellany, and who is buried in Ballylaneen Co. Waterford. Saint Ita was born in County Waterford around 480.
Meehan (2009) Cruise O'Brien was elected a scholar in Modern Languages at Trinity in 1937 and was editor of Trinity's weekly, TCD: A College Miscellany. His first wife, Christine Foster, came from a Belfast Presbyterian family and was, like her father, a member of the Gaelic League. Her parents, Alexander (Alec) Roulston Foster and Mary Lynd, were Irish republicans and supporters of Irish reunification.
The legends were first printed during 1837 as a regular series in the magazine Bentley's Miscellany and later in New Monthly Magazine.Ian Ousby ed., The Cambridge Guide to Literature In English (London 1995) p. 472 They proved immensely popular and were compiled into books published in 1840, 1842 and 1847 by Richard Bentley. They remained popular during the 19th century, when they ran through many editions.
It was then closed by the British Railways Board. The OS maps and photographs show that it had one platform, a signal box, a weighing machine, and a siding. A passing loop was located just beyond the Llangybi end of the single platform.Derelicy Miscellany Retrieved : 2012-09-21 Passenger services ran through to Aberystwyth until flooding severely damaged the line south of Aberystwyth in December 1964.
A zibaldone is an Italian vernacular commonplace book. The word means "a heap of things" or "miscellany" in Italian. The earliest such books were kept by Venetian merchants in the fourteenth century, taking the form of a small or medium-format paper codex. The word may also refer specifically to the best- known such book: the Zibaldone di pensieri by Giacomo Leopardi, often called simply The Zibaldone.
Wolf attended the University of Southern California (USC), where he swam for the USC Trojans swimming and diving team in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) competition and was a four-time All American. He graduated from USC with a bachelor's degree in 1951, and later returned to USC Law School to earn a law degree in 1957.University of Southern California, About USC. "A Trojan Olympic Miscellany".
In 1967 he co-founded the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses together with Reed Whittemore (The Carleton Miscellany, The New Republic); Jules Chametzky (The Massachusetts Review); George Plimpton (The Paris Review); and Robie Macauley (Playboy).History of The Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines (CCLM) Pauline Uchmanowicz, "A Brief History of CCLM/CLMP," The Massachusetts Review, Vol. 44, No. 1/2, Spring - Summer, 2003, pp. 70-87.
Public Printing in North Carolina, 1749-1815, North Carolina Historial Review, Vol. 21, no. 3 (July 1944): 181-202, at 183.Graham, Nicholas (26 August 2004). August 1751: North Carolina’s First Newspaper, North Carolina Miscellany (UNC Chapel Hill libraries), Retrieved 1 February 2019 Previously, the lack of a paper for the colony meant residents had to rely on the Virginia Gazette (founded 1736) for news and advertising.
In 1842, he was asked by the firm of Bradbury, Soden and Company to suggest an editor for a new monthly magazine they were planning to publish, The Boston Miscellany; Hale named his 21-year-old son, Nathan Hale, Jr., as its founding editor.Frank Luther Mott, A History of American Magazines, 1741-1850. Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 1966, p. 718.
On 10 October 1589 Bille had brought a letter from Anne of Denmark to James VI explaining that she had given up trying to sail Scotland after five failed attempts.William Boyd, Henry Meikle, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 166–8: Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588–1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp.
Loy McAfee led the effort to document the activities of the Army Medical Department during World War I. She provided editorial direction for "The Medical Department of the United States Army in the World War", a 15-volume work completed in 1930. Several parts were reviewed in JAMA. Dr. McAfee published "Social Medicine, Medical Economics and Miscellany " in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
He took symbolic possession or (sasine) by accepting a handful of earth and stone.David Stevenson, Scotland's Last Royal Wedding (John Donald: Edinburgh, 1997), p. 103. The next keeper was the English courtier Roger Aston, who repaired the roof in 1594 using lead shipped from England.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp.
In 1844 he abandoned the practice of medicine. For the rest of his life, he wrote on a variety of subjects, but specialized in the study of several languages, the Middle Ages, and Freemasonry. After being connected with several Charleston journals, he established in 1849 The Southern and Western Masonic Miscellany, a weekly magazine. He maintained it for three years, mostly by his own expense.
Paul Bekker. Paul Bekker (September 11, 1882 in Berlin - March 7, 1937 in New York) was one of the most articulate and influential German music critics of the 20th century. The music library of Yale University houses the Paul Bekker Collection, which contains a variety of letters, documents, receipts, photographs, printed scores and other forms of miscellany, some of which have great historical and musicological value.
Strickland sat for Hedon throughout the Long Parliament, taking a hard line in support of the Commonwealth and later of Cromwell. (An opposition pamphleteer described him as “for settling the Protector anew in all those things for which the king was cut off”.Harleian Miscellany, iii, 486, quoted in the Dictionary of National Biography) He also spoke frequently in favour of the punishment of James Naylor.
Smoke and Mirrors: Short Fictions and Illusions is a collection of short stories and poems by Neil Gaiman. It was first published in the United States in 1998, and in the United Kingdom in 1999. Many of the stories in this book are reprints from other sources, such as magazines, anthologies, and collections (including ten stories and poems from Gaiman's earlier small press miscellany Angels and Visitations).
During the protracted divorce proceedings, she worked as a journalist for several London magazines and became friends with Wilkie Collins, who also wrote for Bentley's Miscellany. It was through Collins that she met Charles Dickens. Collins had asked her to play in the 1857 amateur performances of The Frozen Deep, a play he had co- written with Dickens. In December 1863 she married the Very Rev.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1886 and won its Royal Medal in 1897. He was a Plenary Speaker of the ICM in 1908 at Rome. He is now remembered much more as an author of treatises than as an original researcher. His books have, however, often been criticized (for example by J. E. Littlewood, in his A Mathematician's Miscellany).
Grevillea intricata is a shrub which is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It grows up to 3 metres in height and produces flowers between May and October (late autumn to mid spring) in its native range. The species was first formally described by botanist Carl Meissner, in a paper published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855.
After a long absence in Italy, Hare returned to New College as a tutor in 1818. In June 1824 he published a defence of the Gospel narrative of the Resurrection, entitled A Layman's Letters to the Authors of the "Trial of the Witnesses". In 1825, he was ordained in Winchester College Chapel. With his brother Julius, Hare wrote Guesses at Truth, an "influential miscellany" of essays.
There were always a few items of local interest, usually placed with paragraphs of editorial miscellany. Correspondents, in return for the paper, sent items; private letters, often no doubt written with a view to such use, were a fruitful source of news; but the chief resource was the newspapers that every office received as exchanges, carried in the post free of charge, and the newspapers from abroad.
R. L. Thompson, 'Preface', A Medieval Miscellany: Essays by Past and Present Members of the Staff Medieval Group and the Centre for Medieval Studies of the University of Leeds in Honour of Professor John Le Patourel, ed. by R. L. Thomson, Proceedings of the Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society. Literary and Historical Section, 18 pt. 1 ([Leeds]: [Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society], 1982), pp. 5-6.
Student media has actively consolidated to a single network under the name CisternYard Media. Under this umbrella is a student-run newspaper called CisternYard News which is online with a quarterly print insert called The Yard. There is also a student-run radio station called Cistern Yard Radio. CisternYard Video and a literary organization called Miscellany are also included under the CisternYard Media umbrella.
Mesny's Miscellany, Vol IV, p. 399. In addition to sending Han exiles convicted of crimes to Xinjiang to be slaves of Banner garrisons there, the Qing also practiced reverse exile, exiling Inner Asian (Mongol, Russian and Muslim criminals from Mongolia and Inner Asia) to China proper where they would serve as slaves in Han Banner garrisons in Guangzhou. Russian, Oirats and Muslims (Oros. Ulet.
In June 1589 an English sailor George Beeston arrived in the Forth and Delny was sent to greet him.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 11 fn. 37. In October Delny was in the retinue which accompanied James VI to Norway and Denmark to collect his future Queen, Anne of Denmark.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Richard Sumner Cowan and Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany. Five groups of microneurous species of Acacia (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: section Plurinerves), mostly from Western Australia as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was later reclassified as Racosperma aulacophyllum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 and then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006.
She was a regular contributor to RTÉ Radio's Sunday miscellany and other shows in the 1980s. Her interest in family history and her travels provided subject matter for her Irish Times articles which were published throughout the 1990s. She had a particular interest in historical diaries, and traveled Ireland in search of unpublished examples. This resulted in her 1997 book, Diaries of Ireland: an anthology, 1590–1987.
The publication of Ellen Wood's East Lynne (1861), which sold out four editions in six months, helped dramatically. After 20 years, the book had sold 110,250 copies. In January 1866 Bentley purchased Temple Bar Magazine; his son, George, became the editor, a position which he held until 1895. Two years later, Ainsworth ran into financial trouble with Bentley's Miscellany and the Bentleys bought it back for £250.
At times the last working Cornish pumping engine can be seen working.Google review The museum is an Anchor point on the European Route of Industrial Heritage. Miscellany It is home to Cornwall's first ILR Radio Station, Pirate FM. On 20 June 2008, the town held its first regular Farmers' Market in Market Place: the Market will now be held every Friday throughout the year.
Campbell dedicated the work in 1860 to the son of my Chief, the Marquess of Lorne. Volume IV, subtitled "Postscript", contained miscellany. The greater part of it was devoted to commentary on the Ossian controversy, the rest filled with descriptions of traditional costume, music, and lore on supernatural beings, etc. More West Highland Tales (1940) was later published, provided with translations by John Gunn McKay.
Perhaps the most prominent theatrical work is John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728). Sheppard was the inspiration for the character of Macheath, and his nemesis, Peachum, is based on Jonathan Wild. A melodrama, Jack Sheppard, The Housebreaker, or London in 1724, by William Thomas Moncrieff was published in 1825. Ainsworth's popular novel was published in Bentley's Miscellany from January 1839, with illustrations by George Cruikshank.
Isaac Taylor had soliloquy of Hill's "on hearing a parent correct his child with curses". A more ambitious poem was mentioned by Maurice Johnson, junior, in a letter to Stukeley, dated 14 October 1719. Verses on Hill's death are in John Husband's Miscellany of Poems (pp. 134–40), Oxford, 1731, implying that Hill wrote some lines on "Eternity" about ten hours before his death.
Willard was the son of Harvard president Joseph Willard and Mary (Sheafe) Willard. Willard was a member of the Anthology Club, and a founder of The Literary Miscellany, established and edited the American Monthly Review (4 vols., 1832/3), was editor of The Christian Register, contributed to numerous periodicals, and published a Hebrew Grammar (Cambridge, 1817), and Memoirs of Youth and Manhood (2 vols., 1855).
Kemp Morgan or Gib Morgan (1842–1909) is a character from American folklore, particularly appearing in tall tales. Kemp Morgan stories are said to have appeared in the oil fields of Texas and Oklahoma, where he was a folk hero similar to Paul Bunyan or John Henry.Folk-say: A Regional Miscellany, 1929–32, ed. Benjamin Albert Botkin, University of Oklahoma Press, 1930, Volume 2 pp.
The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany 1789 p.53 At this time he is listed as living at Buccleuch Place in Edinburgh’s South Side.Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1790-92 He died at Canaan House on Grange Loan on 10 February 1810.The Edinburgh Magazine and London Review 1810 The house still exists as a building within the grounds of Astley Ainslie Hospital.
The Prayers before, at, and after the Holy Communion were reprinted in Theophilus Dorrington's Reform'd Devotions, 1700, 1704, 1727. Lake's Diary in 1677–8 was edited in 1846 by George Percy Elliott, for vol. i. of the Camden Society's Miscellany. Sixteen of his Sermons preached upon Several Occasions (including a Concio ad Clerum Londinensem, 1685) were published by his son-in-law, William Taswell, London, 1705.
The species was originally described by Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany 13. Taxonomy of some Western Australian phyllocladinous and aphyllodinous taxa (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was briefly reclassified as Racosperma applanatum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 but classified back into the genus Acacia in 2006. Other synonyms include; Acacia diptera, Acacia diptera var.
The species was originally described by the botanists Richard Sumner Cowan and Bruce Maslin in 1990 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany 3. Some new microneurous taxa of Western Australia related to A. multineata (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: Section Plurinerves) from Western Australia. published in the journal Nuytsia. Synonyms for the plant include Acacia unguiculata, Racosperma unguiculatum and Racosperma unguiculum as described by Pedley in 2003.
Her illustrations, and those of J.B. Yeats and William Orpen, were included in the Second Annual Volume of The Shanachie, an "Irish Miscellany Illustrated" which included works be many Irish writer, including W.B. Yeats, Stephen Gwynn, Lady Gregory and George Bernard Shaw.The Publishers' Circular and Booksellers' Record, Volume 87. London: Office of "The Publishers Circular," Limited; 1907. p. 96. Darwin taught her husband's cousin Gwen Raverat engraving.
Miscellanies were an influential literary form at the time. From the beginning of the 18th century, verse miscellanies were gathering together a selection of poetic works by different authors, past and present, and so played a part in the development of the concept of the English canon. These literary miscellanies might be sold as unique collections, arising from the combinations of writers in a small literary circle; or their function could attempt to be more national and historical, by representing the finest works of British poets to date. The multiple editions of the Dryden-Tonson Miscellany Poems (1684-1708)Digital Miscellanies Index, Miscellany Poems and the Swift-Pope Miscellanies (1727–32),Google Books Miscellanies as well as The Muses Library (1737)Google BooksThe Muses Library and The British Muse (1738),Google Books The British Muse were from early on attempting to construct a notion of a national literary heritage.
When Burns died in 1796, Maria wrote an admired account of him for the Dumfries Journal. She was also a friend of the novelist and poet Helen Craik, another admirer of Burns. She included some poems by Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire and Mary Darwall in her 1802 anthology, The Metrical Miscellany. Her husband lost Woodley Park and another property and died at the end of the century.
"Leaf by Niggle" is a short story written by J. R. R. Tolkien in 1938–39Tolkien, J.R.R. "Tree and Leaf." George Allen & Unwin, 1964. and first published in the Dublin Review in January 1945. It can be found, most notably, in Tolkien's book titled Tree and Leaf, and in other places (including the collections The Tolkien Reader, Poems & Stories, A Tolkien Miscellany, and Tales from the Perilous Realm).
They called their establishment "Elmhurst School, for the Sons of Gentlemen"."History" , Elmhurst School for Boys, pdf downloaded 29 August 2015; and "Birth and Background", Murphy, N. T. P. The P G Wodehouse Miscellany, 2015 The previous Principal, Henry Wickham, who bought the school in 2009, is the husband of the author Sophie Kinsella. Bellevue Education bought the school in October 2013. The parent company is Bellevue Education International Limited.
By 1898 his interest in ticks as disease vectors had been awakened. His interests also extended to collecting fungi and other cryptogams. Because of the limited space available at his office, Lounsbury was obliged to house his tick host animals in a miscellany of buildings, such as builder's sheds, scattered over Cape Town. Cattle, goats, sheep and dogs were kept without serious objections from neighbours or health authorities.
Like the 4AD label, Factory Records used a creative team (most notably record producer Martin Hannett and graphic designer Peter Saville) which gave the label and the artists recording for it a particular sound and image. The label employed a unique cataloguing system that gave a number not just to its musical releases, but also to various other related miscellany, including artwork, films, living beings, and even Wilson's own casket.
Michael Bath, Emblems in Scotland: Motifs and Meanings (Brill, Leiden, 2018), pp. 97–101. James VI gave his courtiers gifts of jewelry at New Year. In January 1596 Erskine received a "tablet" or locket set with rubies and diamonds and a gold ring set with a table diamond.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's 'English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588–1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 85.
Charlotte Ann Fillebrown Jerauld (pen name, Charlotte; April 16, 1820 - August 2, 1845) was an American poet and story writer. A zealous Universalist, she contributed to Christian magazines such as Ladies' Repository, the Rose of Sharon, the Universalist Quarterly, the Miscellany, the Union, and the Star of Bethlehem. Jerauld died after a birth at the age of 25, her dead infant, five days old, buried in the coffin with her.
With the invention of the automobile, the need for the public mounting block vanished and they now are used exclusively by equestrians or retained as historic features at old inns, kirks, etc.The History of East KilbrideRCAHMS Database In the 1860s, those mounting blocks that remained in London e.g. Bayswater, were thought of as quaint and old fashioned "in the true style of olden times".The Youth's magazine, or Evangelical miscellany, pub.
Miniature from the North French Hebrew Miscellany of Noah's Ark landing on the Mountains of Ararat (fol. 521a, c. 1278-98) The Inquisition, which had been instituted in order to suppress Catharism, finally occupied itself with the Jews of Southern France who converted to Christianity. The popes complained that not only were baptized Jews returning to their former faith, but that Christians also were being converted to Judaism.
Title page of Miscellany Poems, on Several Occasions, published in 1713. By the early 18th century, the political climate in England had generally improved for the Finches. King William died in 1702, and his death was followed by the succession to the throne of Queen Anne, the daughter of James II, who had died in 1701. With these developments, the Finches felt ready to embrace a more public lifestyle.
Stephen Taylor From Cranmer to Davidson: a Church of England miscellany On 1 October 1856, Milman was appointed librarian and chaplain of Sion College.Sion College and library He was rector of St Augustine and St Faith. In 1874 and 1875, he was president of Sion College. In 1880 he presented to the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society Some account of Sion College and of its library which was later published separately.
Quinby was born in Brewer, Maine on December 14, 1835. His family moved to Detroit, Michigan in 1850, where his father Daniel F. Quinby published a magazine, The Literary Miscellany. William Quinby attended Gregory's Business College in Detroit before transferring to the University of Michigan, where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1858. He then studied law, attained admission to the bar and practiced in Detroit for two years.
There were barrels of English beer and wine from the cellars at Holyrood Palace. A boatman James Lun spent eight days loading the ship and then put the king and his company aboard.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 28-34: John Mackenzie, A chronicle of the kings of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1830), p.
Reduced and coloured copies of the revised map, which was of the original size (i.e. six feet square), were sold with the second and third editions of the Index Villaris. Adams has been identified, on inadequate grounds, with a ‘Joannes Adamus Transylvanus,’ the author of a Latin poem describing the city of London, which was translated into English verse about 1675, and is reprinted in Harleian Miscellany, x. 139–50.
During 1840, Ainsworth simultaneously wrote The Tower of London and Guy Fawkes, both initially published as serials. The stories began their publication in January 1840; Guy Fawkes was published in instalments in Bentley's Miscellany until November 1840. Ainsworth serialised the story again in his own magazine, Ainsworth's Magazine, in 1849–50. As well as the two serialisations, the story has been published as a novel on seven occasions.
Jack Sheppard was serially published in Bentley's Miscellany from January 1839 until February 1840.Worth 1972 p. 19 The novel was intertwined with the history of Charles Dickens's Oliver Twist, which ran in the same publication from February 1837 to April 1839. Dickens, previously a friend of Ainsworth's, became distant from Ainsworth as a controversy brewed over the scandalous nature around Jack Sheppard, Oliver Twist, and other novels describing criminal life.
The music notes (with blank lyrics) was printed, preceding the ballad text, in Pills to Purge Melancholy (1719). The melody was also printed with lyrics to an unrelated ballad printed in Watt's Musical Miscellany (1729).An untitled ballad by one Mr. Prior that begins "Who has e'er been at Paris.." Edward Francis Rimbault provided musical history on the tune (on this and other pieces in Percy's Reliques). Melody appended on p.
Few details are available on its formation, but it is reported to have been established by Viyacheslav Eshba based upon several Yak-52 trainer aircraft armed with machine guns.Slavic & East European Collections at UC Berkeley (June 1998). . Army & Society in Georgia: Military Chronicle – Miscellany. Drawn from an entry published in 7 Dge, No. 72, June 22–23, p.3 (reprinted from "Abkhazia" No. 5, a periodical issued in Russia).
Some energy is used for air conditioning, heating, lighting and other miscellany. At low speeds the percentage of power used for levitation can be significant, consuming up to 15% more power than a subway or light rail service. For short distances the energy used for acceleration might be considerable. The power used to overcome air drag increases with the cube of the velocity and hence dominates at high speed.
In addition to introducing the vaccination he worked tirelessly to build up the city's childbirth provision and to promote social and welfare provision more generally. None of this put an end to Kerner's journalistic activity. He wrote regular articles for the Hamburg weekly paper "Nordische Miszellen" ("Northern Miscellany") in which he gave vent to his political dissatisfaction. That increased after 1806 when the French armies occupied the city.
However, at that time the technique of allowing noble rot to infect grapes had not yet been discovered, so the wine Jefferson was drinking was a different sweet wine. The 1811 Château d'Yquem, a comet vintage, has exhibited what wine experts like Robert Parker have described as exceptional longevity with Parker scoring the wine a perfect 100 points when tasted in 1996.Harding, Graham (2005). A Wine Miscellany.
Tadhg Gaelach Ó Súilleabháin (c.1715-1795), known in English as Timothy O'Sullivan, was an Irish poet whose Pious Miscellany was reprinted over 40 times in the early 19th century. Ó Súilleabháin was born in Míntín Eoghain in the parish of Cill Íde near Tournafulla in County Limerick c.1715. His early works were reflective of Munster poetry of the period, including laments, eulogies, "drinking songs" and verses promoting Jacobite causes.
Vale, Brian, 'Captain J P Grenfell of the Brazilian Navy in the River Plate', in The Naval Miscellany VIII, Navy Records Society, 2017 He was however promoted to vice-admiral and then finally admiral and returned to Liverpool to resume his role as consul-general. In 1861, he attended the funeral of Lord Cochrane in Westminster Abbey as the representative of the Brazilian Government. He died in Paris in 1869.
Michael Pearce, 'Riddle's Court, Banquet & Diplomacy in 1598', History Scotland 12:4 (2012), pp. 20–7: Marguerite Wood, Extracts from the Records of the Burgh of Edinburgh, 1589–1603 (Edinburgh, 1927), p. 362. Bousie and Jeremy Bowie were paid £220 Scots for glasses to serve the desserts.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588–1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 80.
TAVR III ('Territorials') were the home defence units with light equipment scales and a much-reduced training commitment; this category was disbanded on 1 April 1969. TAVR IV was a miscellany of units such as University Officer Training Corps and bands.Beckett, pp. 204-207. The Royal Yeomanry Regiment (Volunteers) was in TAVR II. For four years, it was the only Royal Armoured Corps yeomanry reserve regiment: hence its generic name.
Her major subject was Pure Mathematics, and her minors were Applied Mathematics and Physics. before her retirement in 1936. She was promoted to assistant professor in 1915, to associate professor in 1919, and to full professor in 1927.Vassar Miscellany News 16 February 1927 — Vassar Newspaper Archive She was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1924 at Toronto and again in 1932 at Zürich.
Nichols printed some small volumes, including John Byrom's Poems (1814), and pamphlets, and edited the Leeds Literary Observer vol. i., from January to September 1819. This periodical he wanted to replace by a more ambitious monthly miscellany; but in the event he moved to London and opened a printing office at 22 Warwick Square, Newgate Street. His best-known work Calvinism and Arminianism compared (1824), was written and printed there.
After her sister Sarah's 1846 death, Mary Eliza Herbert published The Aeolian Harp, a collection featuring poetry from both Sarah and herself, in 1857. Herbert published Flowers by the Wayside: A Miscellany of Prose and Verse in 1865 at her own expense. Flowers by the Wayside thematically focuses on women's struggles. Herbert's novels were exclusively self-published as Nova Scotia had no book publishing firms in her lifetime.
507 With the suspension of President Lewis Morris from Council in 1704, Bowne became President."Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey", date: various (pre 1950) Governor Cornbury appointed Andrew Bowne a judge of the Inferior Court of Common Pleas on December 11, 1704, and on November 6, 1705, elevated him to the New Jersey Supreme Court.Historical and Genealogical Miscellany, John E. Stillwell, M. D., Vol. III; New York, 1914, p.
The Devonshire Manuscript is a verse miscellany that was produced in the 1530s and early 1540s, and contains a range of works, from original pieces and fragments to translations and medieval verse. Compiled by three eminent women, it is one of the first examples of men and women collaborating on a literary work.Southall, Raymond. “The Devonshire Manuscript Collection of Early Tudor Poetry, 1532–41,” Review of English Studies, n.s.
Edith Allen Milner reminiscences and related miscellany. Retrieved 15 May 2015. Another unpublished manuscript by Milner, "Covered Wagon Experiences", is held by the Arizona Historical Society. Joseph Warren Cheney's "The Story of An Emigrant Train", published in The Annals of Iowa in 1915 also contains descriptions of Alpha Brown's family, the Rose–Baley wagon train, and its aftermath, as does John Udell's diary, published in 1859 and republished in 1946.
South Indian tea, on the other hand, was slow to take off. The gold rush (Miscellany, April 23) was one of the reasons. It was not till James Finlay's developed the Kannan Devan High Range that tea began to make slow but steady progress till South India became the major tea producer it is today. Its slow beginnings were in 1854 in Coonoor, on Thiashola estate, southwest of Coonoor.
It is estimated Halevi died in July or August, possibly after having reached Palestine, based on a letter from Abu Nasr ben Avraham to Halfon ben Netanel dated November 12, 1141.Halkin, p. 236 Legend also has it that Halevi was killed by an Arab horseman as he arrived in Jerusalem, with the first account found within a Hebrew miscellany published around 450 years after Halevi's presumed death.Halkin, p.
David Stevenson, Scotland's Last Royal Wedding (Edinburgh, 1997), p. 40. They gave Henrik Gyldenstierne, Captain of Bohus, a ring and a gold chain worth 3,000 Danish dalers.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 36. In 1593–1604, similar to the construction then undertaken at Akershus in Oslo, Bohus was upgraded to a bastion fortress.
While they were at the palace the clothes of his infant daughter by Elizabeth Beaton, the Lady Jean Stewart, were washed.Athol Murray, 'Pursemaster's Accounts', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society X (Edinburgh, 1965), pp. 42-3. Robert Murray, the plumber who maintained the fountain at Linlithgow Palace, also provided lead work for a long vanished fountain at Falkland.Henry Paton, Accounts of the Masters of Work, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1957), p. 261.
There were several among the well-educated in the 18th century who used dialect in their poetry. One of the earliest was the Rev. Josiah Relph, whose imitations of Theocritan Pastorals self-consciously introduce the demotic for local colour. Although written about 1735, they were not published until after the author's death in A Miscellany of Poems (Wigton, 1747),Online archive followed by two further editions in 1797 and 1805.
Wit and Mirth: or Pills to Purge Melancholy (1719-20); p. 17 in the 1876 reprint, reproduced in facsimile by the Folklore Library (New York, 1959) The poem was first published in a miscellany, The Christmas Box (1828-9), and then included as a song in Scott's unperformed play The Doom of Devorgoil (1830). Later adaptations for singing include only stanzas 1, 2, 8 and 10, with the refrain.
59 published by the Slingshot Collective The tradition of murals began in the 1960s, and many of the "original" murals were painted by house members, such as a large mural of the Beatles Yellow Submarine. As times changed, so did the murals; the 1980s murals were more punk rock. But old murals were considered sacred by house by- laws,Barrington Hall miscellany, 308W.U592.bar, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Thornley joined University College London as an assistant in 1919 becoming assistant lecturer in 1925 and then spending a year as an assistant professor of history at Vassar College in the United States from 1925 to 1926."Isobel Thornley, Former Professor Dies In London Raid" by Louise Fargo Brown in Vassar Miscellany News, Vol. XXV, No. 40 (15 March 1941), p. 2. via Vassar newspaper archives. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1999 as part of the work Acacia miscellany. The taxonomy of fifty-five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma sphenophyllum by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. It resembles and can be confused with Acacia acanthoclada subsp.
The George-Anne, the university's flagship publication, is published twice a week during academic semesters. There are also magazines published by students, such as The Reflector, a student interest news magazine of Georgia Southern University and, until 2016, The Miscellany, a literary arts magazine composed of submissions from the student body and university community. Georgia Southern University's intercollegiate sports teams, known as the "Eagles", compete in the Sun Belt Conference.
Sea- faring Norsemen depicted invading England. Illuminated illustration from the 12th century Miscellany on the Life of St. Edmund (Pierpont Morgan Library) The Viking Age in Scandinavian history is taken to have been the period from the earliest recorded raids by Norsemen in 793 until the Norman conquest of England in 1066.Peter Sawyer, The Viking Expansion, The Cambridge History of Scandinavia, Issue 1 (Knut Helle, ed., 2003), p. 105.
Forty-Fives is a descendant of the Irish game Spoil Five, which in turn is a descendant of a game that King James VI of Scotland popularized in the 17th century called Maw. Scottish emigrants to Atlantic Canada may explain the reason for the popularity of the game there.Chambers, Robert, The Book of Days: a Miscellany of Popular Antiquities in connection with the Calendar, vol.2 (1832), p.
William Fraser, Melvilles, Earls of Melville, and the Leslies, Earls of Leven (Edinburgh, 1890), p. 166: Dorothea Nolde, 'Religion and the Display of Power', C. Scott Dixon, Dagmar Freist, Mark Greengrass, Living with Religious Diversity in Early-modern Europe (Ashgate, 2009), p. 268. He died in 1617. In January 1624 his daughter Anna married Sir James Murray of Tippermuir, known as the compiler of a miscellany of verse.
Anne's government united the two colonies as the Province of New Jersey, a royal colony, establishing a new system of government. In 1703 Edward Hunloke was appointed by The Crown as a member of the New Jersey Provincial Council, however he died before his commission reached American shores. Edward Hunloke made his will on June 4, 1702; proved August 8, 1702.Historical and Genealogical Miscellany, John E. Stillwell, M. D., Vol.
The third part of The Necromancer continues the story of the Lieutenant, as he prepares for his adventure with the Austrian and a miscellany of other officers. They manage to surround the Necromancer in a village inn near the Haunted Castle. After they witness a séance in which the Necromancer summons a phantom, the heroes assault the room. The Austrian realizes that the Necromancer and Volkert are the same person.
The Doom of the Griffiths was first published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine in January 1858. The Half-Brothers was first published in Fulcher's Ladies' Memorandum Book and Poetical Miscellany in 1856. In 1861 Sampson Low, Son & Co. published a 1-volume second edition entitled My Lady Ludlow, and Other Tales; included in "Round the Sofa". In the 1861 book the lengths of the stories are: Round the Sofa, 6 p.
Eva March Tappan (December 26, 1854 – January 29, 1930) was a teacher and American author born in Blackstone, Massachusetts, the only child of Reverend Edmund March Tappan and Lucretia Logée. Eva graduated from Vassar College in 1875. She was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and an editor of the Vassar Miscellany. After leaving Vassar she began teaching at Wheaton College where she taught Latin and German from 1875 until 1880.
After retiring from the National Guard Rickards ran unsuccessfully for Congress as a Republican in 1926.Warsaw Union, "Quits Guard", June 9, 1925Sheffield Observer, "Local and Miscellany", April 23, 1935U.S. Congress, Official Congressional Directory, 1930, page 100 From 1928 until his death Rickards served as Venango County Register and Recorder. He died in Oil City on January 15, 1933, and was buried at Oil City's Grove Hill Cemetery.
At the close of 1839 he became connected with Bentley's Miscellany in which magazine his writings are sometimes (with illustrations by his brother) signed A. Crowquill and at other times Hal Willis. "Mr. Crocodile", in viii. 49–53 (1840), was the first of his long series of papers. In 1843 a selection of his articles in those two magazines was brought out in two volumes under the title Phantasmagoria of Fun.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany 13. Taxonomy of some Western Australian phyllocladinous and aphyllodinous taxa (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified by Leslie Pedley in 2003 and Racosperma pterocaulon then transferred back to the current genus in 2006. The type specimen was collected by Maslin in 1976 near Three Springs.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Bruce Maslin and Richard Sumner Cowan in 1995 as a part of the work Acacia Miscellany. New taxa and notes on previously described taxa of Acacia, mostly section Juliflorae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae), in Western Australia as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma cylindricum in 2003 by Leslie Pedley then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006.
Alison Bruère was the drama critic for The Vassar Miscellany, and went on to study law at Columbia.Alison Bruère to Wed George Carnahan; Ex-Student Led Theater Protest, The Poughkeepsie Star- Enterprise (Nov. 29, 1938) at 7. Henry Bruère's more radical sibling, Robert W. Bruère, was an advisor to former President Theodore Roosevelt when the latter was forming his National Progressive Party leading up to the Bull Moose convention.
The magazine which was to continue Charles Fort's work documenting the unexplained was founded by Robert JM "Bob" Rickard in 1973 as his self-published bi-monthly mail order "hobbyish newsletter" miscellany The News — "A Miscellany of Fortean Curiosities". The title is said to be "a contraction taken from Samuel Butler's The News from Nowhere", (although Rickard may be conflating/confusing Butler's Erewhon and William Morris' "News from Nowhere"). The News saw fairly regular bi-monthly publication for 15 issues between November 1973 and April 1976. Debuting at 35p (£1.80/$4.50 for a year of 6 issuesEarly advertisements promised a monthly, 12-issue subscription for the same price, but monetary and time constraints caused Rickard to move to a bi-monthly schedule, and use any 'extra' monies to merely produce a greater number of pages) for 20 pages, The News was produced on Rickard's typewriter, with headings created with Letraset, during (as Rickard says in #2) the late-1970s blackouts.
The Miscellany News was first published under the name Vassariana on June 27, 1866.Farkas, Brian (March 30, 2009), Covering the Campus: A History of The Miscellany News at Vassar College, 2009 The four-page long issue was meant to be a retrospective of the College's first year, more of a yearbook than the student newspaper which it would become. "Now we lay down the editorial pen," read the conclusion of the paper's first editorial, "believing it will be taken up by those who will carry on the work we have begun; who, although the foundations are of a rough stone, will build above with polished marble, and who will maintain the Vassariana in the front ranks of the college papers in the land.""The Vassariana", June, 1866 The paper—one of the first student organizations at Vassar—did indeed grow to be the publication for which the charter editors had hoped.
He was given 100 crowns and a promise of a monthly allowance of 60 crowns.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588–1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 89–90. James VI received an anonymous letter criticising Foulis's abilities, and suggesting William Cecil and the Earl of Essex were working together against the king's interest.Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1595–1597, vol. 12 (Edinburgh, 1952), p. 161.
The plant was discovered in 1859 by Johannes Teijsmann, who sent it to the botanic garden at Leiden, Netherlands, Hortus Botanicus Leiden. It was then flowered by H. Witte. In that same year the banker Jan Abraham Willink W.Z.N. a dedicated amateur of orchids in Amsterdam,Doubtless it was the same "Mr. Willink" who imported from Java the variegated Coleus blumei, (now known as Plectranthus scutellarioides), according to The Florist, Fruitist, and Garden Miscellany vol.
Ellis 1979 pp. 276–77, 288–318 Ainsworth eventually published his third novel in 1837.Carver 2003 p. 172 A fifth edition of Rookwood appeared in 1837, and its success encouraged Ainsworth to work on another novel about a famous outlaw, the story of Jack Sheppard.Ellis 1979 pp. 276–89 Ainsworth's next novel, Jack Sheppard, was serially published in Bentley's Miscellany (January 1839February 1840). Dickens's Oliver Twist also ran in the magazine (February 1837April 1839).
He published a half dozen works on phrenology (the belief that personality traits could be determined by examining the dimensions of a person's skull) between 1830 and 1838."Works of Dr. Ferrarese", The Phrenological journal and miscellany, 1839, p. 91-95. His chief work on the subject, Memorie Risguardanti La Dottrina Frenologica (1836-8), was "one of the fundamental 19th century works in the field". His work was initially met with approval by the Church.
Paternoster was born in 1802 in London, the son of surgeon John Paternoster and Elizabeth Twining. He followed his older brother John to Haileybury College, where he was a brilliant student and won prizes for Sanskrit and Deva Nagri writing.The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany, July 1820. He started his career in the Madras civil service as a writer (a junior clerk) and in 1824 was promoted to an assistant to the magistrate at Bellary.
Elderberries, a common fruit wine ingredient. Fruit wine can be made from virtually any plant matter that can be fermented.G. Harding "A Wine Miscellany" pg 5-9, Clarkson Potter Publishing, New York 2005 Most fruits and berries have the potential to produce wine. There are a number of methods of extracting flavour and juice from the fruits or plants being used; pressing the juice, stewing and fermenting the pulp of the fruits are common.
David (2001), pp. 17, 209 and 70 Articles aimed at the domestic cook include "Do not Despair over Rice", "Making Ice Cream", and one propounding a view for which she was famous: "Garlic Presses are Utterly Useless".David (2001), pp. 142, 272, 57 and 51 The New York Times called the book "this very appealing, completely absorbing miscellany. ... This is a book good enough to eat—and, in a way, you can."Grimes, William.
She was married to the writer Maurice Kennedy, and edited a posthumous collection of his work, The Way to Vladivostok, in 2000. She was the mother of the journalist Maev Kennedy. She lived outside Dublin, and frequently broadcast on Sunday Miscellany, a programme of writers’ original reflections on RTÉ. She was passionately involved in campaigns to protect Dublin's architectural heritage and, in later years, was active campaigning for LGBT rights and marriage equality.
An anonymous editor took over from Ryland and changed the Eclectic into a miscellany. Edwin Paxton Hood took over as editor in January 1861, changing the periodical back to a book review, increasing the size of each issue, and lowering the price still further. According to Basker, these last years were successful and the periodical produced "some of its finest review journalism". About 60 of the contributors to the Eclectic have been identified.
Edward was safe in Bangor, Caernarvonshire by Christmas of 1642. On 30 December 1643 King Charles I awarded him a warrant for a baronetcy in recognition of his services, but no patent was taken out at the time.Sir Edward Lake's Account of His Interviews With Charles I. On Being Created A Baronet, And Receiving An Augmentation To His Arms, edited by T. P. Taswell- Langmead for Camden Society's Miscellany. vol. iv, 1858.p.
One ambassador was given a gold chain worth 500 crowns paid for from the queen's dowry.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 53. James VI and Anna rode on the sands of Leith in view of the ships lying at anchor. James VI left after a short time, hearing of a chance to capture the rebel Archibald Wauchope of Niddrie.
This pattern of brief visits changed in June or July 1496, when James IV was flattered to entertain Don Pedro de Ayala as a resident Spanish ambassador at his court, and he paid some of Ayala's expenses.Gouldesbrough, P., 'Accounts of Duncan Forrester of Skipinch', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, vol. 9, Edinburgh (1958), 81. James reserved a house in Edinburgh for the Spanish embassy, paying £40 for a year's rent and damages.
The long and narrow leaves are 20 to 55 mm long and 1 to 2 mm wide. The species was first formally described by Carl Meissner in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855, from material collected by James Drummond. The species occurs in a small area from north of Eneabba to Bindi Bindi. Plants labelled as Grevillea stenomera in plant nurseries are often forms or hybrids of this species.
He was a strong abolitionist and, as a result, was invited to open the 1856 Republican National Convention in prayer. A long-time pastor in the Philadelphia area, Levy was an important member of the National Holiness Association. His theological views aligned themselves more closely to Methodist and Wesleyan theology, making him unpopular among many of his fellow Baptists. Levy's testimony is recorded in John S. Inskip's Holiness Miscellany published in 1882.
National Lampoon Gentleman's Bathroom Companion II was a humorous book that was first published in 1977. It was a spin-off from National Lampoon magazine and a follow-up to the National Lampoon The Gentleman's Bathroom Companion. The pieces in the book were created by the National Lampoon's regular contributors. A description (or possibly a subtitle) on the cover reads: > A Miscellany, Risque, of Choice Selections from the Bounteous Ribaldry of > the Monthly National Lampoon.
Capt. William Ramsay Hutchison (16 January 1889 – 22 March 1918) was a Scottish international rugby union player. He was killed in World War I.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ) He played for Glasgow District in the inter-city match against Edinburgh District on 3 March 1910. He played for Glasgow High School FP and was capped for in 1911. He is remembered on the Arras memorial bay 5.
On the radio, she has been a regular contributor to Radio 4's Saturday miscellany Loose Ends, hosted originally by Ned Sherrin, now by Clive Anderson. In 1988, she was one of the launch presenters of GLR, where she presented the weekday 10.00 am programme. One of her producers during this period was Chris Evans. She also appeared on Just A Minute on 14 April 1990, playing against her father, who was a show regular.
She burnt Union and Brio del Mar, and put their crews on Venus, which she made a cartel to carry the crews to Batavia. Because the captures occurred after the end of the war, the Phoenix and Star insurance companies of Calcutta applied to the US government for compensation. Congress voted full compensation, £12,000 for Union and £3,000 for Breo de Mar.Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany ..., Volume 10 (July 1820), p.91.
From 1782 to 1786 Rack was actively engaged in making a topographical survey of Somerset, and he had almost completed it before his death. The work was published by the Rev. John Collinson in 1791 in three volumes, entitled The history and antiquities of the county of Somerset. Rack contributed to the Monthly Ledger and the Monthly Miscellany under the signature of "Eusebius", and he also wrote for the Farmer's Magazine and the Bath Chronicle.
Lugaid Mac Con, often known simply as Mac Con, was, according to medieval Irish legend and historical tradition, a High King of Ireland. He belonged to the Corcu Loígde,John O'Donovan (ed.) "The Genealogy of Corca Laidhe", in Miscellany of the Celtic Society. Dublin. 1849. alternative scan and thus to the Dáirine. His father was Macnia mac Lugdach, and his mother was Sadb ingen Chuinn, daughter of the former High King Conn Cétchathach.
Coleman and his Eolian Attachment The Cincinnati Miscellany, or Antiquities of the West, and Pioneer History vol. I. Caleb Clark, Cincinnati, 1845 p.98 Spillane wrote that although the Aeolian attachment received some notice as a novelty in the Boston and New York papers, "little came of this…it having been proved that the piano section, at least, required to be tuned every month to keep it in tolerably good condition"Spillane p.
However, the pattern of beats marking the rotation of the cycle does not necessarily indicate the internal rhythmic organization. For example, although the Jhampā tāla, in its most common miśra variety, is governed by , the most characteristic rhythm of melodies in this tāla is . The tālas in Hindustani music are somewhat more complicated. To begin with, they are not systematically codified, but rather comprise a miscellany of patterns from a number of different repertories.
On the evening of 3 August Redbridge encountered the frigate . Next morning Phoebe and Redbridge sighted four sail. Phoebe advised that they were probably French and the British ships set sail to escape. Phoebe was able to outpace their pursuers, but Redbridge was not and fell prey to them. The four sail were a squadron of French frigates, Cornélie, Rhin, Uranie, and Tamise,The Fireside Book: A Miscellany (1837), V.1, p.397.
Clara Du Mazet de Pontigny was born in London, 31 July 1807. She was the daughter of M. de Pontigny, a French gentleman, and an Englishwoman. Living in France in 1826, she wrote an elegy on Jacques-Louis David's death, 'Le Tombeau du Proscrit'. Returning to England in 1827, she wrote widely under her pseudonym Leopold Wray, and for periodicals including Reynolds's Miscellany, London Society, The Queen, Chambers's Journal and Le Courrier de l'Europe.
Ainsworth's two novels Rookwood and Jack Sheppard were fundamental in popularising the "Newgate novel" tradition, a combination of criminal biography, the historical and Gothic novel traditions. The tradition itself stems from a Renaissance literary tradition of emphasising the actions of well-known criminals.Worth 1972 p. 34 Ainsworth's Jack Sheppard is connected to another work within the same tradition that ran alongside it for many months in the Bentley's Miscellany: Dickens' Oliver Twist.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 34, 41: National Records of Scotland, Royal household book, E31/16. In 1624 John Auchmoutie of Scoughall was Master of the King's Wardrobe in Scotland. He petitioned the king for better pay for the four tapestry keepers and workers in Scotland, and the repalacement of the deceased Nicolas Elmar with Martin Leache.
Athol Murray, 'Pursemaster's Accounts', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society X (Edinburgh, 1965), p. 35. During the war of the Rough Wooing in 1548 the English commander Edward Clinton planned to reconstruct the harbour and pier and their defences, employing a military engineer. The harbour at this time was dry at low-tide and ships lay in the "ooze" or mud.Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1547-1563, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), p. 159.
While a clerk, Fargus had written words for various songs, adopting the pen name Hugh Conway in memory of his training-ship days.James Williams Arrowsmith, a Bristol printer and publisher, took an interest, and Fargus's first short story appeared in Arrowsmith's Miscellany. In 1883 Fargus published through Arrowsmith his first novella, Called Back, an early thriller that sold over 350,000 copies in four years. One admirer of the book was the American poet Emily Dickinson.
The law was framed by Cambridge University Professor John Edensor Littlewood, and published in a 1986 collection of his work, A Mathematician's Miscellany. It seeks among other things to debunk one element of supposed supernatural phenomenology and is related to the more general law of truly large numbers, which states that with a sample size large enough, any outrageous (in terms of probability model of single sample) thing is likely to happen.
Melinia is a genus of plants in the family Apocynaceae, first described as a genus in 1835. It was initially given the name Brachylepis, but this turned out to be an illegitimate homonym, meaning that someone else had already used the name for a different plant.Hooker, William Jackson & Arnott, George Arnott Walker. 1835. Brachylepis. Journal of Botany, being a second series of the Botanical Miscellany 1: 290–291 in LatinDecaisne, Joseph. 1844. Melinia.
He was the author of several books: View of Religions (1829); Lives of the Signers of the Declaration of independence (1829); History of the United States of America (1822); Family Tourist (1848); Family Sabbath-Day Miscellany (1855); Geography of the Chief Places mentioned in the Bible (1855); Greek Grammar (1855); Child's History of the United States (1855); Bible History of Prayer (1855); Great Events of American History; Outlines of Geography; and Universal Traveller.
Hawick and Wilton played its first official match on 7 February 1874. This was against Langholm RFC; a club heavily influenced by the sons of Tweed manufacturers who were educated across the Scottish border in England. Scottish rugby clubs standardised most of today's rules of rugby union around the 1860s:- by formulating The Green Book in 1858; the Blairgowrie and Rattray Laws of 1865 and the Kilmarnock Rules of 1869.The Scotland Rugby Miscellany.
Though Tottel printed several volumes unrelated to law, the bulk of his publications were legal pieces. In light of this, it is ironic that he is best known for the compilation he edited and printed known as Tottel's Miscellany or Songes and Sonnets. Tottel's treatment of this piece is both careful and bold. His accuracy and ability are seen to be of scientific quality in an age where neither was of great importance.
The Spottiswoode Miscellany, vol. 1 (1844), pp. 370-372. An English visitor in October 1641 recorded in a poem that the roof of the great hall was already gone, the fountain vandalised by those who objected on religious grounds to the motto "God Save the King," but some woodcarving remained in the Chapel Royal.Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, 2, (1904), 275, anonymous poem, A Scottish Journie of Montague Bertie, Lord Willoughby.
Miles Kerr- Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 39-40. He busied himself repairing Holyrood Palace and Dunfermline Palace which had been assigned to the queen. He was given £1,000 Scots from tax money raised in Edinburgh for the royal marriage to spend on the repairs at Holyroodhouse.Register of the Privy Council of Scotland, 1585-1592, vol.
Miles Kerr- Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 85. In March 1598 he was tasked with giving the Queen's brother, Ulrik, Duke of Holstein a tour of Scotland with Esmé's son, Ludovic, Duke of Lennox, taking him to Fife, Dundee, Stirling Castle, and on a trip to the Bass Rock.Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 13 part 1 (Edinburgh, 1969), p.
Subrahmanyam had shown him a picture of his very young boys, blowing on toy trumpets in the nude. Vasan chose the pose to craft the logo and hence the name Gemini-- The TwinsA Madras Miscellany, S. Muthiah, Published by EastWest Books, pg 260. The new facade also had statues of ‘The Gemini Twins’, blowing the bugle. Gemini Studios served as a breeding ground for innumerable artists and technicians for the south Indian Film Industry.
Ascher was a member and correspondent for various magazines, including the Berlin Monatsschrift, Berlin Archive of Time and Taste, Eunomia, Literary Newspaper Hall, Morning Paper for the Educated Classes of Cotta, Miscellany for New World Client by Zschokke, Journal de l'Empire. Ascher founded and distributed at least two magazines himself. In 1810, a politically difficult year for Ascher, he founded the "World and Spirit", which was published until 1811 in six issues.
Charles' food was seasoned with saffron, nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, and ginger. Every tart provided for the king's table had a pound of sugar, while tarts for lesser courtiers required only half a pound.David Stevenson, 'Minute Book of the Board of Green Cloth', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society XV (Woodbridge, 2013), pp. 66-77. A fire partially destroyed the palace during its occupation by Cromwell's troops, and it quickly fell into ruin.
On 12 January 1816 Coromandel stopped at the Cape on her way to Madras and Bengal; she was still under Cameron's command.Asiatic journal and monthly miscellany, Volume 1, p.40. What connects this Coromandel with that of the voyages to Australia is that a Coromandel appeared in the Lloyd's Register (LR) for 1818 and 1819. LR described her as a teak-built vessel of 503 tons (bm), launched in 1793 in the East Indies.
Vermilacinia robusta is an olive green fruticose lichen that occurs on rocks near ocean mist along the foggy Pacific Coast of southern California to northern Baja California and offshore islands.Spjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14 The epithet, robusta, was probably adopted in recognizing a more robust form of V. comboides, originally described as a variety of Ramalina combeoides by R. Heber Howe, Jr. in 1913.
Grevillea leucopteris, also known as old socks or white plume grevillea, is a shrub which is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It grows up to in height and produces white or cream unpleasantly-scented flowers between July and January (mid winter to mid summer) in its native range. The species was first formally described by botanist Carl Meissner, his description published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855.
James VI of Scotland and Anne of Denmark attended the wedding of Henrik Ramel and Abel Rantzau (d. 1596) at Kronborg on 1 February 1590, and gave the bride 6 gold rose nobles.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 39. Daniel Rogers said the marriage was planned by Frederick II to link Ramel firmly to Danish interest.
Vermilacinia reptilioderma is a rare fruticose lichen found on the Vizcaíno Peninsula and Cedros Island of Baja California.Spjut, R. W. 1996. Niebla and Vermilacinia (Ramalinaceae) from California and Baja California. Sida Miscellany 14 The epithet, reptilioderma, is in regard to the outer surface of the cortex appearing like the skin of a reptile, especially the brown snake, Pseudechis australis, the color of the thallus cortex often turning brown when stored in a herbarium.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1992 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany. Review of Acacia victoriae and related species (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: Section Phyllodineae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma ryanianum in 2003 by Leslie Pedley then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The shrub belongs to the Acacia victoriae group but can be distinguished by its prostrate habit and curved pods.
The poem was printed in 1827 in The Eton Miscellany. A later version was printed in 1833 in Britain in Follen's Little Songs for Little Boys and Girls. It was an addition to the volume and probably inserted by the publisher. In the introduction to a subsequent edition, Follen denied any hand in the poem's composition, but took it under her wing and claimed ownership as the poem passed through various reprints.
In 1590 and 1591 Sandilands was involved with the English subsidy money, accounting for £6,000 Scots brought by Thomas Foulis, giving £300 to John Wemyss of Logie and to an English woman called Rachael, and £260 to the king to play cards.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 5, 55, 57, 69, 72-3: British Library, 'Hopetoun Manuscript', Add.
A New Miscellany of Humour, Literature, and the Fine Arts p.4. People with poor speaking skills were declared "Speakers of the Republic", gossipmongers were made members of the "Secret Council", litigious people were declared "Justices of the Peace", people who exaggerated their hunting exploits were made "Masters of the Hunt", etc. All nominations were dutifully entered into the Memorial Register of Babin Officials. There was a total of 411 accounts in the register.
The west range was entirely rebuilt by the Gilmours, in the 1660s, to provide a spacious suite of modern accommodation, to suit Sir John's position as a senior judge. The roof slates were brought in 1661 from Stobo, carried by horses from Peebles.Henry Paton, 'Lauderdale Correspondence', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society (Edinburgh, 1933), p. 113. The ground floor contained a large central drawing room dining room, with large windows, and a carved stone fireplace.
He coined Littlewood's law, which states that individuals can expect "miracles" to happen to them, at the rate of about one per month. He continued to write papers into his eighties, particularly in analytical areas of what would become the theory of dynamical systems. Littlewood is also remembered for his book of reminiscences, A Mathematician's Miscellany (new edition published in 1986). Among his own PhD students were Sarvadaman Chowla, Harold Davenport, and Donald C. Spencer.
From 1838 to 1852 he edited the Russische Landwirtschaftliche Zeitung (“Russian Agricultural News”). He published Russische Miscellan zur Kenntnis Russlands und seiner Bewohner (“Russian miscellany of facts about Russia and its inhabitants,” 4 vols., 1828–32) and edited the manuscript journals of the explorer Ferdinand von Wrangel, which he issued in Reise längs der Nordküste von Sibirien und auf dem Eismeer (“Trip along the north coast of Siberia and the Arctic Ocean,” 1839).
He remarried to Elizabeth Hamilton and James VI gave a ring to his wife at the christening of their child in 1594.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 82. In 1600 they had a daughter, Janet, and a son Andrew in 1603, and John in 1604.Henry Paton, Parish Registers of Dumfermline (Edinburgh, 1911), pp. 107, 115, 118.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Richard Sumner Cowan and Bruce Maslin in 1999 as part of the work Acacia miscellany 17. Miscellaneous new taxa and lectotypifications in Western Australian Acacia, mostly section Plurinerves (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. The only known synonym is Racosperma auratiflorum as classified by Leslie Pedley in 2003. The type specimen was collected by Mary Tindale in 1973 about east of Lake Grace.
Evans was author of Practical Observations on the due performance of Psalmody. With a short postscript on the Present State of Vocal Music in other Departments (Bristol 1823) and A Chronological Outline of the History of Bristol, and the Stranger's Guide through its Streets and Neighbourhood (London 1824) This miscellany includes a list of Evans's contributions to the Bristol Observer. Some anecdotes by Evans of William Combe appear in the Gentleman's Magazine, 1823, ii. 185.
"Neither were we the fittest team in the world. Denis Compton broke a finger fielding on the first day and Bedser was never well, as was proved when it was discovered that he had developed shingles. One or two of us also got a touch of the sun, but there was no way of getting away from the fact that 'catches win matches'. "Colin Batty, The Ashes Miscellany, Vision Sports Publishing, 2006, pages 20–21.
Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, published together posthumously in December 1817, were reviewed in the British Critic in March 1818 and in the Edinburgh Review and Literary Miscellany in May 1818. The reviewer for the British Critic felt that Austen's exclusive dependence on realism was evidence of a deficient imagination. The reviewer for the Edinburgh Review disagreed, praising Austen for her "exhaustless invention" and the combination of the familiar and the surprising in her plots.Waldron, 89.
The Harvard Classics. Edited by Charles W. Eliot. New York: P.F. Collier and Son, 1909. Shelley wrote to the publishers Charles and James Ollier (who were also his own publishers): :I am enchanted with your Literary Miscellany, although the last article has excited my polemical faculties so violently that the moment I get rid of my ophthalmia, I mean to set about an answer to it.... It is very clever, but I think, very false.
On his return to London, on entering his club Lumsden was heard to comment, "I've just been sacked because there isn't room in the desert for two cads like Monty and me".Bingham, Colin. "Wit and Wisdom: A Public Affairs Miscellany" Melbourne University Press, 1982, p. 197. After Lumsden's death in 1945 Montgomery, notoriously sensitive to criticism of his generalship, blamed the near failure of his attack on 24/25 October 1942 on Lumsden.
While in Italy, Webster researched her senior economics thesis "Pauperism in Italy". She also wrote columns about her travels for the Poughkeepsie Sunday Courier and gathered material for a short story, "Villa Gianini", which was published in the Vassar Miscellany in 1901. She later expanded it into a novel, The Wheat Princess. Returning to Vassar for her senior year, she was literary editor for her class yearbook and graduated in June 1901.
"'A Word for What was Eaten': An Introduction to Della T. Lutes and her Fiction", Lawrence R. Dawson, Midwestern Miscellany IX, ed. David Anderson, The Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, The Midwestern Press: East Lansing, MI, 1981 The "Della T. Lutes School" in Waterford, Michigan was dedicated in 1961 and closed in 2005; it is now the Lutes Campus of New Gateways, Inc., a non-profit which serves the mentally and developmentally disabled.
She also contributed to Alexandra College Magazine, Celtica, Celtic Review, Ériu, and New Ireland Review. Joynt was one of the contributor's of Kuno Meyer's 1912 Miscellany edited by Osborn Bergin and Carl Marstrander. Joynt was involved in the Irish Women’s Franchise League and Irish Women’s Progressive Union. From 1902, Joynt was an active committee member of the Women Graduates and Candidate Graduates Association, a group advocating for women's rights in higher education.
On the death of Constable he, in conjunction with Messrs. Hurst, Chance, & Co., of London, and Henry Constable, purchased the work, but his connection with it ceased after the failure of the London firm in 1831. He had established a printing-office, with the view of starting a publication similar to the ‘Miscellany,’ when he died somewhat suddenly, 15 February 1833. Aitken took an active part in founding the Edinburgh Literary Journal.
Construction of the fuse and tail was steel tube with a clever arrangement that eliminated awkward framing around the windows of the passenger compartment. The sponsons served as attach points for both the landing gear and the forward wing struts, and also were storage for tool kit, battery and other miscellany! Wings were wood with aluminum ailerons and leading edge sheeting. The cabin was mohair fabric upholstered in a style that rivaled the finest automobiles.
Depiction of Noah's ark landing on the mountain top, from the North French Hebrew Miscellany (13th century) There are multiple legends that detail the origins of the Kurds. One details the Kurds as being the descendants of King Solomon’s angelic servants (Djinn). These were sent to Europe to bring him five-hundred beautiful maidens, for the king's harem. However, when these had done so and returned to Israel the king had already died.
Portrait of Reynolds on the first page of the first issue of Reynolds's Miscellany, November 1846, price one penny. The text of the first installment of Wagner the Wehr-Wolf begins at the bottom of the page. George William MacArthur Reynolds (23 July 1814 – 19 June 1879) was a British fiction writer and journalist. Reynolds was born in Sandwich, Kent, the son of Captain Sir George Reynolds, a flag officer of the Royal Navy.
Menčetić belongs to the first generation of Croatian lyrical poets, and most of his poems (512) have been preserved in Ranjina's Miscellany, in which he is the most represented poet. As opposed to Džore Držić, Menčetić's opus contains longer lyrical narratives,SPH 2/1937., br. 248, 294, 311, 415, 418, 455, 459, 460, 478 and lyrical subject is more immediate, vigorous, lascivious and eroticized, and the topic of and the sensuality of reciprocated love is emphasized.
John Richardson (1740/41-1795), FAS of Wadham College, Oxford, was the editor of the first Persian-Arabic-English dictionary in 1778-1780.Clarke, John. (1806). The Bibliographical Miscellany; Or, Supplement to the Bibliographical, p. 276-277. His seminal work on Persian grammar, written in collaboration with Sir William Jones, was noteworthy amongst the early works on this subject; and it remains significant in the context of that philological foundation from which all subsequent grammatical studies were to evolve.
From the UK: Andrew Gallix, Gabriel Josipovici, Fernando Sdrigotti, Victoria Best, Martin Dean, Joanna Walsh, and George Szirtes. Work in translation includes: Quim Monzó, Juan José Saer, Jorge Carrera Andrade, Viktor Shklovsky, Cesare Pavese, Kazushi Hosaka, Anton Chekhov, Mihail Sebastian,"Accident" Thirsty: A Biblioasis Miscellany Published Nov 7, 2010. Retrieved Oct 3, 2011. Giacomo Leopardi, Habib Tengour, Besik Kharanauli, Rilke, Blanca Castellón, Horace, Liliana Heker, Andrzej Stasiuk, Rilke, Guillaume Apollinaire, Paul-Armand Silvestre, Paul Éluard and Mathias Énard.
Pope's pastorals ultimately appeared in Tonson's sixth Miscellany (May 1709). William Wycherley wrote that Tonson had long been gentleman-usher to the Muses: "you will make Jacob's ladder raise you to immortality." Nicholas Rowe's edition of Shakespeare, in six volumes, was published early in 1709 by Tonson, who had previously advertised for materials. Richard Steele dined at Tonson's in 1708–1709, sometimes to get a bill discounted, sometimes to hear manuscripts read and advise upon them.
In 1642, his brother George Harwood, a merchant of London, published The Advice of Sir E. Harwood, written by King Charles his Command, upon occasion of the French King's preparation, and presented in his life time by his owne hand, to his Majestie: … also a Relation of his life and death, by Hugh Peters, &c.;, London. It was reprinted in Harleian Miscellany, ed. Park. Peters met Harwood around 1630, and may have acted as his chaplain.
The articles of the Annals contained detailed rebuttals to skeptics of phrenology (494), detailing the Society's disagreement with articles in such journals as the Christian Examiner and the New England Magazine. Through cases and personal anecdotes,(vol 1 Society writers defended the relevance of phrenology to social welfare and mission work, and discussed its harmony with Christianity.The Phrenological Journal and Miscellany p. 235 The journal also published reprints of contemporary European phrenology literature(vol 2) and phrenology news.
In January 1707-8 Fenton published in his Oxford and Cambridge Miscellany Poems, a short "Bacchanalian Song" by Philips. In 1708 Philips issued Cyder,David F. Foxon English Verse 1701-1750, P237-8 his chief work, which is an imitation of Virgil's Georgics. Tonson agreed to pay Philips forty guineas for it in two books, with ten guineas for a second edition. Philips also received one hundred large-paper copies, and two dedication copies bound in goatskin.
"Fashionable Surgery", in Vanity Fair magazine dated 12 September 1874. Pellegrini's original watercolour is in the National Portrait Gallery, which describes Clayton in its catalogue as "Surgeon and socialite".Sir Oscar Clayton (1816-1892), Surgeon and socialite in online catalogue of National Portrait Gallery, London, at npg.org.uk, accessed 1 August 2011 In 1880, in a series of sketches called "Our Doctors", Edmund Yates's magazine Time: a Monthly Miscellany published a sketch of a society doctor entitled "Mr Osric Claypole".
Assigned to clear the harbor of Bari, glutted with 17 ships sunk when two ammunition ships had been exploded by German bombing, Extricate won commendation from the British forces to whom she was then attached for the manner in which she carried out her duties. She raised two ships, beached a third, got an undamaged ship and three barges off the beach after they had been grounded in a storm, and carried out a miscellany of other salvage missions.
Capt. Eric Templeton Young (14 May 1892 - 28 June 1915) was a Scottish rugby union player and British Army officer who was killed in the Gallipoli Campaign in World War I.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany, p. 107. (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ) Young was educated in Edinburgh at Cargilfield Preparatory School and Fettes College. He attended Magdalen College, Oxford, where he played for the university. He also played for Glasgow Academy and the Glasgow Academicals.
James Pearson (24 February 1889 – 22 May 1915) was a Scottish rugby union player and British Army soldier who was killed in World War I.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany, P. 109. (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007 ) Pearson was born in Dalkeith, Midlothian. He was educated at George Watson's College, where he played cricket for the Watsonians. A friend encouraged him to take up rugby as well, and he soon excelled at that as well.
Maj. Walter Torrie Forrest (14 November 1880 – 19 April 1917) was a Scottish rugby union player and British Army officer who was killed in World War I.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007. P. 109. ) Forrest was born in Kelso, Roxburghshire, to George Forrest, a celebrated fishing rod master and tackle maker, and Margaret Torrie Forest. He played for Hawick Rugby Club as a centre and made his international debut for in 1903 against .
Maj. Roland Elphinstone Gordon (22 January 1883 – 30 August 1918) was a Scottish rugby union player and British Army officer who was killed in World War I.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007. P. 109. ) Gordon was the son of civil servant George Dalrymple Gordon and Georgina Meredith Williams Gordon, of "Alwyns," Teignmouth, Devon. He was born in Selangor, Straits Settlements, Malaya, where his father worked in the colonial government's irrigation department.
Messiah is a 'sacred eclogue' by Alexander Pope, composed in 1712. It is based on the Fourth Eclogue of Virgil, and is an example of English Classicism's appropriation and reworking of the genres, subject matter and techniques of classical Latin literature. Samuel Johnson, while still a student at Oxford, translated Pope's Messiah into Latin hexameters. The translation appeared in Miscellany of Poems (1731), edited by John Husbands, and is the earliest surviving publication of any of Johnson's writings.
Miscellanea Historica Hibernica, also known as MS G1, is a manuscript miscellany, a miniature vellum commonplace book. Compiled by Pilip Ballach Ó Duibhgeannáin during the years 1579 to 1584, it is described on the front endpaper as Miscellanea Historica Hibernica in a later hand. Ó Duibhgeannáin was a resident of Cloonybrien, County Roscommon. The Miscellanea contains an Irish rendering of an extract from a Latin tract found in Roger Bacon's 13th century version of Secretum Secretorum on physiognomy.
Acacia anthochaera is a shrub or tree belonging to the genus Acacia and the subgenus Phyllodineae native to Western Australia. The rounded shrub or tree typically grows to a height of . It blooms from August to December and produces yellow flowers. The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany Taxonomy of some Western Australian "Uninerves-Racemosae" species (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: section Phyllodineae) as published in the journal Nuytsia.
He also performed as Sergei in Shostakovich's Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District. Larin recorded several discs of Russian songs for the Chandos label, exploring Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky in discs entirely devoted to their works and offering another recital devoted to songs of "The Mighty Handful" (Rimsky- Korsakov, Cui, Balakirev, Borodin, and Mussorgsky) as well as two discs of miscellany, including Medtner, Gretchaninov, Rubinstein, and Kalinnikov. His accompanist in the project was Eleonora Bekova. He died in Bratislava, Slovakia.
She wrote the miscellany primarily between 1664 and 1666 and made changes to it until 1682. "Book M" demonstrates her familiarity with the poetry of Richard Corbett and some of John Donne's writings (certainly his sermons, possibly his poetry). One of her best known poems from the book is the estate poem "On the Situation of Highbury". This poem demonstrates her familiarity with the genre, although her poem is unusual in leaving the estate's "dweller" anonymous.
On visiting it, the celebrated Samuel Johnson declared that "none but a poet could have made such a garden."Evelyn Noble Armitage, Quaker Poets (1896), p.242 The grotto continued as a tourist attraction into Victorian times but, having then fallen out of use, was restored in 1991 as “the most complete of the grotto-builder’s art”.Lottie Clarke, “The influences behind the creation of John Scott’s grotto” in Hertfordshire Garden History: A Miscellany, University of Hertfordshire 2007, pp.
This appointment seems to have been a result of his connections to the Patronage networks of Henry Dundas, the virtual ruler of Scotland and the Duke of Montrose. He was elected to represent the Paisley Presbytery in 1777.The North British Intelligencer; or Constitutional Miscellany, edited by Robert Dick and A Belshis Vol V Edinburgh 1777 p. 31 However, in 1780 he moved to be Minister of the Inner High Kirk (or St Mungo's) in Glasgow.
Tanks were constructed at Grosvenor Basin, Pimlico, at the Grand Surrey Canal Dock, Rotherhide, and at the City Road Basin. Great things were predicted of 'kyanising,' as the process then began to be called. A witty writer in 'Bently's Miscellany' for January 1837 told how the muses had adopted Kyan's improvement to preserve their favourite trees. At a dinner given to celebrate the success which attended the experiment, a song, which became popular, was first sung.
In 1702 Nicolson, a Tory moderate, was appointed bishop of Carlisle. He had cultivated the support of local Tories: Sir Christopher Musgrave, 4th Baronet, Thomas Tufton, 6th Earl of Thanet who was heir to the Cumbrian Clifford estates, Colonel James Grahme the brother of Richard Graham, 1st Viscount Preston. His Miscellany Accounts of his diocese, compiled in 1707–4, were published in 1877 by Richard Saul Ferguson. They were from his own observations, or from trusted witnesses.
In 1818 Hargrove published a History and Description of the ancient City of York; comprising all the most interesting information already published in Drake's "Eboracum," with much new matter and illustrations. He had first planned to reprint Francis Drake's Eboracum, but did not have enough support. Hargrove also published the York Poetical Miscellany; being selections from the best Authors (1835). He was a contributor to the poets' corner of the York Herald and the York Courant, and to magazines.
Clergyman, journalist, educator, and civil rights spokesman, which also includes five series: Correspondence; Southern Regional Council; Clippings/Writings; Miscellany; and Photographs. These papers are the writings by Gordon Blaine Hancock, over the span of 1928-1970. The collection relates primarily to Hancock's efforts to increase opportunities for Blacks. Among those efforts was a course he organized on race relations at Virginia Union University in 1922, which is believed to have been the first course of its kind in America.
After his retirement, he focused on writing and co-wrote History of Kirk Maughold, Maughold and Ramsey Place-names, and Kirk Bride: A Miscellany with his wife. Radcliffe took over the role of Yn Lhaihder at the Tynwald Day ceremony from Charles Craine in 1978 and continued in that role until his death. This is a centuries old tradition that required Radcliffe to read out new laws that were to be promulgated in the Manx language on Tynwald Hill.
At this early stage, Slonim derided Soviet literary productions, and described the better poets (Alexander Blok and Andrei Bely) as incompatible with communist dogmas. After a short stay in Berlin, during which time he issued his own journal, Novosti Literatury,Platone, p. 174 Slonim settled in Prague, Czechoslovakia, where he taught at the Russian Free University"Slonim Views Pasternak's Philosophy in V.C. Lecture", in Vassar Miscellany News, Vol. XXXXIII, Issue 16, 1959 and joined the local Zemgor.
27 Nevertheless, in June 1794 she was appointed an elder in the Redstone Monthly Meeting, a reflection of the high esteem that she was held by the men and women of her faith.Comly, John and Isaac Comly (editors) (1839), Friends' Miscellany, Vol. XII, Philadelphia, Pa.: J. Richards, p. 338: "Went home with Esther Hunt, an elder of Redstone monthly meeting;"Redstone Monthly Meeting Records, Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania She traveled extensively, always on horseback.
Taipei Yue Lao appears at night and "unites with a silken cord all predestined couples, after which nothing can prevent their union."Yue Laou, in: E. Cobham Brewer, "Dictionary of Phrase and Fable", 1898 He is immortalEast India Company The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany Vol. XXVII Published by Wm. H. Allen & Co., 1838, p. 25 and is said to live either in the moon or in the "obscure regions" (Yue ming), the Chinese equivalent of Hades.
Andrew Bowne was appointed as a justice of the peace for Monmouth County in 1690; he also held the position from 1695 through 1698. In 1692 he was appointed a judge of the Court of Session, and was Presiding Judge in 1693, 1697, 1698 and 1699. In 1698 and 1699 Bowne was a judge of the East Jersey Court of Common Right, the supreme court of the colony.Historical and Genealogical Miscellany, John E. Stillwell, M. D., Vol.
In 1847, he published Travels in Western Africa in 1845 and 1846, comprising a Journey from Whydah through the Kingdom of Dahomey to Adofidiah in the Interior, 2 volumes, London, duodecimo. The preface is dated "Feltham Hill, August 1847". The work has a steel portrait of the author by Durham, and a map of the route. The same year he contributed to Bentley's Miscellany a paper in two parts, entitled Some Account of the late Expedition to the Niger.
The club were able to take part despite the city of Plymouth in ruins, but they often struggled to assemble 11 fit players on a Saturday, so it was no surprise that they managed just three wins from 42 matches. In all, 72 players represented the club that season.Cowdery & Curno, Miscellany, p. 164. :U. : From the First Round Proper to the Sixth Round of the 1945–46 FA Cup, matches were played over two legs. :V.
696, 711: David Stevenson, Scotland's Last Royal Wedding (Edinburgh, 1997), pp. 22-3, 85-6: Miles Kerr-Peterson, A Protestant Lord in James VI's Scotland: George Keith, Fifth Earl Marischal (Boydell, 2019), p. 50. Keith bought a jewel to give to the queen during the ceremony, his credit assisted by Fredeerick Lyall, a Scottish merchant in Helsingør.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 36.
The London Journal; and Weekly Record of Literature, Science and Art (published from 1845 to 1928) was a British penny fiction weekly, one of the best-selling magazines of the nineteenth century. It was established by George Stiff, published by George Vickers and initially written and edited by George W. M. Reynolds. After Reynolds left to found his own Reynolds's Miscellany in 1846, John Wilson Ross became editor. In the mid-1850s the magazine's circulation was over 500,000.
According to S Muthiah, the idea for Penguin Books was Menon's. In his celebrated history of the old British port, Madras Miscellany, he writes: > .. he (Menon) dreamt of flooding the market with cheap paperback editions of > quality titles. He discussed the idea with a colleague at Bodley Head and > Allen Lane jumped at it. In 1935, they quit Bodley Head and with 100 Pounds > capital, set up office in the crypt of St Pancras Borough Church.
The album begins with a melodic cover of "Strawberry Swing" by English alternative rock band Coldplay. Connor O'Neill of The Miscellany News writes that the cover begins the album with "so much atmosphere you almost melt into it" and then "spreads you over an apocalyptic swan song". The song ends abruptly with the rude sound of an alarm clock, followed by the "nightmarish" song "Novacane".Pitchfork Staff (December 15, 2011). The Top 50 Albums of 2011, Page 4.
Although the effects of this illness would linger until her death, she continued to write. We find two more published poems in 1720. Both are included in Anthony Hammond's A New Miscellany of Original Poems, Translations, and Imitations. Following this, Centlivre published a poem entitled "A Woman's CASE: in an Epistle to CHARLES JOYE, Esq; Deputy-Governor of the South Sea", that traces her political associations and shines some light on her relationship with her husband.
Moorcock has stated that "Anderson's a definite influence [on Elric], as stated. But oddly, the Kalevala was read to us at my boarding school when I was about seven", and "from a very early age I was reading Norse legends and any books I could find about Norse stories".Elric/Turambar – Moorcock's Miscellany. Moorcock in the same posting stated "one thing I'm pretty sure of, I was not in any way directly influenced by Prof. T[olkien]".
Ninety years after The Miscellany was discontinued, The Catholic Banner appeared in 1951. The Banner was published as a section of Our Sunday Visitor, a nationally distributed Catholic weekly newspaper. In 1960, The Banner became part of a three-diocese consortium, designed and published in Waynesboro, Georgia, with some local articles and photographs accompanying national and international copy from a wire service, the Catholic News Service. The editorial offices of The Banner were located in Columbia.
Petersfield Bookshop Since his father Frank's death in January 2006 Westwood has been a partner in the family bookshop in Petersfield, Hampshire. In 2007 Westwood wrote a book, The True Pompey Fan's Miscellany. In January 2020, the Petersfield Bookshop was featured on many news outlets after it tweeted that it had had no customers that day. Author Neil Gaiman re-tweeted the post to his 2.3 million followers and the bookshop received thousands of pounds' worth of orders.
Some of the yearly fees due to the crown for these lands were used for the wages of the garrison of Stirling Castle.The Miscellany of the Spalding Club (Aberdeen, 1842), pp. 188-9. It has been suggested that Erskine was a founder of the College of Justice, and he may have been educated at Pavia.Hannay, Robert Kerr, The College of Justice (Edinburgh, 1933), 63. Later he came under the king’s suspicion for communicating with the banished Douglas family.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1990 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany. Three new Western Australian species with affinities to A. wilhelmiana (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: Section Plurinerves) from Western Australia as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma ascendens by Leslie Pedley in 2003 and then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2014. The shrub is closely related to Acacia abrupta and belongs to the Acacia wilhelmiana group.
Illustration by George Cruikshank for the 'Dead Drummer of Salisbury Plain', one of The Ingoldsby Legends. In 1826 Barham first contributed to Blackwood's Magazine; and in 1837 he began to write for a recently initiated magazine, Bentley's Miscellany, a series of tales (most of them metrical, some in prose) known as The Ingoldsby Legends. These became very popular. They were published in a collected form in three volumes between 1840 and 1847, and have since appeared in numerous editions.
The engraved view does appear in the August 1788 edition of the "Edinburgh Magazine or Literary Miscellany". An original finished watercolour of the scene was sold a few decades ago privately by public auction. Sandby worked the latter view up from a simpler bistre sketch of the same view, upon which the later engraving is based. This original sketch is held by the National Library of Wales and originally belonged to the antiquarian and naturalist Thomas Pennant.
The Shit Creek Review spawned a subzine called II which was somewhat more text-based (rather than emphasising the art component). In October, 2007, II was detached from The Shit Creek Review and renamed The Chimaera, now edited by Paul Stevens and Peter Bloxsom of NetPublish. The Chimaera is a literary miscellany, publishing verse, short stories, articles, essays and interviews with prominent or rising poets, including Alison Brackenbury, John Whitworth (poet), R.S. Gwynn and Stephen Edgar.
12mo, 1841), Tour round the Coasts of Scotland (1842), and was asked by Queen Victoria to write the official history of her visit, entitled Memorial of the Royal Progress in Scotland (1843). Volume One of a Miscellany of Natural History, published in 1833, was also partly prepared by Lauder. An unfinished series of papers, written for Tait's Magazine shortly before his death, was published under the title Scottish Rivers, with a preface by John Brown, MD., in 1874.
In 1725, two short poems by the Countess of Hertford, based on the story of Inkle and Yarico, were published anonymously in A New Miscellany...Written Chiefly by Persons of Quality and Isaac Watts published four short poems by her in 1734, in his Reliquiae juveniles, written under the pen name Eusebia.Memoirs of the Rev. Isaac Watts, D.D., ed. T. Gibbons (1780), 364–402 Her correspondents included Henrietta Knight, Baroness Luxborough, and Henrietta Fermor, Countess of Pomfret.
Of his miscellaneous poems, "The Dying Child" is best appreciated. Fulcher also published The Ladies' Memorandum Book and Poetical Miscellany (1852 ff.) and The Farmer's Day-book, which reached a sixth edition in 1854. On his death on 19 June 1855, he was engaged on a life of Gainsborough, a Sudbury man. This work, embodying much original research and written in a terse, scholarly style, was completed by his son, E. S. Fulcher, and published in London in 1856.
It received official non-government organisation (NGO) status from the Moroccan government in 2002, and subsequently received a donation from King Mohammed VI. In 1996, Chenna published Miséria: témoignage ("Misery: Testimonies"), in which she narrated twenty stories of women she had worked with. The book has been described both as a "feminist proclamation" and a "miscellany of sorrowful stories"."Morocco’s Aicha Chenna, a Dauntless Activist in Defense of Women", Morocco World News, 8 April 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
An ex-tangential quadrilateral ABCD and its excircle In Euclidean geometry, an ex-tangential quadrilateral is a convex quadrilateral where the extensions of all four sides are tangent to a circle outside the quadrilateral.Radic, Mirko; Kaliman, Zoran and Kadum, Vladimir, "A condition that a tangential quadrilateral is also a chordal one", Mathematical Communications, 12 (2007) pp. 33–52. It has also been called an exscriptible quadrilateral.Bogomolny, Alexander, "Inscriptible and Exscriptible Quadrilaterals", Interactive Mathematics Miscellany and Puzzles, .
The list of discontinued newspapers undoubtedly offered 20-year-old Hall little encouragement that his publication would continue through the years, but it has. Hall's staunch Democratic Party beliefs were reflected in the first edition of his paper. The editorial declared the publication to be “uncompromisingly Democratic,” and a biography of the Democratic candidate for president, James K. Polk, was included in the issue. The front page of the first edition contained only two headlines – poetry and miscellany.
The estimated footage of the various libraries as reported to the trustees has been summarised by Harris (1998), 3,6: Sloane 4,600, Harley 1,700, Cotton 384, Edwards 576, The Royal Library 1,890. Montagu House, c. 1715 The British Museum was the first of a new kind of museum – national, belonging to neither church nor king, freely open to the public and aiming to collect everything. Sloane's collection, while including a vast miscellany of objects, tended to reflect his scientific interests.
Following their appearance, Thomas Gray commented in a letter that each poet "is the half of a considerable Man, & one the Counter-part of the other. [Warton] has but little Invention, very poetical choice of Expression, & a very good Ear; [Collins] a fine Fancy, model'd upon the Antique, a bad Ear, a great variety of Words & Images, with no Choice at all. They both deserve to last some years, but will not."Hysham, Julia, "Joseph Warton's Reputation as a Poet", Studies in Romanticism, vol. 1.4, 1962, [www.jstor.org/stable/25599562, cited on p.220] Moreover, their new manner and stylistic excess lent themselves to burlesque parody and one soon followed from a university miscellany in the shape of an "Ode to Horror: In the Allegoric Descriptive, Alliterative, Epithetical, Fantastic, Hyperbolical, and Diabolical Style".The Student. Or, the Oxford and Cambridge Monthly Miscellany 2 (1751) pp.313-15 Rumour had it even then that the culprit was Joseph Warton’s brother Thomas, and his name was coupled with it in later reprintings.
The precise date of the origin of the Freising Manuscripts cannot be exactly determined; the original text was probably written in the 9th century. In this liturgic and homiletic manuscript, three Slovene records were found and this miscellany was probably an episcopal manual (pontificals). The Freising Manuscripts in it were created between 972 and 1039, most likely before 1000. The main support for this dating is the writing, which was used in the centuries after Charlemagne and is named Carolingian minuscule.
Two of his poems were included in the Songes and Sonettes of Surrey (Tottel's Miscellany), published in 1557: "The assault of Cupid upon the fort where the lover's hart lay wounded, and how he was taken," and the "Dittye ... representinge the Image of Deathe," which the gravedigger in Shakespeare's Hamlet misquotes. Thirteen pieces in the Paradise of Dainty Devices, published in 1576, are signed by him. These are reprinted in Alexander Grosart's Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library (vol. iv, 1872).
He served as dean of the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters from 1850 to 1854 and was made a knight in the Order of Leopold on 24 September 1855. He went on to serve as rector of the university from 1855 to 1857, when he was removed from office by the government due to political frictions. From 1855 to 1863 he edited five volumes of a literary and historical miscellany under the title Vaderlandsch museum voor Nederduitsche letterkunde, oudheid en geschiedenis.Vol. 1, vol.
Open Library. in which 'the late famous comedy' and its three authors were unsparingly ridiculed. Pope is described in the prologue as one "On whom Dame Nature nothing good bestowed: In Form a Monkey; but for spite a Toad," and he is represented (scene 1) as saying, 'And from My Self my own Thersites drew,' and then Thersites is explained as 'A Character in Homer, of an Ill-natur'd, Deform'd Villain.' In the same year Breval published, under similar auspices, Pope's 'Miscellany.
He put a prize crew aboard Malartic and took her crew on board Phoenix where passengers and the officers of the 88th Regiment of Foot traveling on her stood watch over them. The Court of Directors of the British East India company awarded Moffat 500 guineas and the officers and crew of Phoenix £2000 to be divided among them for "their gallant conduct in engaging and capturing the ship General Malartic."Edinburgh Magazine: Or Literary Miscellany, Volume 20, p.235.
He was born in a Derbyshire vicarage which had been occupied by his father and grandfather for almost 50 years, and was a member of the same family as Fletcher Christian. At the age of 18, he began contributing to the Guardian's Miscellany column. After becoming a full-time freelance writer, he wrote for newspapers and magazines including the Birmingham Post, Birmingham Evening Mail, Nottingham Guardian, The Times, Country Life and New Scientist. From 1950, he was editor of The Plough.
He gave interviews to newspapers—"GBS Confesses", to The Daily Mail in 1904 is an example—and provided sketches to would-be biographers whose work was rejected by Shaw and never published. In 1939 Shaw drew on these materials to produce Shaw Gives Himself Away, a miscellany which, a year before his death, he revised and republished as Sixteen Self Sketches (there were seventeen). He made it clear to his publishers that this slim book was in no sense a full autobiography.
The son of the journalist Allan Massie, Massie was educated at Glenalmond College in Perthshire and at Trinity College, Dublin, where he edited T.C.D. Miscellany. He was also an active member of the University Philosophical Society, one of the college's main debating societies. In 1997, he won the John Smith Memorial Mace debating competition, speaking with Matthew Magee and representing the University Philosophical Society. Formerly The Observer Mace, the competition was renamed in 1995 and is run by the English-Speaking Union.
Noted in Campbell Bonner, "A Miscellany of Engraved Stones" Hesperia 23.2 (April - June 1954:138-157) p. 154; 1695 title page. Online In his cabinet of curiosities, Gorlaeus had a collection of rare shells, which was of sufficient interest to be purchased by the States-General of the Dutch Republic as a present for Marie de' Medici, for 9000 guilders.J.J. Dodt van Flensburg, "Resolutien der Generalen Staten uit de XVII eeuw", in Archief voor kerkelijke en wereldsche geschiedenissen... (Utrecht, 1839-48), vol.
In 1979, he moved up to the New England Tea Men of the North American Soccer League. In October 1980, the Tea Men released Cano.SPORTS LOG\ MISCELLANY: TEA MEN CUT TWO Boston Globe - Friday, October 24, 1980 In 1981, he moved to the New England Sharks of the ASL.N.E. SHARKS AIM TO SURVIVE\ AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE TEAM SPORTS FOUR EX-TEA MEN Boston Globe - Friday, April 3, 1981 He later played in the semi-professional Southern New England Super Indoor Soccer League.
Capitalizing on this trend, Congo Pictures released the hoax documentary Ingagi (1930), advertising the film as "an authentic incontestable celluloid document showing the sacrifice of a living woman to mammoth gorillas." Ingagi is now often recognized as a racial exploitation film as it implicitly depicted black women having sex with gorillas, and baby offspring that looked more ape than human.Gerald Peary, 'Missing Links: The Jungle Origins of King Kong' (1976), repr. Gerald Peary: Film Reviews, Interviews, Essays and Sundry Miscellany, 2004.
Engraving of Ned Ludd, Leader of the Luddites, 1812 Ned Ludd, possibly born Edward Ludlam,Palmer, Roy (1998) The Sound of History: Songs and Social Comment, Oxford University Press, , p. 103Chambers, Robert (2004) Book of Days: A Miscellany of Popular Antiquities in Connection with the Calendar, Part 1, Kessinger, , p. 357 is the person from whom, it is popularly claimed, the Luddites took their name. In 1779, Ludd is supposed to have broken two stocking frames in a fit of rage.
The couple were married formally at the Bishop's Palace in Oslo on 23 November. James received a dowry of 75,000 Danish dalers and a gift of 10,000 dalers from his mother-in-law Sophie of Mecklenburg-Güstrow.Miles Kerr- Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 35. After stays at Elsinore and Copenhagen and a meeting with Tycho Brahe, they returned to Scotland on 1 May 1590.
Philip Astley was born in Newcastle-under-Lyme in England the son of a cabinetmaker.The book of days: A miscellany of popular antiquities in connection with the calendar, including anecdote, biography, & history, curiosities of literature and oddities of human life and character. p. 474\. Robert Chambers, ed. 1864. At the age of nine, he apprenticed with his father, but Astley's dream was to work with horses, so he joined Colonel Eliott's Fifteenth Light Dragoons when he was 17, later becoming a Sergeant Major.
Anne Taylor, "Barham, Francis Foster (Alist Francis Barham) (1808–1871)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 4 January 2008. Heraud's ODNB entry has him editing the Monthly Magazine from 1839 to 1842, but does not mention the New Monthly. In 1845 Colburn sold the magazine for £2500 to William Harrison Ainsworth, who had earlier edited Bentley's Miscellany and who now edited his own Ainsworth's Magazine. Ainsworth edited the New Monthly with his cousin William Francis Ainsworth as sub-editor.
"An Extempore upon a Faggot" is an eight-line poem of unknown authorship dating from the mid-17th century. It has been attributed to John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, John Dryden, John Milton, and Sir John Suckling. In September 2010, Jennifer Batt, lecturer in English at Jesus College, Oxford, published a version of the poem found in the 1708 Oxford and Cambridge Miscellany Poems, part of the Harding Collection at the Bodleian Library. The original anthology attributes this version to John Milton.
An inventory of the contents in 1517 includes masonry tools; halberds, axes, and Jedburgh staves, bows and arrows, and armour; wool and linen cloth and yarn; clothes and furniture; five barrels of wine; and farm tools and ploughs.Spalding Club Miscellany, vol 2 (Aberdeen, 1842), pp 75-80. The Mackintosh family was later granted Petty. The lands were granted to James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray by his half-sister, Mary, Queen of Scots, following her return to Scotland in 1561.
Bishop England faced these unfavourable conditions in a brave and determined spirit. The day after his arrival he assumed formal charge of his see, and almost immediately issued a pastoral. He then set out on his first visitation of the three States comprising his diocese. In 1822 he organized and incorporated a Book Society to be established in each congregation, and in the same year established the "United States Catholic Miscellany", the first distinctively Catholic newspaper published in the United States.
Some historians have concluded that Asiaticus married Lollia Saturnina,Wiseman, Talking to Virgil: A Miscellany, p.75 the sister of Lollia Paulina, the third wife of the emperor Caligula.Freisenbruch, The First Ladies of Rome: The Women Behind the Caesars, p. 131 However, Bernard Kavanagh has argued not only that it is more likely that Saturnina was not Asiaticus' wife, but the wife of his son, but also that, as a consequence, Lollia Saturnina was likely the niece of Lollia Paulina.
Sprawski, p. 107; Bos, p. 73; Boffa and Leone, p. 386; Aelian, Varia Historia (Historical Miscellany) 5.3 [= Aristotle fr. 678 Rose]. Compare Euphorion fr. 169 Lightfoot; Parthenius fr. 34 Lightfoot. Ovid, in his Metamorphoses, describes Aegaeon as a "dark-hued" sea god "whose strong arms can overpower huge whales",Ovid, Metamorphoses 2.8-10. while according to Arrian apparently, the Aegean Sea was said to have been named after Aegaeon.Sprawski, p. 107; Fowler 2013, p. 68; Fowler 1988, p. 100 n.
Vivian Mercier Vivian Mercier (1919-1989) was an Irish literary critic. He was born at Clara in County Offaly and educated, first, at Portora Royal School, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, and then, at Trinity College Dublin. He was elected a Scholar of the College in 1938, and edited the student magazine T.C.D. Miscellany. After taking his doctorate at Trinity, he taught in American universities from the 1940s to the 1980s; his last post was Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
Other very minor contributors were birds, light phenomena such as mirages or searchlights, and various miscellany such as flares or kites. The vast majority of identified objects (about 84%) were explained as balloons, aircraft, or astronomical objects. However, about 22% of all sightings still defied any plausible explanation by the team of scientists, and percentage of unidentifieds rose to 33% for the best witnesses and cases. Thus when carefully studied, a substantial fraction of reports (given the available data) is currently not understood.
The Egerton ManuscriptEgerton Manuscript 2711, British Museum is an album containing Wyatt's personal selection of his poems and translations which preserves 123 texts, partly in his handwriting. Tottel's Miscellany (1557) is the Elizabethan anthology which created Wyatt's posthumous reputation; it ascribes 96 poems to him, 33 not in the Egerton Manuscript. These 156 poems can be ascribed to Wyatt with certainty on the basis of objective evidence. Another 129 poems have been ascribed to him purely on the basis of subjective editorial judgment.
Antiocheis is an epic poem by Joseph of Exeter, written in Latin soon after the year 1190, when Joseph returned to England from the Third Crusade on the death of his friend and fellow Crusader, Baldwin of Exeter, archbishop of Canterbury.Mortimer Angevin England p. 210. The poem is lost, except for a single fragment of 21 lines quoted by William Camden in his miscellany Remains Concerning Britain. The fragment praises Britain as a land of warriors, giving King Arthur as an example.
74 Third Edition Allen & Unwin 2001 Today the winery holds the distinction of producing the oldest surviving bottle of Australian wine—an 1867 Tintara Vineyard claret. The Tintara wine earned the distinction when the previous record holder, an 1864 bottle of Pewsey Vale Cabernet Sauvignon, was accidentally broken by an office cleaner at Christie's auction house.G. Harding "A Wine Miscellany" p. 28, Clarkson Potter Publishing, New York 2005 AAP "Australia's oldest bottle of wine returns" Associated Australian Press, 24 February 2003J.
Joseph Relph (3 December 1712 – 26 June 1743) was a Cumberland poet (his first name is given as Josiah in later editions of the Dictionary of National Biography). His poetical works were first published in 1747 under the title of A Miscellany of Poems. They were edited by Thomas Sanderson, who supplied a biography of the author and a pastoral elegy on his death. A second edition appeared at Carlisle in 1798, with the biography and engravings by Thomas Bewick.
Although the poem brought him praise, it did not bring the material benefit he had hoped for. The poem later appeared in Miscellany of Poems (1731), edited by John Husbands, a Pembroke tutor, and is the earliest surviving publication of any of Johnson's writings. Johnson spent the rest of his time studying, even during the Christmas holiday. He drafted a "plan of study" called "Adversaria", which he left unfinished, and used his time to learn French while working on his Greek.
This generosity was connected with the aftermath of a fatal struggle between Beeston's sailors and Armada veterans on the streets of Edinburgh.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp. 11-2, 22-3, 61: National Records of Scotland, treasurer's accounts, June 1589. James VI sent Foulis and Robert Jousie to London in July 1589 to buy clothes and ornaments in preparation for his marriage to Anne of Denmark.
The Gentleman's Magazine 1843 page 202 Lipscomb was ordained in 1816. He was appointed vicar of Sutton Benger, Wiltshire on 2 October 1818 The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany: A New Series of the Scots Magazine July - December 1818 p. 381. and remained there until his elevation to the Episcopate. Hw was consecrated bishop at Lambeth Palace on 24 July 1824,J.B. Ellis The Diocese of Jamaica: A Short Account of its History, Growth, and Organisation (London: SPCK, 1913), page 60.
Even his pursemaster and yeoman of the wardrobe, John Tennent of Listonschiels, was sent on an errand to England, though he got a frosty reception.Thomas, Andrea, Princelie Majestie, John Donald (2005), 12–15, 36: Murray, Atholl, 'Pursemaster's Accounts', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, vol. 10 (SHS: Edinburgh, 1965), pp. 13–51. Lawless acts of lords in James V's time James increased his income by tightening control over royal estates and from the profits of justice, customs and feudal rights.
Despite the initial controversy, Lennon notes, WN became the most reprinted essay of an era. It was reprinted with rebuttals from Ned Polsky and Jean Malaquais, followed by Mailer's response, as "Reflections on Hip", in his 1959 miscellany, Advertisements for Myself. The essay and "Reflections on Hip" were reprinted the same year in pamphlet form by City Light Press, and again by this press several times over the next 15 years. Most recently it appears in Mind of an Outlaw (2014).
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1992 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany. Review of Acacia victoriae and related species (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae: Section Phyllodineae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma aphanocladum in 2014 then transferred back to the genus Acacia in 2005. The specific epithet is taken from the Greek word aphanes meaning unseen or invisible and klados meaning branch referring to the spindly habit of this species.
A son of William and Ann Bowne, Andrew Bowne was born circa 1638 in Salem, Massachusetts, where he was baptized on August 12, 1638. About 1645 or 1646, the Bowne family moved to Gravesend, an English settlement in New Netherland. He became a mariner by profession, and by 1680 was a resident of New York City, where he became a merchant. In 1686 he became a resident of Middletown Township, New Jersey,Historical and Genealogical Miscellany, John E. Stillwell, M. D., Vol.
The Cruden Bay Hotel tramway was built to connect Cruden Bay railway station with the Cruden Bay Hotel. It was constructed by the Great North of Scotland Railway which owned the hotel. Two tramcars were provided and built by the Great North of Scotland Railway at Kittybrewster,Lambert's Railway Miscellany, Anthony Lambert, Random House, 2010 in a purple lake and cream livery with "Cruden Bay Hotel" on the rocker panel. It was the most northerly tramway service in the United Kingdom.
Jacob Still Deutsch Blakesley is an American translator of fiction and poetry who teaches at the University of Leeds, where he co-directs the Leeds Centre for Dante Studies. He won a 2018 NEA Literature Translation Fellowship for a project on translating the modern experimental Italian poet Edoardo Sanguineti. His poetry translations from Italian and other languages have been published in Chicago Review, Comparative Critical Studies, Poetry Miscellany, and Stand. He is currently the chair of the John Dryden Translation Competition.
Johnson completed half of the translation in one afternoon and the rest the following morning. The poem was finished quickly because Johnson was hoping for patronage that would help him overcome the financial difficulties that he was experiencing while at Pembroke. After Johnson finished the poem, it was sent to his home, and his father Michael Johnson, a bookseller, immediately printed the work. It was later contained in a collected of work by the Pembroke tutor John Husbands titled Miscellany of Poems (1731).
Among these was the sermon preached by Richard Bancroft at St. Paul's Cross at the opening of parliament in February 1588–9, in which the divine right of bishops as a higher order than presbyters was maintained, and the orders of the Scottish church disparaged. Davidson at the request of the presbytery of Edinburgh published a reply, which was suppressed by order of the king. It became very scarce. Part of it is republished in the Miscellany of the Wodrow Society.
In 1775, he became a member of the French Academy of Inscriptions and a fellow of the Royal Society. Dutens was for a third time chargé d'affaires at Turin. He was in Paris in 1783, and returned to London the following year. Between 1775 and 1805, he wrote his Memoirs of a Traveler, Now in Retirement, which contains a wide- ranging miscellany of Dutens' life "interspersed with historical, literary, and political anecdotes relative to the principal personages of the present age".
He was ill from April to early July. After that he stayed with Dickens in Boulogne from July to September 1853, then toured Switzerland and Italy with Dickens and Egg from October to December. Collins published Hide and Seek in June 1854. During this period Collins extended the variety of his writing, publishing articles in George Henry Lewes's paper The Leader, short stories and essays for Bentley's Miscellany, as well as dramatic criticism and the travel book Rambles Beyond Railways.
It was inhabited by poor people, who set up their rest among its > faded glories, as Arabs of the desert pitch their tents among the fallen > stones of the Pyramids; but there was a family sentimental feeling prevalent > in the Yard, that it had a character.Dickens, Charles. , Little Dorrit, > chapter 12. Before Dickens, the courtyard was best known for its appearance in R.H. Barham's The Ingoldsby Legends, a collection of poems and stories first published in Bentley's Miscellany beginning in 1837.
Later editions were dedicated, by permission, to Princess Mary. This was translated into German by Albrecht Wittenberg and published in Hamburg in 1787. The Rambles of Fancy, or, Moral and Interesting Tales, in 2 vols (1786); was also published ‘for the author’ and sold by her at 28, Warwick-Street, Golden-Square. She attracted the attention of the publisher John Marshall, and during 1788 she edited The Juvenile Magazine; or, An instructive and entertaining miscellany for youth of both sexes, published by him.
One of his answers on why he writes the blog is "because writing is, like death, a lonely business." The original American Gods blog was extracted for publication in the NESFA Press collection of Gaiman miscellany, Adventures in the Dream Trade. To celebrate the seventh anniversary of the blog, the novel American Gods was provided free of charge online for a month. Gaiman is an active user of the social networking site Twitter with over 2.7 million followers , using the username @neilhimself.
After the American Civil War, Scripps gave up her job as a schoolteacher and headed to Detroit, at that time a burgeoning industrial center in the West. She joined her brother James E. Scripps in publishing The Detroit Evening News, a short, inexpensive, and politically independent newspaper pitched to the city's working class. This was to be the start of the Scripps family fortune. She wrote a daily column, nicknamed "Miss Ellen's Miscellany," that reduced local and national news to short sound bites.
According to Gerald Baldasty, "Her columns of "Miscellany" and other topics became the inspiration for the Newspaper Enterprise Association, a news features service that Edward Scripps established in 1902." In the 1870s and 1880s, the Scripps papers expanded to include The Cleveland Press, The Cincinnati Post, and the St. Louis Chronicle. A shareholder, Ellen Scripps played an important role in Scripps councils. She gave business advice to her younger half-brother E.W. and sided with him in family financial disputes.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Bruce Maslin in 1999 as part of the work Acacia miscellany. The taxonomy of fifty- five species of Acacia, primarily Western Australian, in section Phyllodineae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae) as published in the journal Nuytsia. It was reclassified as Racosperma quinquenervium by Leslie Pedley in 2003 then transferred back to genus Acacia in 2006. The specific epithet (quinquenervia) is from the Latin quinque meaning "five" and nervus, "vein", referring to the leaves usually having five veins.
"Local Miscellany", National Republican, Washington, District of Columbia, 24 September 1874, p. 4. Bruff was an avid reader. His personal library included 322 volumes covering a wide range of topics including history, travel, many scientific works, philosophy, religion, fine arts, and literature. He also kept a private artifact collection of ancient coins, Native American weapons and tools, geological specimens, animal tusks, original letters from notable Americans, and mementos from historical sites as well as portraits of famous people he admired.
She now attracted public praise. On 25 September 1797, the Morning Chronicle acknowledged that "this celebrated woman", despite "the miscellany of her life", had "acquired an elevation ... which she has preserved with dignity", using "her influence with the great in favour of the unfortunate". She was forced to let Norwood House due to reduced financial circumstances in the early 19th century. Mary then frequently lived abroad, where in 1808 she met Madame Tussaud and bought her a house in Crystal Palace.
The grave of Robert Chambers, St Andrews Cathedral churchyard The Book of Days was Chambers's last major publication, and perhaps his most elaborate. It was a miscellany of popular antiquities in connection with the calendar, and it is supposed that his excessive labour in connexion with this book hastened his death. Two years before, the University of St Andrews had conferred on him the degree of Doctor of Laws, and he was elected a member of the Athenaeum Club in London.
James VI and her sister Anna 4,000 Danish dalers.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 38. When her future spouse first arrived for the wedding in 1590, he disguised himself as a jeweler; he presented her with jewelry, and stated that prize was her body. As a result, he was thrown in jail until he could prove his identity and explain that it had been a joke.
Bentley published the works of well-known authors such as Leigh Hunt, William Hazlitt, Maria Edgeworth and Frances Trollope, and was the English publisher of Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales. Bentley's firm gained a "reputation for quality". He often published the same work in several formats. For example, Ainsworth's Jack Sheppard was serialised in Bentley's Miscellany from January 1839 to February 1840, published as a three-decker book in October 1839, and reprinted in one volume and as a serialisation in 1840.
Due to his mother's numerous love affairs, doubts were often raised about his paternity: he and his siblings were often called "the Harleian Miscellany". Lord Oxford married Eliza Nugent (1806-1877), the illegitimate daughter of George Nugent, 1st Marquess of Westmeath, on 17 February 1831. He died in January 1853, aged 44, when the title became extinct. His estates passed to his sister Jane, who was married to Lord Langdale, from whom they eventually passed to a distant relative, William Daker Harley.
In the miscellany Miscellaneous Morsels from Youyang, Han Yu had an unnamed grandnephew who lived in the Huai River region. He instructed his grandnephew to study Confucian classics in a school, but his grandnephew showed no interest in his studies and bullied his classmates. Han Yu then arranged for his grandnephew to study in a Buddhist school, but the abbot complained that he was defiant and reckless. Han Yu then brought his grandnephew home and scolded him for not spending his time productively.
Throughout her time in Derbyshire, Sinar was active in the work of the Derbyshire Archaeological Society: she edited the Derbyshire Archaeological Journal from 1970 to 1976, and Derbyshire Miscellany, the society's local history magazine, from 1970 to 1982. In 1977, she became a founding committee member of the Derbyshire Record Society. Following her retirement, she helped establish the Derbyshire Historic Gardens Trust in 1989. She lectured widely to local groups, and was an honorary lecturer in the University of Sheffield extramural department.
On his return from his continental tour, Earle prepared several tracts in which he described his travels. Two of these, A Description of Vallombrosa and A Picturesque View of the Glaciers in Savoy, he communicated to the Monthly Miscellany. A third is A Letter to Lord Littelton, containing a description of the last great Eruption of Mount Ætna, A.D. 1766, Lond. 1775, a sequel to the reprint of a letter on the 1669 Etna eruption addressed to Charles II by Lord Winchilsea.
For the Bannatyne Club Dennistoun edited Memoirs of the Affairs of Scotland from 1577 to 1603, by David Moysie, 1830. For the Maitland Club, Cartularium comitatus de Levenax, ab initio seculi decimi tertii usque ad annum MCCCXCVIII., 1833; the Cochrane Correspondence regarding the Affairs of Glasgow 1745–6, 1836; the Coltness Collections 1608–1840, 1842, and, as co-editor with Alexander Macdonald, Miscellany, consisting of Original Papers illustrative of the History and Literature of Scotland, vols. i. ii. and iii.
Mendel Gdański is a short story by Polish poet and short-story writer Maria Konopnicka published for the first time in 1890 in the Przegląd Literacki magazine. After three years it was published again in her miscellany of poems Na drodze ("On the Road"). The main reason for Maria Konopnicka's writing Mendel Gdański was the prevailing outbreak of anti-Semitism in Poland at that time. The opus tackles the remarkably current in the late 19th century matter of ethic minorities' assimilation.
Both were reissued in 1736, as his Historical Works. History of the Life and Reign of Mary Queen of Scots and Dowager of France (Dublin, 1753) claimed to be by Higgons. Higgons wrote verses for the 1688 Cambridge University collection Illustrissimi principis ducis Cornubiæ genethliacon, addressed to Mary of Modena, on the birth of her son. In Examen Poeticum, being the Third Part of Dryden's Miscellany, 1693, were poems by Higgons, and he prefixed lines to William Congreve's Old Bachelor.
C.P.Stacey, Another look at the Battle of Lake Erie, in Zaslow 1964, p. 108. Detroit had to be completed with a miscellany of guns from the fortifications of Amherstburg. Barclay claimed at his court martial that these guns lacked flintlock firing mechanisms and matches, and that they could be fired only by snapping flintlock pistols over powder piled in the vent holes. Barclay repeatedly requested men and supplies from Commodore James Lucas Yeo, commanding on Lake Ontario, but received very little.
In 1910 The Life of Kitty Wilkinson was published by Winifred Rathbone which provided a more accurate story of her life than previously available in "Catherine of Liverpool" in Chambers' Miscellany., In 2000, a fuller biography, The Life of Kitty Wilkinson, was written by Liverpool author and civic historian Michael Kelly. Kelly also starred in a short documentary about Wilkinson's life, produced by a group of students at Edge Hill University in 2014, with the title Kitty: The Saint of the Slums.
Grave of George Addison, Bogor Botanical Gardens George Augustus Addison (Calcutta, 1792—Java, about 14 January 1815) was the author of collected works published posthumously under the title, Indian Reminiscences, or the Bengal Moofussul Miscellany, in London by Edward Bull in 1837. A young man of high promise, he died prematurely in Java of a fever. His knowledge of languages, his mathematical and classical attainments, his excellent qualities, and his religious character, are all highly extolled in the introduction to that work.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 91. Sir Robert Cecil encouraged the English courtier Roger Aston with gifts which he sent to Nicholson, including 20 yards of fine black velvet for Aston's wife, Margaret Stewart, who with her mother the Mistress of Ochiltree and sisters was a lady- in-waiting in the household of Anne of Denmark.M. S. Giuseppi, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 12 (Edinburgh, 1952), p. 42.
John O'Donovan, ed. 'The Genealogy of Corca Laidhe', in Miscellany of the Celtic Society. Dublin. 1849. p.384. alternative scan Like many other Irish saints, he received his first lessons in religion from Saint Ita of Killeedy, the "Brigid of Munster", from whose care he passed, according to some writers, to St. Finbarr's seminary at Loch Eirce, near Cork. He is reported by some to have founded Molana Abbey, on the little island of Dairinis in the River Blackwater, not far from the town of Youghal.
The species was first formally described in 1855 by William Henry Harvey after an unpublished description by James Drummond. It was given the name Urocarpus phebalioides and the description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany from specimens collected on the east side of Mount Lesueur. In 1987, Paul Wilson transferred the species to the genus Asterolasia, but as there was already a species named Asterolasia phebalioides, Wilson changed the name to Asterolasia drummondii, publishing the change in the journal Nuytsia.
The college is physically challenged friendly and is under constant CCTV surveillance. The Placement Cell, NSS, NSO, NCC, Counselling Cell function for the overall wellbeing of the students. Kamala Nehru College has several extra-curricular societies that cover the whole gamut of personality development aspects by providing plural avenues to students for self- discovery. All departments and the societies have their annual newsletters/magazines and the college comes up with its journal ‘Akademos’(An Annual Miscellany of Liberal Arts and Scholarship, ISSN 2231-0584) each year.
Although there were usually official age limits, these were often ignored; the youngest boys were sometimes treated as mascots by the adult soldiers. The life of a drummer boy appeared rather glamorous and as a result, boys would sometimes run away from home to enlist.Albert A. Nofi, A Civil War Treasury: Being a Miscellany of Arms and Artillery, Facts and Figures, Legends and Lore Da Capo Press 1992 (p.107) Other boys may have been the sons or orphans of soldiers serving in the same unit.
By 1858 the castle was ivy-covered and described as: "a fine old green-mantled tower" on the grounds of Castlefergus House.An Ennis Miscellany, (Ed. Joseph Power) (Ennis 1990), p131 The American millionaire and oil heiress Elizabeth Phillips (of Phillips Petroleum) and her husband Henry D. Irwin, who chose to call it "Ballyhannan Castle", (using the older townland spelling), restored the building to its former glory in 1970. It is currently rented out to top-of-the-market tourists as an out-of-the-way destination.
Grevillea thyrsoides, is a small, spreading shrub which is endemic to Western Australia. It grows to between 0.3 metres and 0.7 metres in height and is up to 1.5 metres in width. It produces red flowers in late summer to early autumn and mid-winter to early spring (February to March and July to September in Australia.) The species was formerly described in 1855 by Swiss botanist Carl Meissner in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany based on plant material collected by James Drummond.
Elder, John, 'A Proposal for uniting Scotland and England' (1827), Bannatyne Miscellany, vol.1, (1827), pp. 1–18. (Elder later became the tutor of Lord Darnley.) Somerset began a new round in 1547 shortly before the Battle of Pinkie by publishing the Scot James Henrisoun's An Exhortacion to the Scottes to conforme themselfes to the honourable, Expedient & godly Union betweene the two realmes of Englande & Scotland. It was followed by Somerset's printed Proclamation of 4 September 1547, and the Epistle or Exhortation of February 1548.
Historically, the structure was used by and for student organizations. Formerly housed in the Calisthenium and Riding Academy and later the Alumnae Gymnasium, the Philaletheis Society moved into the Students' Building upon its opening and began to use the space for its theatrical performances. The junior prom, lectures from a wide array of speakers, and faculty-led skits all took place beneath the building's roof. Vassar's yearbook, the Vassarion, as well as its weekly newspaper, The Miscellany News, were also headquartered in the Students' Building.
It produces a wine of pure red color. A single vine of Žametovka growing in the Slovenian town of Maribor is estimated by the Guinness Book of Records to be the oldest living vine still producing fruit in the world at over 400 years of age.G. Harding "A Wine Miscellany" pg 19, Clarkson Potter Publishing, New York 2005 Anthony Gardner "Maribor, Slovenia: a cultural city guide" The Daily Telegraph March 1st, 2012Nick Stephens "The Oldest Grape Vine in the World – and The Oldest Wine etc!" Bordeaux Undiscovered.
As Arrott had done before him Kellie joined the Royal Navy in 1790 as a surgeon.The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany 1818;81:500 During this naval service he published papers in the form of letters to his father ‘Mr Kellie, surgeon, Leith’. A letter to Edinburgh Medical Commentaries dated 21 May 1794 show that he is now surgeon on HMS Iris, a 32 gun, fifth rate frigate. In this letter he records experiments on himself, describing the effects of compressing the arm by tourniquet.
Alexander Crichton remained in the Cardinal's favour and sailed with him to France in 1540. He returned before his master in 1541 to meet James V. The King, Crichton, and the secretary, Thomas Erskine of Haltoun, played tennis at St Andrews on 3 April 1541.Athol Murray, 'Pursemaster's Accounts', in 10th Miscellany of Scottish History Society (SHS, Edinburgh, 1965), pp. 35 footnote, 41. In November 1542 he sailed to France from Dumbarton on the business of rents owed to the Cardinal and Mary of Guise.
He spends several months every year in Morocco, a country very close to his heart; having first visited there in 1965 and has returned annually ever since to walk in the Atlas Mountains. In 2006, he released the book The Mountains Look On Marrakech an account of a 90-day end to end trek of the Atlas Mountains. In 2008, Brown took a break from writing books on walking when he released The Scottish Graveyard Miscellany, a book about the design and art of gravestones throughout Scotland.
In 2012, BBC Four screened Jonathan Meades on France, a series in which he explored his "second country". The first episode, Fragments of an Arbitrary Encyclopaedia, focused on the Lorraine region, using a miscellany of words beginning with the letter V. The second episode, A Biased Anthology of Parisian Peripheries, focused on Frenchness and its major traits. The series concluded with Just a Few Debts France Owes to America. The 2013 film The Joy of Essex examined that county's little-known history of utopian communities.
The William J. Benners Papers are housed in the Fales Library and Special Collections at New York University's Bobst Library. The papers consist of: letters to Benners from family members, various authors, and publishers; fragments of dime novel manuscripts; several research and accounting notebooks; and miscellany such as scrapbooks and photos. They were donated by Edward G. Levy, the noted dime novel collector, in 1966. Levy had acquired them from Ralph Adimari in 1964; Adimari had received them throughout the 1950s from Ralph Cummings.
Lt. James Young Milne Henderson (9 March 1891 – 31 July 1917) was a Scottish rugby union player and British Army officer who was killed in World War I.Bath, Richard (ed.) The Scotland Rugby Miscellany (Vision Sports Publishing Ltd, 2007. P. 109. ) Milne Henderson was born James Young Henderson in Edinburgh to John, a chartered accountant and bank manager, and Edwardina "Ina" Young Henderson. (The family added the Milne to their surname a few years after he was born.) He had four brothers and one sister.
With his health broken and his strength almost exhausted, he promptly resumed his duties on his return to Charleston, where he died. Most of his writings were given to the public through the columns of the United States Catholic Miscellany, in the publication of which he was aided by his sister. His successor, Bishop Reynolds, collected his various writings, which were published in five volumes at Baltimore, in 1849. A new edition, edited by Archbishop S.B. Messmîr of Milwaukee, was published at Cleveland in 1908.
Cotherstone was held in extremely high regard by contemporary observers. Commenting on his defeat in the St Leger the American Turf Register and Sporting Magazine described Cotherstone as "the best horse we have had for years", while a writer in the 1844 edition of the New Sporting Almanack referred to him as "the greatest winner of these modern days" and compared him to the 18th Century champions Flying Childers and Eclipse. "Sylvanus", writing in Bentley's Miscellany, called Cotherstone "as magnificent an animal as ever rounded Tattenham Corner".
Both were active in local, regional and national Quaker activities. Chris, among other roles, was Chairman of the Social Responsibility Council, 1970 – 1972; Clerk of Quaker Social Responsibility and education, 1979 – 1981.Description of contributors to A Quaker miscellany for Edward H. Milligan, edited by David Blamires, Jeremy Greenwood and Alex Kerr, published by David Blamires (1985) p. 175. He served on Quaker Peace and Service Central Committee from 1993 to 1998QPS CC period of service – source – email from Friends House Library 30 August 2012.
During the Early Middle Ages, the Toquz Oghuz ("Nine Tribes"), included a people known in Chinese sources as Sijie, who have been identified with Sīkari in the Saka Stäel-Holstein Miscellany. This name may be a sinicisation of igil, a Turkic root meaning "many" (Sijie < γiei-kiet < igil ). In the middle of the 7th century, they were reported to be located on the northern bank of the Kherlen River.Wang Pu, "Summary review of Tang dynasty, 618-907 (Tang Huiyao)", Shanghai, 1958, ch. 72, p.
The Book of Lismore, also known as the Book of Mac Carthaigh Riabhach, is a late fifteenth-century Gaelic manuscript that was created at Kilbrittain, Co. Cork, for Fínghean Mac Carthaigh, Lord of Carbery (1478–1505).Ó Corráin, Clavis, 1101: 'The likely origin is the Mac Carthaigh house at Kilbrittain, Co. Cork'. Defective at beginning and end, 198 leaves survive today, containing a miscellany of religious and secular texts written entirely in Irish. The main scribe of the manuscript did not sign his name.
The Gentleman's Magazine, 1850, p94-6. In 1829 he moved to London and began to contribute regularly to journals such as the Athenaeum of which he was deputy editor, Bentley’s Miscellany and The Art Journal. In London he worked as a writer for hire or, as his obituaryObituary from the Dublin University MagazineObituary from the Gentleman's Magazine puts it, "a writer for his daily bread". He published profusely throughout his career, writing on religion, history and a number of biographies, most notably that of Sir Robert Peel.
The receptions he gave at home on Mondays were described by Frederick Rolfe, known as Baron Corvo. An alpinist, Brown climbed peaks in Switzerland, the Carnic Alps and the Tyrol, and was a member of the Alpine Club of Venice. He published Venetian Studies (1887), a historical miscellany, followed by a more comprehensive history, Venice, an Historical Sketch (1893), later abbreviated as The Venetian Republic (1902), and his The Venetian Printing Press (1891) came out of unpublished material he found in his researches at the Frari.
The only major collection of Anne Finch's writings that appeared in her lifetime was Miscellany Poems, on Several Occasions. Nearly a century after her death her poetic output had been largely forgotten, until the great English poet William Wordsworth praised her nature poetry in an essay included in his 1815 volume Lyrical Ballads. A major collection titled The Poems of Anne, Countess of Winchilsea, edited by Myra Reynolds, was published in 1903. For many years, it was considered the definitive collection of her writings.
De octo quaestionibus; ; trans. A. G. Holder in W. T. Foley and A. G. Holder, Bede: A Biblical Miscellany, Translated Texts for Historians (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 1999) 149–65. According to Eric Knibbs, the treatise entitled the De octo quaestionibus is a 12th-century creation that cannot be ascribed to Bede, though the eight individual texts gathered under this title are much older. A subset of four (called, in some manuscripts, the Solutiones) are almost certainly Bede's; the authorship of the other four is uncertain.
In the winter, the lake froze over and students at the college would ice skate upon the surface. The shallowness of the lake became an obstacle to recreational use, and while it was suggested by Vassar's Miscellany News that the lake be dredged or removed entirely, neither of these options were employed and the lake is no longer a recreation site. By the 1920s, the Fonteyn Kill's source spring was being dammed in wintertime, flooding a nearby hollow to create an ice skating pond.
In 1590 James VI gave him £333 Scots from the subsidy money that Queen Elizabeth had given him.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 56, 59. On 7 January 1591 he came to the attention of Robert Bowes, the English diplomat in Edinburgh who described a fight on Edinburgh's Royal Mile. Logie had upset or made Ludovic Stewart, 2nd Duke of Lennox jealous in an incident in the king's bed chamber.
The first test saw the debut of Ciaran Fitzgerald while the second saw Mike Gibson make his final Ireland appearance. www.sporting-heroes.netThe Ireland Rugby Miscellany (2007): Ciaran Cronin This test series remains Ireland's only winning tour of the southern hemisphere "big 3" countries and the last time Ireland won a test in either Australia, South Africa or New Zealand. www.irishrugby.ie While on this tour Ned Byrne was the victim of a hit and run road accident which left his leg broken in three places.
The album distanced itself from the band's original sound, which was previously influenced by deathcore and metalcore, now fit into the genres of math rock and alternative rock. In an interview with JaME World, Sho said that the name of the album "comes from the essence of several places", thus giving the name miscellany. Regarding the musical genre of the album, Retsu said "we think DIMLIM is its own musical genre [...]" and Sho said that "there have been big changes in the way we see the music [...]".
His connection with the King's Revels Company ceased in 1636, and his activities in the late 1630s are not known. Lynn Hulse suggests as "an attractive possibility" that he may then have been attached to the Werburgh Street Theatre in Dublin. Details that support an Irish connection include a commendatory verse signed "T.I." in one of the plays of James Shirley, the Werburgh Street house dramatist, and the dedication of Jordan's miscellany Sacred Poems (1640) to James Ussher, archbishop of Armagh and primate of all Ireland.
The sails of the James were decorated with red taffeta.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 29: John Mackenzie, A chronicle of the kings of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1830), p. 142 An order, brought from the king by William Schaw, was made on 13 March 1590 for several towns including Ayr to equip "six ships of the greatest birth" to bring James VI and Anna of Denmark from Denmark.
Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 79 Colville was to continue to France, and invite Henry IV to send a representative to the christening, investigate the debts and revenues of Mary, Queen of Scots, and if necessary help to bring peace in France with James's cousins, the Dukes of Guise and Mayenne.Annie I. Cameron, Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1593-1595, vol. 11 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 314-5.
Miniature of Noah's Ark landing on the Mountains of Ararat (fol. 521a), from the 13th century North French Hebrew Miscellany The broadest distinction is between manuscript and printed miscellanies. Manuscript miscellanies were carefully compiled by hand, but also circulated, consumed, and sometimes added to in this organic state – they were a prominent feature of 16th and early 17th century literary culture. Printed miscellanies, which evolved in the late 17th and 18th centuries, were compiled by editors and published by booksellers in order to make a profit.
The Importance of the Auchinleck Manuscript. Retrieved April 18, 2013. However, most surviving manuscript verse miscellanies are from the 17th century: Printed verse miscellanies arose in the latter half of the 16th century, during the reign of Elizabeth I (1558–1603). One of the most influential English Renaissance verse miscellanies was Richard Tottel’s Songes and Sonettes, now better known as Tottel's Miscellany. First printed in 1557, it ran into nine further editions before 1587; it was not then printed again until the 18th century.
372 On 1 January 1590 he presented Henrik Gyldenstierne, Captain of Bohus Castle, with a ring and a gold chain, for which James VI reimbursed him 3,000 Danish dalers.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), p. 36. Carmichael returned to Scotland on 15 April 1590 with instructions for the welcoming party at Leith for Anne of Denmark.Calendar State Papers Scotland: 1589-1593, vol. 10 (Edinburgh, 1936), pp. 261-2.
The species was first formally described by the botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1857 as part of the work Nova genera et species aliquot rariores in Plagis Australiae Intratropicis nuperrime detecta. as published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. Other synonyms include Metrosideros paradoxus and Nania paradoxus. In a woodland setting associated species include Erythrophleum chlorostachys, Eucalyptus foelscheana, Eucalyptus setosa, Eucalyptus confertiflora and Eucalyptus latifolia in the overstorey and Grevillea decurrens, Gardenia megasperma and Calytrix exstipulata in the sparsely vegetated understorey.
After Derby, the War Council met only once more, an acrimonious session at Crieff in February 1746. Disappointment and heavy drinking resulted in repeated accusations by Charles that the Scots were traitors, reinforced when Murray advised abandoning plans to invade England. Instead, he proposed an insurgency in the Highlands that would "...oblige the Crown to come to terms, because the war rendered it necessary...English troops be occupied elsewhere".Elcho in Tayler (ed) (1948) A Jacobite Miscellany: Eight Original Papers on the Rising of 1745-1746, p.
Gemini Studios was an Indian film studio based in Madras, Tamil Nadu. It was launched when S. S. Vasan, a businessman of many ventures (including the ownership of Ananda Vikatan) bought Motion Picture Producers' Combines from Krishnaswamy Subrahmanyam and renamed itA Madras Miscellany, S. Muthiah, Published by EastWest Books, pg 644 Categories. The studio re-opened under the name Gemini. Despite the common beliefs about a lucky racehorse or the astrological sign of his wife, it was the logo Vasan chose that led to the name.
Korean prose literature can be divided into narratives, fiction, and literary miscellany. Narratives include myths, legends, and folktales found in the written records. The principal sources of these narratives are the two great historical records compiled in Classical Chinese during the Koryo era: Samguk sagi (1146; "Historical Record of the Three Kingdoms") and Samguk yusa (1285; "Memorabilia of the Three Kingdoms"). The most important myths are those concerning the Sun and the Moon, the founding of Korea by Tangun, and the lives of the ancient kings.
"Miscellany From Siskind blog and Aaron Diehl,Pulliam, Becca "Diehl beat out four other finalists for the 2011 Cole Porter Fellowship, awarded by the American Pianists Association" NPR A Blog Supreme respectively. Siskind won second prize at the Montreux Solo Jazz Piano Competition in Switzerland in 2011, and won first prize in the Nottingham International Solo Piano Competition in 2013.Burke, Debbie "In 2012, Jeremy won the Nottingham International Jazz Piano Competition; in 2011, he claimed second place at the Montreux Solo Piano competition.
She was also head of the drama and speech department at the Finch School in New York for many years."Miss Vida R. Sutton, Educator, is Dead; Author was Speech Consultant at N. B. C.," New York Times (July 28, 1956): 17. In 1936, she was chair of the Radio Council for American Speech, which collaborated with the National Council of Teachers of English on public education programs."Vida R. Sutton to Speak on Radio in Education Tuesday," Vassar Miscellany News 20(31)(February 26, 1936): 3.
He was also a pioneer folklorist, collecting together a miscellany of material on customs, traditions and beliefs under the title "Remaines of Gentilisme and Judaisme". He set out to compile county histories of both Wiltshire and Surrey, although both projects remained unfinished. His "Interpretation of Villare Anglicanum" (also unfinished) was the first attempt to compile a full-length study of English place-names. He had wider interests in applied mathematics and astronomy, and was friendly with many of the greatest scientists of the day.
He also contributed to periodicals such as The United States Catholic Miscellany and The Truth Teller. In later life Power suffered painful attacks of gout and became saddened by the burden of debt imposed on the Church by the rebuilding of St Peter’s Church in 1837. He died on April 14, 1849 and was buried under the floor of what is now the Old Cathedral of St Patrick. Power’s brother, Dr. William Power, was a prominent member of the Irish-American community in New York.
Founded in 1996 by Chris Lott and Tom Dooley, Eclectica's extensive and growing archives contain poetry, fiction, non-fiction, miscellany, travel, opinion and reviews by hundreds of authors from around the world. The first issue appeared in October 1996. Dooley, the remaining founder/editor, published a "Best Fiction" anthology in 2003, which was recognized by the IPPY awards as a runner up in the short fiction category for that year.2004 IPPY Awards In 2004, Eclectica took top honors in storySouth's Million Writers Award.
He wrote and published "Sokroviste slavjanskog jezika", "Monašskaja pravila" (which appeared in 1777), "Memoiri". Also, he edited and published "Itika Jeropolitika" in Vienna in 1774. This miscellany of emblems, first printed in Kyiv in 1712, and for the express use of Serbian reading public, was reprinted, thanks to his efforts to leave a literary legacy for his fellow Slavs and others. The influence of this book can be seen both in the printing and in poetry (the poetry of Jovan Rajić) of that period.
The Beast of Sydenham of 2005, was a large, panther-like black animal, which had been spotted around the area, and attacked a man. The beast was said to be 6 ft in length and 3 ft in height. According to The Literary Miscellany, "John Hussey of Sydenham died in 1748 at the age of 116 years. For upwards of fifty years his breakfast had been balm- tea (lemon balm) sweetened with honey; and his dinner had been pudding; by which he acquired regular health".
Some of his poems go beyond the conventional rhetorical style of Petrarchist poetry. Their graceful and warm verses, remindful of folk songs, are above almost everything else in the Ranjina's Miscellany, the oldest collection of Croatian Petrarchist lyric. Today's favorite is the refined and graceful poem Odiljam se (I Am Going Away), in verses of sixteen syllables, simple and warm, with a hint of bugarštica, a kind of a ballad. His eclogue Radmio and Ljubmir, found only recently, was written in the late 15th century.
Only four issues were published. Patten describes Bentley as "slow and imitative of other publishers", with "a strong bourgeois streak that prompted him to stand upon his proprietorial and editorial dignity, even when he lost contributors through his stubbornness", and describes his launch of the review as an "overreaching" that is typical of him. The firm slowly became successful again. From June 1859 to May 1860, Bentley published a series of "Tales from Bentley" that reprinted stories from Bentley's Miscellany, which was a success.
William Gilpin's sketch of Dinevawr Castle, illustrating his theory of perspective, 1782 Among the other poems by Dyer that accompanied the first appearance of “Grongar Hill” in Savage's miscellany was his epistle to his teacher Jonathan Richardson, “To a Famous Painter”, in which he modestly confessed that “As yet I but in verse can paint”.The Works of the English Poets, vol.53, pp.135–37 After Dyer's death, it was included among his poems as a continual reminder that he had practised both arts.
Fragments of a 9th-century metrical Anglo-Saxon Physiologus are extant (ed. Thorpe in Codex Exoniensis pp. 335–67, Grein in Bibliothek der angelsächsischen Poesie I, 223-8). About the middle of the 13th century there appeared a Middle English metrical Bestiary, an adaptation of the Latin Physiologus Theobaldi; this has been edited by Wright and Halliwell in Reliquiæ antiquæ (I, 208-27), also by Morris in An Old English Miscellany (1-25). There is an Icelandic Physiologus preserved in two fragmentary redactions from around 1200.
The First Wave 1760–1840 (London: Leicester University Press), p. 88. Retrieved 28 November 2015. Romance of the Pyrenees was serialized in the Lady's Magazine, starting in February 1804, but not in book form, "probably because the expected second sale did not warrant the cost." It took three years and "is the longest novel ever published in an eighteenth-century miscellany, with the single exception of Pamela."Robert D. Mayo, The English Novel in the Magazines, 1740–1815 (London: The Women's Press), pp. 232–233.
The school closed after the deaths of Bessie in December 1917 and Jane in October 1918. The death of Henry in December 1922 left Foster alone, and having lost her hearing almost completely, she was in difficult circumstances. To support herself, she began to write literary sketches and dialect verse for a number of publications such as the Northern Whig, Ireland's Own, and the annual miscellany Ulster Parade. A selection of these writings were published as a volume, Tyrone among the bushes, in 1933.
Throughout his life Burton poured forth tracts and sermons; most of the sermons are reprinted in 'Occasional Sermons preached before the University of Oxford,' 1764–6. Many of his Latin tracts and addresses are in his 'Opuscula Miscellanea Theologica,' 1748–61, or in the volume 'Opuscula Miscellanea Metrico-Prosaica,' 1771. He contributed to the Weekly Miscellany a series of papers on 'The Genuineness of Lord Clarendon's History of the Rebellion—Mr. Oldmixon's Slander confuted,' which was subsequently enlarged and printed separately at Oxford in 1744.
Easthope was known as a difficult employer, with the nickname 'Blast-hope'. Dickens left his employ in November 1836 to edit Bentley's Miscellany. On 24 August 1841 he was created a baronet by Lord Melbourne, as a reward for his adherence to the liberal party, and for his advocacy of a war policy in connection with the Syrian affairs. He died at his home Fir Grove, near Weybridge, Surrey, on 11 December 1865 and was buried at the family vault in West Norwood Cemetery.
The Sultan of Morocco sought to bring the lucrative trade in salt, slaves and especially the gold of the Songhay kingdom under his control. A force of some 4,000 well-trained mercenaries armed with guns was thus dispatched to bring it to heel. Organization of the invasion force was impressive, with some 8,000 camels in support, sapper units, and abundant supplies of gunpowder and lead. There were about 2,000 infantry harquebusiers, 500 mounted gunmen, and a miscellany of other forces, including 1500 mounted lancers.
The Carthusian: A Miscellany in Prose and Verse, By Charterhouse, S. Walker, London, 1837 The grave contains an inscription in Latin as well as Levett's coat-of-arms.Henry Levett grave inscription, The Registers and Monumental Inscriptions of Charterhouse Chapel, The Publications of the Harleian Society, Francis Collins M.D. (ed.), London, 1892 Dr. Henry Levett was the son of William Levett Esq. of Swindon and Savernake Forest,Dr. Henry Levett inherited Levett's Farm in Savernake Forest from his father, and eventually passed it to family heirs.
The species was first formally described by the botanists Richard Sumner Cowan and Bruce Maslin in 1995 as part of the work Acacia Miscellany. New taxa and notes on previously described taxa of Acacia, mostly section Juliflorae (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae), in Western Australia as published in the journal Nuytsia. In 2003 Leslie Pedley reclassified the species as Racosperma gibbosum but in 2006 it was transferred back to the genus Acacia. The plant is often confused with Acacia cyperophylla and is closely related to Acacia websteri.
This is a sum of money that is put into the club's pool, a kind of "kitty". If, at the end of the year, there are still funds in the pool, each member will pay a reduced call the following year; but if the club has made a major payout (say, after an oil spillage) club members will immediately have to pay a further call to replenish the pool. There is an International Group of P&I; Clubs based at Peek House, London.The Jackson Parton Miscellany - 2nd ed - 2012 page 77 - www.marinequery.
The Tribal Hidage, from an edition of Henry Spelman's Glossarium Archaiologicum A manuscript, now lost,Featherstone, Tribal Hidage, p. 23. was originally used to produce the three recensions of the Tribal Hidage, named A, B and C.Featherstone, Tribal Hidage, p. 27. Recension A, which is the earliest and most complete, dates from the 11th century. It is included in a miscellany of works, written in Old English and Latin, with Aelfric's Latin Grammar and his homily De initio creaturæ, written in 1034,British Library, Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts.
The Spy was a periodical directed at the Edinburgh market, edited by James Hogg, with himself as principal contributor, which appeared from 1 September 1810 to 24 August 1811. It combined features of two types of periodical established in the 18th century, the essay periodical and the miscellany. As an outsider, Hogg used his periodical to give a critical view of the dominant upper-class culture of Edinburgh, with Walter Scott and Francis Jeffrey as its leading lights, and to launch his career as a writer of fiction as well as poetry.
He travelled over a large extent of country during that period, preaching on temperance. While at Perth Burns edited the Christian Miscellany. In May 1835 he accepted a call to the pastorate of the general baptist congregation assembling in Ænon Chapel, New Church Street, Marylebone, and in June finally moved with his family to London. His congregation at first was small, but owing to his enthusiasm it increased so much that twice in the first twenty-five years of his ministry at Paddington it was found necessary to enlarge the building in which it worshipped.
In the years immediately before her death, she wrote much of the verse on which her reputation rests. Her interest in rhythm and meter led her to create a unique variationWebster, Jean, Vassar Miscellany, 1915. on the cinquain (or quintain), a 5-line form of 22 syllables influenced by the Japanese haiku and tanka. Her five-line cinquain (now styled as an American cinquain) has a generally iambic meter defined as "one-stress, two-stress, three-stress, four- stress and suddenly back to one-stress"Louise Townsend Nicholl, Adelaide Crapsey's Poems, New Republic, 1923.
Craven was born in London in 1818, son of Robert Thornton, a schoolmaster in Holborn. Starting life as a publisher's clerk in Paternoster Row, he subsequently acted as amanuensis to Edward Bulwer-Lytton, and began writing for Bentley's Miscellany. Ambitious to become a dramatist, he took to the stage, making his first appearance at York in 1840 and his London debut soon after at Fanny Kelly's Theatre in Soho. In 1841 he was acting on the Sunderland circuit, and in 1842 his first play, Bertram the Avenger, was produced at North Shields.
In 1839 he was appointed printer and publisher in Edinburgh to Queen Victoria, and issued, among other notable series, Constable's Educational Series, and Constable's Foreign Miscellany. Thomas married Lucia Anne Cowan, daughter of Alexander Cowan, an Edinburgh paper-maker (who clearly would have had business links with a major publishing firm such as Constables).Dictionary of National Biography: Thomas Constable They lived at 11 Thistle Street in Edinburgh's First New Town. Their son was also Archibald David Constable FRSE LLD (1843-1915), named after his grandfather, and followed in the family tradition as a printer.
Hugh Peters was the author of the following pamphlets: # "The Advice of that Worthy Commander Sir Edward Harwood upon occasion of the French King's Preparations … Also a relation of his life and death" (the relation is by Peters), 4to, 1642; reprinted in the Harleian Miscellany, ed. Park, iv. 268. # "A True Relation of the passages of God's Providence in a voyage for Ireland … wherein every day's work is set down faithfully by H. P., an eye-witness thereof", 4to, 1642. # "Preface to Richard Mather's Church Government and Church Covenant discussed", 4to, 1643.
An alternative and innuendo-free version of the text was also written by Burns, who included it in the Scots Musical Museum, though he later produced a further version, referring to the Museum setting as "damned nonsense" as they had "drawled out the tune to twelve lines of poetry".James Hogg (ed.), The works of Robert Burns, Volume 3, Fullarton, 1835, p.126 Various other stall-ballad versions also circulated, and the tune has been adapted for other songs and ballads, such as Lucky Nancy in Allan Ramsey's Tea-Table Miscellany.
His first success as a writer came with Rookwood in 1834, which features Dick Turpin as its leading character. In 1839 he published another novel featuring a highwayman, Jack Sheppard. From 1840 to 1842 he edited Bentley's Miscellany, from 1842 to 1853, Ainsworth's Magazine and subsequently The New Monthly Magazine. His Lancashire novels cover altogether 400 years and include The Lancashire Witches, 1848, Mervyn Clitheroe, 1857, and The Leaguer of Lathom. Jack Sheppard, Guy Fawkes, 1841, Old St Paul's, 1841, Windsor Castle, 1843, and The Lancashire Witches are regarded as his most successful novels.
The novel is prefaced with a quote from the poet and playwright E. E. Cummings: "To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best day and night to make you like everybody else means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight and never stop fighting." The quote is taken from the essay "A Poet's Advice to Students," which appeared in the book E. E. Cummings, A Miscellany.Cummings, E.E. E. E. Cummings, A Miscellany. New York: Argophile Press, 1955, p. 13.
Kongevej (King's Way), linking Frederiksborg with Copenhagen, was completed in 1588. James VI of Scotland visited on 13 March 1590 after his marriage to Anne of Denmark. He gave money to the poor, to the keeper of the park who lent the couple horses, to a woman who kept pheasants and "spruce fowls", and 100 Danish dalers to the Captain of Frederiksborg for his officers and servants.Miles Kerr-Peterson & Michael Pearce, 'James VI's English Subsidy and Danish Dowry Accounts, 1588-1596', Scottish History Society Miscellany XVI (Woodbridge, 2020), pp.
The finless sleeper ray was described as a new species and genus by English zoologist John Edward Gray in an 1831 issue of the scientific journal Zoological Miscellany. His account was based on two specimens collected from Penang in Malaysia by General Thomas Hardwicke and presented to the British Museum. Hence, Gray named the ray Temera hardwickii, or "Hardwicke's Temera". He noted that the new genus was most closely affiliated to the genus Narke, because it has no dorsal fins while Narke has only one and other electric rays have two.
Margaret's supporters, including her daughter in later years, believed that Arthur was mentally ill. However, during his time overseas he acquired substantial estates in Australia and Canada (near Enderby, BC, where his estates were managed by George Heggie).J D Davies, 'Stepney, Canada: Or, Sir Arthur Abroad’, The Llanelli Miscellany (2006) He also spent much time in the United States, eventually becoming a citizen and ceasing to use his title. In 1901 he transferred the management of his estates to his daughter Meriel and obtained a divorce in Idaho.
Whenham (2007) "The Venetian Sacred Music", pp. 205–06 The Messa et salmi volume includes a stile antico Mass for four voices, a polyphonic setting of the psalm Laetatus Sum, and a version of the Litany of Lareto that Monteverdi had originally published in 1620.Whenham (2007) "The Venetian Sacred Music", pp. 202–03 The posthumous ninth book of madrigals was published in 1651, a miscellany dating back to the early 1630s, some items being repeats of previously published pieces, such as the popular duet O sia tranquillo il mare from 1638.
He was appointed the chief pilot of the Shanghai Military Government. On 13 and 14 April 1912, Lee flew a Taube over the Jiangwan Racecourse in Shanghai to celebrate the success of the Xinhai Revolution. According to Frank Dikötter and others, Lee was the first Chinese aviator, although Feng Ru, who had flown earlier in the United States, is also commonly credited as the first Chinese aviator. Lee on The Eastern Miscellany magazine, 1 May 1912 Lee enlisted in the newly established flying battalion of the Republic of China Army in Nanjing.
" Scott Sterling from The Michigan Daily noted the song as a "smooth, driving groove with luscious strings and mellow horns that sounds like a '90s Love Unlimited Orchestra." Daniel S. Housman from Miscellany News commented that it "seems addressed to a friend in need." Music & Media stated that on her first single in two years, Stansfield is "updating the '70s "Philly" soul sound, tastefully adding a fashionable dance beat to it." Newcastle Evening Chronicle noted that the song "marks the start of a new and exciting era in her career.
In 1825, he became editor of a West Indian newspaper, and was afterwards employed, from 1827 to 1838, in a similar capacity as editor of The Nottingham Mercury. Under the name of ‘The Old Sailor,’ he wrote a number of lively and spirited sea- tales, very popular in their day. He was naval editor of the United Service Gazette, and a frequent contributor to the Literary Gazette, Bentley's Miscellany, and the Pictorial Times. For some astronomical discoveries he was presented with a telescope by the Royal Astronomical Society.
Jean Adam (or Adams) (30 April 1704 – 3 April 1765) was a Scottish poet from the labouring classes; her best-known work is "There's Nae Luck Aboot The Hoose". In 1734 she published a volume of her poetry entitled Miscellany poems, but the cost of shipping a substantial number to the British colony of Boston in North America, where they did not sell well, forced her to turn first to teaching and then to domestic labour. She died penniless in Glasgow's Town's Hospital poorhouse at the age of sixty.
As described in Hoodline: > "Specs' refusal to run his business according to anyone else's playbook was > palpable in almost every decision he made. The bar itself almost defies > description: a low-ceilinged, dark, and narrow room lined with curio > cabinets, inside each of which are trophies, trinkets, artwork, > idiosyncratic miscellany, totems, and plenty of socialist and union > propaganda." For decades, Specs' hosted bi-annual "Ancient Rome" parties, which occurred during April and August. At these events, people were invited to a free feast, which included shucked oysters and clams.
She worked with her sister and brother-in-law as an assistant editor of The Hibernia Magazine from 1964 to 1966. She founded and edited six issues of Martello from 1982 to 1990. In 1990 she published a collection of poetry, Selected fables of La Fontaine and in 1997 a volume of prose and poetry with Warren O'Connell, Duet for two Dubs. She was a regular contributor to the Sunday miscellany on RTÉ Radio, briefly worked as the Evening Press theatre critic, and sat on the board of various cultural institutions.
Isopogon adenanthoides, commonly known as the spider coneflower, is a small shrub that is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is usually between 0.3 and 1 metre high and produces pink to purple flowers between June and October in the species' native range. The species was first formally described by botanist Carl Meissner in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855. In 1891, German botanist Otto Kuntze published Revisio generum plantarum, his response to what he perceived as a lack of method in existing nomenclatural practice.
It was at once a newspaper and a monthly miscellany of useful and entertaining literature. It not only gave parliamentary debates and the latest births, deaths, and marriages, but also tit-bits of London and Dublin gossip, the newest outrages, the most thrilling sentimental tales à la Werther, along with scraps of poetry and tête-à-tête portraits of the leading fashionable belles and beaux of the day. Up to about 1795, the magazine showed sympathy for women's rights and Catholic emancipation. Afterwards it became more reactionary in opposition to the United Irishmen.
He led the trend for pastoral poetry, helping to develop the Habbie stanza, which would be later be used by Robert Burns as a poetic form. His Tea-Table Miscellany (1724–37) contained old Scots folk material, his own poems in the folk style and "gentilizings" of Scots poems in the English neo-classical style."Poetry in Scots: Brus to Burns" in C. R. Woodring and J. S. Shapiro, eds, The Columbia History of British Poetry (Columbia University Press, 1994), , p. 100. Ramsay was part of a community of poets working in Scots and English.
Thomas Churchyard was born at Shrewsbury in c. 1523, the son of a farmer. He received a good education, and, having speedily dissipated at court the money with which his father provided him, he entered the household of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey. There he remained for twenty years, learning something of the art of poetry from his patron; some of the poems he contributed later (1555) to Nicholas Grimald's and Richard Tottel's collection, Songes and Sonettes (known more often as Tottel's Miscellany), may well date from this early period.
Among other attempts to retrieve his fortunes, her husband published a paper called "Canfield's Lottery Argus, Commercial and Exchange Telegraph, or National Miscellany." The great object of the paper was to give the public all such matters and things as were necessarily connected with banks and brokerage, and in this area he was adept. To this, he added a literary department, of which his wife took charge. But few readers of miscellaneous literature thought of looking into such a paper for matters of taste and genius, making her efforts almost entirely wasted.
He established a printing press at Urmia, and used it to produce several works, eighty of which Perkins himself either translated or wrote. These included a magazine Rays of Light, which was devoted to "Religion, Education, Science, Missions, Juvenile Matters, Miscellany and Poetry", and which would continue to be produced until his death. He translated portions of the Christian Bible which appeared at various times. Primary among these were a translation of the New Testament which appeared in 1846, of the Old Testament in 1852, and a referenced version of the Old Testament in 1858.
The Flak 36 guns were briefly issued in late 1944 to the American Seventh Army as captured weapons. The 79th Field Artillery Battalion (Provisional) was formed from personnel of the 79th and 179th Field Artillery Groups to fire captured German artillery pieces at the height of an ammunition shortage. Similarly, the 244th Field Artillery Battalion was temporarily equipped with a miscellany of captured German 88 mm guns and 105 mm and 150 mm howitzers. By December 31, 1944, the 244th Field Artillery Battalion had fired a total of 10,706 rounds through captured German weapons.
The species was first formally described by Victorian Government Botanist Ferdinand von Mueller in 1857, from plant material collected at Sturt Creek in the Northern Territory. The description was published in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany. Its specific epithet (chordophylla) is derived from Ancient Greek chorde meaning "gut", "string of a musical instrument", "twine" or "rope" and phyllon meaning "leaf". It belongs to a group of related species known as the corkbarks, or lorea group, within the genus Hakea, most of which are found across Australia's arid interior.
In January 1822, two periodicals were established, one, The Catholic Miscellany, devoted to Catholic interests, with a nominal editor, but under the control of Andrews; the other, The People's Advocate, exclusively political, under his avowed editorship. The Advocate lived only seven weeks, and after two months the sole editorship of the other devolved on Andrews. He continued it for several months. In September 1824, he established a weekly paper, The Truth Teller, which lasted for twelve months, and was afterwards continued as a pamphlet, but finally discontinued in 1829 through lack of support.
Grevillea acrobotrya, is a shrub which is endemic to the southwest of Western Australia. It has a spreading or erect habit, growing to a height of between 0.6 and 2 metres with leaves which are 10 to 30 mm long and 12 to 30 mm wide. White or cream flowers appear in racemes throughout the year. The species was first formally described by Swiss botanist Carl Meissner in Hooker's Journal of Botany and Kew Garden Miscellany in 1855, based on plant material collected by James Drummond from the hinterland north of the Swan River.
Prof Kenneth Hurlstone Jackson CBE FRSE FSA DLitt (1 November 1909 – 20 February 1991) was an English linguist and a translator who specialised in the Celtic languages. He demonstrated how the text of the Ulster Cycle of tales, written circa AD 1100, preserves an oral tradition originating some six centuries earlier and reflects Celtic Irish society of the third and fourth century AD. His Celtic Miscellany is a popular standard. In retirement, Jackson continued his work on place-names and Goidelic languages. However he suffered a stroke in 1984 that restricted his work.
The book itself, subtitled "wyth ane exortatione to the thre estaits to be vigilante in the deffens of their public weil", contains a miscellany of stories, classical legends, biblical tales, ballads and allegories emphasising Scotland's separateness and the rewards of virtue and courage. The unifying structure is the narration of Dame Scotia in the final twelve chapters. She hears the complaints of her three sons, the "Thrie Estaits" of Scottish society, and then offers her encouragement and rebuke to the clergy, nobility, and populace in turn. Dame Scotia appears to the narrator in a dream.
Starting around 1840, The Babes in the Wood; or, the Norfolk Tragedy, was included in The Ingoldsby Legends, an exceptionally popular miscellany of folklore and poetry, reprinted throughout the nineteenth century. The tale's endnote alludes to Bloomfield's [sic History of the County of Norfolk], but that work's Wayland section does not mention it. The anonymous ballad was also illustrated by Randolph Caldecott in a book published in 1879. The story tells of two small children left in the care of an uncle and aunt after their parents' death.
His major publication is the Desiderata Curiosa, a two-volume miscellany (published 1732–1735). There is an engraved frontispiece portrait of Peck (by R. Collins, from life) in volume I, and nine other plates, as well as integral engravings in the text; Stukeley presented the plate of Henry Wykys, vicar of Stamford. The work contains a major biography of Sir William Cecil, Lord Burghley, Queen Elizabeth I's Lord High Treasurer and chief advisor for much of her reign. Burghley House, one of the seats of Lord Burghley from Peck's Desiderata Curiosa.

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