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"withal" Definitions
  1. together with this : BESIDES
  2. [archaic] (archaic) THEREWITH
  3. on the other hand : NEVERTHELESS
  4. WITH

87 Sentences With "withal"

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

Hecate!" in the book's final poem, "coda: time to gambol withal?
Withal, most CBT is held in a group format to help improve social skills.
Then the child of the noble uta held withal the power over the lands, which well beseemed such high-born dames.
Withal, the concept of culture and art can only find a sense in the liquid society if it abandons its traditional understanding and adopts the deconstructive approach.
Thanks to certain alchemic pens, which have touched even garbage to gold-paper, murder has been as fine, and withal as jocund among us, as a May-day sweep.
There was once a widow, fair, young, free, rich, and withal very pleasant and jocund, that fell in love with a certain round and well-set servant of a college.
Several ships diverted themselves to plunder the Chinese coast and are reported "to have killed above 1,200 Chinese, and taken all the barkes or junks they met withal, throwing the people overboard".
Robotnicza) and the "Pollena Paczków" chemicals manufacturing plant by Henryk Sienkiewicz Street (ul. Henryka Sienkiewicza). Withal, in 2015 the service industry (including manual labour) provided 31.6% (11.7 million złoty) to the city's budget.
Furthermore he argued > that Caliban 'amidst the rudeness of his nature and possessing an exterior > ugly and misshapen . . . stimulated to revenge, by the severity he suffers . > . . has withal, qualities of a redeeming nature'.
Eventually all the challengers die except Karsa and Icarium. Karsa fights Rhulad and severs Rhulad's sword arm, then uses all his ghosts and the ones in Samar's knife to manipulate the sword's power and travel to the Crippled God's island. There he flips the Crippled God's tent, slays Rhulad with finality, slaps Withal and enters a portal aimed vaguely at his home after refusing to take the sword for himself (which was apparently the Crippled God's plan ever since Karsa left Laederon). Withal and the Nachts destroy the sword.
Pleasant the beginnings, but lamentable the end. In spring, the oxen to their plowing would not attend; They would not carry the grain to the barn in the fall; Came winter, bread ran out, the farmer ate them withal.
Many of them are missing, so that one cannot understand her easily when she speaks quickly." Yet he added, "her figure is fair and tall and graceful in whatever she does; so far as may be she keeps her dignity, yet humbly and graciously withal.
Withal he wrote the scenario for the television series Blisko, coraz bliżejIMDb.com – profile of the movie – Blisko, coraz bliżej (English) (close, increasingly closer; an allusion to the independence of Poland). Over thirty years Albin Siekierski wrote dozens of novels, stories, stage plays and feuilletons. Between 1985 and 1989 he was a member of parliament (Sejm)Sejm.
Pett made a miniature ship for the Prince at Chatham. The keel was 28 feet and the breadth 12 feet, and was finished "battlement-wise" like the Ark Royal. On 22 March Pett presented the ship to Prince Henry, who named it the Disdain and "entertained it with great joy, being purposely made to disport himself withal."Perrin, ed.
Babylonian Talmud, Kareithoth 6a; Siddur. Maharitz, citing the Kol Bo, says that the purport of using this soap was to whiten the operculum withal, since its natural color was black and tended to darken the other constituents if not cleaned first in this manner.Saleh, Y. (1983), s.v. פטום הקטורת This was also the opinion of Rabbi David Ibn Abi-Zimra.
Bosley Crowther writes in his review for The New York Times: "Mr. Cooper is the guy who can play it. His Melody is a most congenial gent—butter-fingered and mentally clumsy, but disarmingly winning withal". A Trailers from Hell review wrote that the film "is concocted to please the Cooper fans, a mix of comedy, sentiment, romance and a little fancy gunplay".
One objection si that it resembles too keenly a previous release by the same maker called Springtime. In both creations weather breezes are denoted through leaping and contortionist insects, plants, and in a similar manner. Withal, however, it has its snickers. Seizing upon caterpillars and butterflies to express the freedom of musical summer carries its own laughs, which in essence is the spirit of the present cartoon.
Modern Association Football (Saint Mirren versus Hamilton Accies) The Bewties Of The Fute-ball is preserved only in the Maitland Folio Manuscript of the latter sixteenth century. It consists of two pairs of rhyming couplets and it is attributed to no author. :Brissit brawnis and brokin banis, :Stride, discord and waistie wanis. :Crukit in eild syne halt withal, :Thir are the bewties of the fute-ball.
Coat of Arms of the Barons Baltimore Official flag of the State of Maryland Calvert was not generally well regarded by his contemporaries. One characterised him as "Feeble in body, conceited, frivolous, and dissipated, but withal generous and sympathetic ... [a man] who gave himself up to a life of pleasure". Another described him as "a disreputable and dissolute degenerate". Posterity has been little kinder to his reputation.
On March 23, 2007, Johanna Habeisen, a library media teacher at Woodland Elementary School received a threatening letter from her principal, Kimberley Saso, because she had the book in her library: "Hopefully you take this matter seriously and refrain from disseminating information that supports alternative styles of living." Other than the principal and Superintendent Thomas Withal, who had been interrogated from the start, there had been no parental challenge.
The novel begins with the aftermath of a massive battle between an alliance of Tiste Edur, led by Scabandari Bloodeye, and Tiste Andii, led by Silchas Ruin, against some K'Chain Che'Malle. The scheming Scabandari massacres his former allies to take the land for his own people. Later, a swordsmith named Withal is washed up on a beach, where he enters the service of the Crippled God to forge a sword.
A competing newspaper in Norway was the Wacht im Norden, that was distributed free of charge to soldiers. Towards the end of 1940, it was decided to establish an offshoot of the paper in Tromsø. Due to a lack of competent editors from Germany, the Tromsø paper was not established before February 1941. It was withal merged with Lappland-Kurier upon Finland's truce with the Soviet Union in September 1944.
Clashing ideals, opposing personalities, economic hazards and withal superb and original productions are all part of Davi Napoleon's narrative and make up a beguiling chapter of our theatrical history." Thomas Lask, book reviewer The New York Times. "Bob Kalfin is a unique man and Chelsea on the Edge is a fascinating account of the unique theater he created. I doubt we will ever see the like of such a theater again.
Withal, he was stoical in adversity (adversity was always his lot) and possessed of great humour and resilience ... As a player, he suffered from the demands of a professionalism that is incompatible with great performance: but he leaves records of many games which reveal, if not genius, then a great talent ... those who knew him will all agree that his life enriched, and in a degree inspired, the chess world.
She is bound with ritual. She is a representative of orthodoxy, yet > withal she is a fine, clean, strong woman just like dozens we all know. > There is a girl, Mary Leigh, who doesn't bother about the Ten Commandments > at all. She is a good kid, but she has spent so much time working that she > hasn't learned the Ten Commandments... Dan McTavish knows the Ten > Commandments, but defies them.
He has > thrown himself heart and soul into most things connected with the Brigade; > and the Boat Club and Racing Club would miss him as much as he would be > missed from an Ascot luncheon. He has commanded the N.R.A. camp at Wimbledon > and Bisley for seven years; yet withal he has found time to start and > successfully edit The Brigade of Guards Magazine. He is a very good and very > popular Colonel.
He was withal a zealous missionary, and in 1692 obtained an edict granting the free exercise of the Christian religion. After the emperor's recovery from a fever, during which he was attended by Gerbillion and Bouvet, he showed his gratitude by bestowing on them a site for a chapel and residence. Gerbillion was a skilled linguist. He was the author of several works on mathematics, and wrote an account of his travels in Tatary.
Page 103, 104. Arnkel finally engages in a physical dispute with Snorri and the Thorbrandssons (Þorbrandsson), Snorri's foster brothers. Snorri and his foster brothers attack and kill Arnkel whilst he was working on his farm.Eyrbyggja Saga chapter 37 ::Arnkel had laid his sword and shield against a hayrick, and now he took up his weapons and defended himself therewith; but now he began to gather wounds, and withal they came up into the garth about him.
Another of his works was Catholic colonization. With an eye to the future he endeavored to provide for the growth of his diocese by bringing Catholic immigrants from European countries to the fertile plains of Minnesota. Withal he did not neglect his ministerial and pastoral office. He was often alone in St. Paul without the help of priest, and at times travelled through the vast extent of his diocese bestowing on his people the consolations of religion.
This disease is currently found in Colombia, Venezuela, Ghana, Nigeria, Sri Lanka, and Indonesia. It is widespread in Ghana and Nigeria. Ghana, Indonesia, and Nigeria are in the top five cacao producing countries in the world, and cacao is one of the main and among the most economically important exports in these regions. Withal, the disease has no apparent economic impact to these countries or the chocolate industry as outbreaks are small, localized, and easily controlled by eradication.
Tertullian (On Modesty 20) suggested Barnabas as the author: "For there is extant withal an Epistle to the Hebrews under the name of Barnabas—a man sufficiently accredited by God, as being one whom Paul has stationed next to himself…". Internal considerations suggest the author was male, was an acquaintance of Timothy, and was located in Italy. Barnabas, to whom some noncanonical works have been attributed (such as Epistle of Barnabas), was close to Paul in his ministry.
Cline, 248–249. The Wells sentimental romanticism, traditional form, and lofty style – using words like withal, betoken and hath – did not appeal to Modernist aesthetics; not all those willing to defend it on grounds of literary freedom were equally willing to praise its artistry.Doan & Prosser, 14, and Souhami, 173. The petition dwindled to a short letter in The Nation and Athenaeum, signed by Forster and Virginia Woolf, that focused on the chilling effects of censorship on writers.
Withal, Ling MengChu made no attempt to conceal the truth, he said:" works only by Feng MengLong were the most artistic, and broke corrupt customs of the society in that time. " Ling MengChu wrote "Er Pai" as well as broke corrupt customs of the society in that time.Foreword of Slapping the table in amazement "Er Pai" and "San Yan" are still different. "San Yan" collected and processed scripts for story-telling (in Song, Yuan and Ming dynasty folk literature).
In the passage cited by Roden, Shairp describes the style of Newman's sermons as "so simple and transparent, yet so subtle withal; so strong yet so tender; the grasp of a strong man's hand, combined with the trembling of a woman's heart ... laying the most penetrating finger on the very core of things". Roden, however, does not argue that Newman was homosexual, seeing him rather—particularly in his professed celibacyRoden, pp. 4, 6, 13–14.—as a "cultural dissident" or "queer".
Sir, there was never, since England was England, > such a stratagem and mask made to deceive England withal as this is of the > treaty of peace. I pray God we have not cause to remember one thing that was > made of the Scots by the Englishmen; that we do not curse for this a long > grey beard with a white head, witless, that will make all the world think us > heartless. You know whom I mean.Laughton, Volume I, pp. 48–49.
The negative views towards Wollstonecraft persisted for over a century. The Rights of Woman was not reprinted until the middle of the 19th century and it still retained an aura of ill-repute. George Eliot wrote "there is in some quarters a vague prejudice against the Rights of Woman as in some way or other a reprehensible book, but readers who go to it with this impression will be surprised to find it eminently serious, severely moral, and withal rather heavy".
These speeches were reported as :marked by great vigour" and showed that he had "a somewhat wide grasp of the political problems of the day". His obituary in the Northern Daily Mail notes that "Mr Gray's liberality to the work-people and those dependent on them will long be remembered. And withal it was characterised with the utmost un-ostentation. Mr Gray was always willing to support by his presence and purse every good effort – whether social, religious or athletic.
Accustomed herself to out- door exercise, the management of a farm, and the superintendence of a large family, and being withal a woman of highly religious character, the grandmother appreciated and enforced the kind of training which later became exhibiting characteristics of Ford. Ford, with her sister Cassandra, was educated at Georgetown Female Seminary, Kentucky, an institution, under the conduct of Prof. Jonathan Everett Farnam. From the first, she gave evidence of talent, and, in 1847, graduated with the highest honors of her class.
They each address the Child in turn, beginning by praising His authority and His creation of all things in tones of reverence and awe, but each comically shifting mid-speech to cooing, gushing baby talk, since they are addressing an adorable baby, who Coll, Gib, and Daw respectively give "a bob of cherries," a bird, and a ball ("Have and play thee withal, and go to the tennis!") The shepherds rejoice at their salvation, all thoughts of hardship and complaint vanished, and leave singing in unison.
His ties to the oligarchy known as the "Big Five" that dominated the island economy led the opposition press to call him "King Bill the First". They described him using a mix of stereotypes: > He was narrow-minded as a New Englander, domineering as a Russian Czar, yet > suave as a Frenchman. He was obstinate as a Scotchman, generous as a > Southerner, and at times vicious as an Indian. But he was withal the hardest > working official we have ever heard of—next to the Devil.
Withal, Nicholas Nickleby is amusing as a chromo of Dickensian life. It is only that Great Expectations has led us to expect so much more".New York Times review Reviewing a revival, Time Out London observed, "For a director who dabbled in the avant-garde, Cavalcanti makes surprisingly little of the surreal possibilities of this convoluted Dickensian nightmare. As in Champagne Charlie he collaborated with art director Michael Relph to create an impressively atmospheric Victorian London, but stylish visuals hardly compensate for the flat, cursory rendering of some of Dickens' best drawn characters.
According to Tuttle in the Record, "Oak Ridge...while not the most pretentious in appearance, probably excites interest more than any other house in the park, and more firmly impresses itself on the mind. It is a beautiful structure, irregular and rambling, as it should be, but so well held together, withal, that it may be viewed and judged in its entirety."Bartlett, "The Houses of Lawrence Park" Smedley was elected to the National Academy in 1905. He maintained a studio in New York City and his home in Bronxville had two studios.
Under a strong government, withal, and despite the resolution to maintain their right of election, the Assemblies were unlikely to choose a person not in favour at court. We know that during the reign of Louis XIV Harlay de Champvallon, Archbishop of Paris, was several times president. Finally, Saint-Simon tells us the royal displeasure deprived him of his influence with the Clergy, and even shortened his life. The offices of secretary and "promotor", being looked on by the bishops as somewhat inferior, were assigned to deputies of the second rank, i.e.
American intellect owes its form to the frontier as well. The traits of the frontier are “coarseness and strength combined with acuteness and inquisitiveness; that practical, inventive turn of mind, quick to find expedients; that masterful grasp of material things, lacking in the artistic but powerful to effect great ends; that restless, nervous energy; that dominant individualism, working for good and for evil, and withal that buoyancy and exuberance which comes with freedom.” Turner concludes the essay by saying that with the end of the frontier, the first period of American history has ended.
Although, Patos-Marinza, also located within the area, is the largest onshore oil field in Europe. After the completion of the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), Albania will be significantly connected to the planned Southern Gas Corridor, that will transport natural gas from the Caspian Sea through Albania to Europe. Withal the TAP runs for across Albania's territory before entering the Albanian Adriatic Sea Coast approximately northwest of Fier. In 2009, the company Enel announced plans to build an 800 MW coal-fired power plant in the country, to diversify electricity sources.
Some critics called the slim volume "charming", the poems "exceedingly gracious, clever and withal philosophical", while others found it uneven in quality and weighed down by "too many adjectives". In 1909, Scott began publishing occasional articles about music in London newspapers, including the Daily Express. The year 1910 was a busy and productive year for Scott. She developed a series of lectures on music history and performance as well as separate teaching lectures on composition, harmony, orchestration and other technical aspects of music that she offered to organisations and clubs throughout London.
He is a very rich man, but modest withal, and now that he has retired from business, he intends to devote himself to parliamentary life and the recreations of a country gentleman. He is an ardent sportsman, a good man after the hounds, a more than average shot, an expert fisherman, and no mean golf player. He has yet to make his mark as a public speaker but he has very decided opinions, and no lack of language wherewith to express them.Mainly About People, p 483, 27 May 1899, vol 50 no.
First scientific attention to Pingsdorf Ware was dealt by Constantin Koenen. 1889 Koenen conducted a first systematic excavation on a pottery complex in the courtyard of the Kleins Inn in Brühl-Pingsdorf. Withal, he analysed an 80 m³ sherd store, which comprised approximately a dozen different pottery forms. The publication of this excavation in the Bonner Jahrbücher displays until today the most complete overview of the variety of pottery types of the Pingsdorf Ware.Koenen 1898. In 1927, Franz Rademacher published an approach to a chronology of the medieval pottery that was based on an art historical analysis of the pottery ware.
After his marriage in 1577, he proceeded to the University of Cambridge. Lord William was a learned and accomplished scholar, praised by William Camden, to whom he sent inscriptions and drawings from relics collected by him from the Roman wall, as "a singular lover of valuable antiquity and learned withal." Sir Walter Scott referred to him as "Belted Will" in the Lay of the Last Minstrel. Being suspected of treasonable intentions together with his half-brother, Philip, Earl of Arundel (husband of his sister-in-law Anne Dacre), he was imprisoned in 1583, 1585 and 1589.
The Pioneer Monument was erected in honor of all who made the difficult trek across the western plains and mountains to reach California during the 1840s. Work on the monument, constructed near the site of the cabins that gave shelter to the Donner Party, began in 1901. On June 6, 1918, in a ceremony that included Donner Party survivors, the Native Sons of the Golden West donated the completed monument and 11 surrounding acres to the State of California. The plaque on the front of the Pioneer Statue reads: > VIRILE TO RISK AND FIND; KINDLY WITHAL AND A READY HELP.
The death of his patron in 1513 apparently put an end to his connection with the west, and he became a monk in the Benedictine monastery of Ely. In this retreat he probably wrote his eclogues, but in 1520 "Maistre Barkleye, the Blacke Monke and Poete" was desired to devise "histoires and convenient raisons to florisshe the buildings and banquet house withal" at the meeting between Henry VIII and Francis I at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.Nichols, John Gough, ed., The Chronicle of Calais, Camden Society (1846), 83 He at length became a Franciscan friar of Canterbury.
Liel Leibovitz Matthew I. Miller, Fortunate Sons: The 120 Chinese Boys Who Came to America, Went to School, and Revolutionized an Ancient Civilization (New York: Norton, 2011), Chapters 5-7. The influential official Huang Zunxian wrote a poem which admitted that the students had lived luxurious lives and become Americanized, but lamented the lost opportunity: :Unfortunately, in the Imperial Academy :The curriculum has not included Western learning. :Withal, on the promotion of science :Now depends the future of the nation. :A decade's effort in training youths :Will lay the foundation for a century's wealth and strength.
Shortly after its first publication a Jesuit challenged Lynde to prove the visibility through all ages of the Protestant church. Antient Characters of the Visible Church, 1625, was his first attempt to meet the challenge, but in 1628 he pursued his argument in Via Tuta, the Safe Way … to the True, Ancient, and Catholique Faith now professed in the Church of England. John Heigham replied at length in Via Vere Tuta (1631), and John Floyd, writing under the initials ‘J. R.,’ followed Heigham's attack with A Paire of Spectacles for Sir Humphrey Linde to see his Way withal, 1631.
He conducted his last service in Adelaide on 30 December 1945. Hale was noted for his sermons: thoughtful, original, well-prepared and delivered without notes of any kind. He was praised for his oratorical skills: clear perfect diction and a pleasant voice, slow and deliberate (an asset in such a large space with no acoustic treatment) and rising in pitch for emphasis. His sermons would have been taxing for the uneducated but deeply satisfying for the academically inclined, as he assumed some knowledge of History, Mythology, Psychology and Classical languages from his audience, but withal punctuated by a lively sense of humour.
Your birds were flown, but > they left you cakes and wine to entertain yourselves withal. I shall send > you, Mr. Mayor a list of some insolent unregistered priests, who absolutely > refused me to quarter my soldiers, and to my surprise you have billeted none > on them. These and James Fitzgerald, who is also an unregistered priest, and > had the insolence to solicit votes for his brother upon a prospect of a > vacancy in Parliament, I expect you'll please to tender the oaths to, and > proceed against on the Galway and Limerick Act. Let us unite together in > keeping those turbulent disqualified townsmen in a due subjection.
Withal, the nearer a causal consequence of our action is, the higher its ethical significance. Peña implements ethical pluralistic gradualism through his paraconsistent fuzzy logic: actions can be regarded as both good and bad, better in certain respects and worse in other respects. As for the units of behaviour to be assessed, Peña's ideas are close to virtue ethics in that he thinks isolated actions are generally too narrow unities to be reasonably appraised, although a whole course of life is too broad. Something in-between is a more adequate candidate, which means a span of one's life evincing a continuation of purposes, choices and habits.
The young man, whose father was a silent partner at a major gambling house, offered Hearne an accounting position at what was then the largest gambling operation in the city. While working for the casino, he became a favorite to many of its wealthy patrons who "having received a good education, and being a man of polished manners, with a social and genial disposition, and having, withal, a large stock of rollickling Irish humor, he commended himself to all with whom he came in contact, and those fond of play and fast living found in Pat Herne a congenial companion".Morris, John, ed. Wanderings of a Vagabound: An Autobiography.
However, reports from contemporaries suggest that she managed well: a letter from Edward Markham, a visitor to Waitangi in 1834, recorded that Busby was "very pleasant" and the stay in her home "a glimpse of Civilisation". Caroline Mair, whose father Gilbert Mair was an early trader and settler in nearby Paihia, described Busby as "a very dignified and rather exclusive little Scotch lady, but kindly withal". Busby gave birth to four children while at Waitiangi: John (1834), Sarah (1835), James (1838), and George (1839). The first baby, John, was delivered by a visiting ship's surgeon, and Marianne Williams (trained maternity nurse and wife of the missionary Henry Williams).
The Charlotte Amalia had no difficulty in finding a Spanish ship on the Porto Rico coast, but the latter vessel had the temerity to answer Captain Moy's fire, wounding one man, killing another, and forcing the valiant captain to beat a nasty retreat to St. Thomas. It was withal an inglorious ending to a sorry enterprise, and not calculated to redeem the good name of the island.Krarup, Milan, 29. The commissioners had arrived in the harbor before the news of the "reprisal" fiasco could reach the governor, and before his "valet", Moses Caille, could return from the French islands, whence he had been sent by the desperate governor in search of help.
There were withal many dove-courts of tame > pigeons about the canals. But indeed it is not possible to give a complete > description of these palaces; and the very remembrance of them is a torment > to one, as putting one in mind what vastly rich buildings that fire which > was kindled by the robbers hath consumed; for these were not burnt by the > Romans, but by these internal plotters, as we have already related, in the > beginning of their rebellion. That fire began at the tower of Antonia, and > went on to the palaces, and consumed the upper parts of the three towers > themselves.Flavius Josephus, The Wars of the Jews, or History of the > Destruction of Jerusalem, trans.
Aristeas was supposed to have authored a poem called the Arimaspea, giving an account of travels in the far North. There he encountered a tribe called the Issedones, who told him of still more fantastic and northerly peoples: the one-eyed Arimaspi who battle gold-guarding griffins, and the Hyperboreans among whom Apollo lives during the winter. Longinus excerpts a portion of the poem: :A marvel exceeding great is this withal to my soul— :Men dwell on the water afar from the land, where deep seas roll. :Wretches are they, for they reap but a harvest of travail and pain, :Their eyes on the stars ever dwell, while their hearts abide in the main.
Make me the temple of Thy Holy Ghost, and no more the habitation of sin, that as from fire all evil, every passion, may flee from me, who through Holy Communion am become a place for Thy dwelling. I bring unto Thee all the saints to make intercession: The ranks of the heavenly hosts; Thy forerunner; the wise Apostles; and withal Thy pure and holy Mother. Their prayers receive, O merciful Christ, and make Thy servant a child of light. For Thou art our hallowing, Thou only art the brightness of our souls, O gracious Lord: And we rightly give glory to Thee, our Lord and our God, All the days of our life. Amen.
For the project, he took on the role of Shylock from The Merchant of Venice and delivered one of the character's most memorable speeches; "To bait Fish withal". Early in 2011 he signed on to play the lead role in The Man Inside, opposite Peter Mullen, David Harewood and Michelle Ryan. Later that year, he was part of an ensemble cast in Cockneys vs Zombies, taking up the role of Mental Mickey. The Metro newspaper described Thomas' wild card performance as "Brilliant". Thomas' first television role came in the winter of 2011, in the Emmy award-winning series Black Mirror by Charlie Brooker for Channel 4 as Judge Wraith in the episode "Fifteen Million Merits".
Fred Astaire allegedly approached Hawes & Curtis to have one made, only to be regretfully refused due to the high demand for such garments from the British aristocracy. According to the Review of Savile Row Tailors, by the 1930s, "Mr. Curtis was an authority in evening dress and had done more to keep shirts from bulging out of up-creeping waistcoats than any other young man in London. Evening shirts and waistcoats were made on scientific mathematical lines – yet were chic withal."Review of Savile Row tailors 1930 London is a Man’s Town by Helen Josephy and Mary Margaret McBride Hawes & Curtis also assisted the Duke of Windsor in creating his now famous Windsor knot, by introducing an extra layer at the inside of the tie.
Elliot played football for Harrow Chequers, before joining the Wanderers club, making his debut for them in a 5–0 victory over Forest School on 28 November 1871. He continued to appear regularly for the Wanderers over the next two years, with his final game coming on 22 March 1873. In the 1873 "Football Annual", he was described as "a truly ponderous fellow but successful as a dribbler withal; has been known to kick a goal." He was selected to represent Scotland in the representative matches against England on 18 November 1871 and 24 February 1872, playing as a forward in the first match, won 2–1 by England, and as a back in the second match, which England won 1–0.
In July 1688 Albemarle persuaded the king to allow Morgan to regain a position on the Assembly, but the former privateer was too ill to attend. Hans Sloane, Albemarle's private physician, inspected Morgan and diagnosed dropsy; he also saw Morgan was drinking to excess and ordered him to reduce his alcohol intake, which was ignored. Sloane described his patient as > lean, sallow-coloured, his eyes a little yellowish and belly jutting out or > prominent ... He complained to me of want of appetite for victuals, he had a > kicking ... to vomit every morning and generally a small looseness attending > him, and withal is much given to drinking and sitting up late, which I > supposed had been the cause of his present indisposition.
Many of Neilston's dwellings are painted in whites or ivories. In his book Ordnance Survey of Scotland (1884), Francis Hindes Groome remarked that Neilston "presents an old-fashioned yet neat and compact appearance", a view echoed by Hugh McDonald in Rambles Round Glasgow (1910), who stated that Neilston "is a compact, neat, and withal somewhat old-fashioned little township", although continued that it has "few features calling for special remark". It is frequently described as a quiet dormitory village, although some sources from around the turn of the 20th century describe Neilston as a town. Neilston is not contiguous with any other settlement, and according to the General Register Office for Scotland, does not form part of Greater Glasgow, despite being very close.
Part of the revision which, together with Elisagarus, he made in the responsories as against the Roman method, were finally adopted in the Roman antiphonary. In the 12th century, the commission established by St. Bernard to revise the antiphonaries of Citeaux criticized with undue severity the work of Amalarius and Elisagarus and withal produced a faulty antiphonary for the Cistercian Order. The multiplication of antiphonaries, the differences in style of notation, the variations in melody and occasionally in text, need not be further described here. In France especially, the multiplication of liturgies subsequently became so great, that when Dom Guéranger, in the middle of the 19th century, started introducing the Roman liturgy into that country, sixty out of eighty dioceses had their own local breviaries.
He wrote in Past and Present, > It has been written, 'an endless significance lies in Work;' a man perfects > himself by working. Foul jungles are cleared away, fair seedfields rise > instead, and stately cities; and withal the man himself first ceases to be a > jungle and foul unwholesome desert thereby. Consider how, even in the > meanest sorts of Labour, the whole soul of a man is composed into a kind of > real harmony, the instant he sets himself to work! Doubt, Desire, Sorrow, > Remorse, Indignation, Despair itself, all these like helldogs lie > beleaguering the soul of the poor dayworker, as of every man: but he bends > himself with free valour against his task, and all these are stilled, all > these shrink murmuring far off into their caves.
Macbeth and Banquo wander onto a heath following the conflict, where they encounter three witches who greet them with prophecies. They address Macbeth first, hailing him as Thane of Glamis and Cawdor, and that he shall be King afterwards, while Banquo is hailed as a father to a line of kings, though he himself will never rule. Macbeth’s reaction was one of consumption and fixation,“rapt withal” and “look how our partner’s rapt”. The word ‘rapt’, showing how Macbeth is obsessed with the witches’ powers and is tempted by their predictions. Then, as they turn to leave, Macbeth calls out “tell me more”, meaning that he’s interested in their abilities. In Macbeth’s letter to his wife, he explains that he “burned in desire to question them further”.
Corbet sadly requested permission to return home, concluding: :"The Commendator will condescend to any reasonable conditions of peace, the same being proffered by others first to him, and withal his Papistical religion excepted. Whether this exception be unreasonable or not he leaves to Burghley to judge." Burghley was as much concerned by developments in the French wars of religion as in the Dutch revolt, but had no intention of committing English forces to either conflict. The very State Papers detailing Corbet's mission constantly refer to large sums expended subsidising Reiters (German mercenary cavalry) for John I, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken, called "Duke Casimir" by the English, whose forces were marching to the aid of the Prince of Condé in France's civil war.
He was, as a shipmate recorded, "a departure from our usual type of young officer", content with his own company though not aloof, "spouting lines from Keats [and] Browning", a mixture of sensitivity and aggression but, withal, sympathetic. Following the outbreak of the Boer War in 1899, Shackleton transferred to the troopship Tintagel Castle where, in March 1900, he met an army lieutenant, Cedric Longstaff, whose father Llewellyn W. Longstaff was the main financial backer of the National Antarctic Expedition then being organised in London. Shackleton used his acquaintance with the son to obtain an interview with Longstaff senior, with a view to obtaining a place on the expedition. Longstaff, impressed by Shackleton's keenness, recommended him to Sir Clements Markham, the expedition's overlord, making it clear that he wanted Shackleton accepted.
Why Mary Abaza is a unique female vocalist? It's because she has got a unique voice of great compass from contralto (overrides male baritone) to soprano (they say, with this rare and uncommon voice, one can be admitted to the Moscow Conservatory without entrance examinations) and withal she is a brilliant growler and added to everything else, she is one of the first female growling vocalists in the world {2}. She got jazz and some classical educations and as she said herself, it helped her to find her own way of singing death metal applying some jazz tricks; by the way it helps her in creating music. When Mary began singing death metal she was crazy about John Tardy (Obituary) as a vocalist and imitated something from his hysterical manner.
700 In his typical idiosyncratic style, Fowler wrote: > As Wardour Street itself offers to those who live in modern houses the > opportunity of picking up an antique or two that will be conspicuous for > good or ill among their surroundings, so this article offers to those who > write modern English a selection of oddments calculated to establish (in the > eyes of some readers) their claim to be persons of taste & writers of > beautiful English. Words deprecated by Fowler include such examples as anent, aught, ere, erstwhile, haply, maugre, oft, perchance, thither, to wit, varlet, withal and wot. Some words that Fowler found objectionable, such as albeit, for(e)bears and proven have found their way into normal English idiom and have been replaced in more recent editions of Modern English Usage by, amongst others, betimes, peradventure, quoth and whilom.Burchfield (2004) p.
The only contemporary account of what happened next is found in George Best's True Discourse:A True Discourse, Early English Books Online Retrieved 13 November 2013. > After his arrival in London, being demanded of sundry his friends what thing > he had brought them home of that country, [Frobisher] had nothing left to > present them withal but a piece of this black stone. And it fortuned a > gentlewoman, one of the adventurer’s wives, to have a piece thereof, which > by chance she threw and burned in the fire so long that at the length being > taken forth and quenched in a little vinegar it glistered with a bright > marquesset of gold. Whereupon the matter being called in some question, it > was brought to certain goldfinders in London to make assay thereof, who > indeed found it to hold gold, and that very richly for the quantity.
In Council and Court he was courteous in demean- our and quiet in speech, yet withal firm and decisive. Privately, no one ever appealed to him in vain for advice or help, which he gave with great sincerity and kindness, in his quiet way, well meriting the verdict of one troubled lady whom he aided in a troublesome piece of public work that " he was such a helpful man."One Hundred Years of Singapore, Pg 429 Sir Thomas de Multon Lee Braddell was born in Province Wellesley in 25 November 1856, and after leaving Oxford was called to the Bar at the Inner Temple on 25 June 1879. On the 16 September 1879 he married Violet Ida Nassau, daughter of John Roberts Kirby by his wife Elizabeth, who was the daughter of William Frederick Nassau, of St. Osyth's Priory, Essex.
Sul Ross Statue at Texas A&M; The morning after Ross's death, the Dallas Morning News published an editorial, quoted in several biographies of Ross: > It has been the lot of few men to be of such great service to Texas as Sul > Ross. ... Throughout his life he has been closely connected with the public > welfare and ... discharged every duty imposed upon him with diligence, > ability, honesty and patriotism. ... He was not a brilliant chieftain in the > field, nor was he masterful in the art of politics, but, better than either, > he was a well-balanced, well-rounded man from whatever standpoint one might > estimate him. In his public relations he exhibited sterling common sense, > lofty patriotism, inflexible honesty and withal a character so exalted that > he commanded at all times not only the confidence but the affection of the > people.
Whatever the surface incompatibilities between Hugill and the Social Credit movement, in the runup to the 1935 provincial election Aberhart found his team lacking both mainstream respectability and legal expertise, and so recruited Hugill to run as a Social Credit candidate in Calgary.Finkel 61–62Barr 80 During the campaign, Hugill attracted attention by refusing (on Aberhart's instructions, and like other Social Credit candidates) to accept questions from the floor at political meetings. The Calgary Albertan took note of this practice, commenting "it must be rather irritating for a gentleman like J. W. Hugill, a practitioner at the bar and a King's Counsel withal, skilled and experienced in the art of debate, not to be free to make use of it".Irving 312 On August 22, Hugill was elected one of Calgary's six Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs).
On 14 August 1648 Cromwell and Lambert were at Skipton, on 15 August at Gisburn and on 16 August they marched down the valley of the Ribble towards Preston with full knowledge of the enemy's dispositions and full determination to attack him. They had with them horse and foot not only of the Army, but also of the militia of Yorkshire, Durham, Northumberland and Lancashire, and withal were slightly outnumbered, having only 8,600 men against perhaps 9,000 of Hamilton's command. But the latter were scattered for convenience of supply along the road from Lancaster, through Preston, towards Wigan, Langdale's corps having thus become the left flank guard instead of the advanced guard. Langdale called in his advanced parties, perhaps with a view to resuming the duties of advanced guard, on the night of 13 August, and collected them near Longridge.
One hint at an Austrian or German origin is the fact that a conservative Transylvanian nobleman, Péter Apor, in his work Metamorphosis Transylvaniae does not mention Kürtőskalács in the list of traditional Hungarian foods, for all the evidence we have about the cake already existing in his wife's cuisine. In a letter from a mother superior in Moldavia addressed to Mrs Péter Apor, née Borbála Kálnoki, the writer asks Mrs. Apor to have a butler of hers taught the art of baking kürtőslalács: "Honored mother Superior prays you if she could send you a butler in the hope perchance you spare no pain and teach him kindly some art of baking kürtőslalács withal others". The baking is finished By the end of the 18th century, kürtőskalács had become popular in all Hungarian speaking regions as a defining element of both urban and rustic cuisine.
When in 1858 there appeared in Bucharest an anti-Jewish pamphlet entitled "Prashtia" (The Sling) and issued from the printing-office of the archbishop, C. A. Rosetti, chief of the Liberal party, criticised the publication harshly in the "Romanul" at Bally's request; and at the same time the latter made representations to the prince-kaimacam, requesting the confiscation of the pamphlet. Bally was repeatedly elected member of the administrative council of the Sephardic community, and there maintained himself as a champion of reform. He had the statutes amended so as to permit a fairer representation, introduced the distribution of clothing and shoes to poor children, projected a series of reforms for the Talmud-Torah (1863), which later became a modern school, established a free-loan institution (1860), and a society for free medical attendance (1872). He found time withal for literary pursuits, and left behind him many manuscripts in Judæo-Spanish.
Perrot faced a moment of crisis when further allegations were made – most notably by his former secretary, Henry Bird – of his frequent use in private conversation of violent language against the Queen. He was also accused of having prior knowledge of the rebellion in 1589 of Sir Brian O'Rourke (later extradited from Scotland and hanged at London), which had occurred under the government of Bingham in Connaught. Perrot ended up in the Tower of London and in 1592 stood trial before a special commission on charges of high treason. O'Roghan's letters and the evidence concerning the O'Rourke rebellion played their part in the prosecution case, but the evidence most vividly presented was of Perrot's remarks about Queen Elizabeth: "God's wounds, this it is to serve a base bastard pissing kitchen woman, if I had served any prince in Christendom I have not been so dealt withal."Bodl. Oxf.
20 Manuscript Kernewek Kemmyn # Translation 1 Listen friend, 2 Do not be shy! 3 Come down and rest 4 and come closer to me 5 if you know what is to your advantage, 6 and I will give you a girl, 7 one who is very beautiful. 8 If you like her, 9 go and get her; 10 take her for your wife. 11 She will not murmur to refuse you 12 and you will have her 13 She will be a good wife 14 to keep house for you. 15 I tell you the complete truth. 16 Go and ask her 17 Now I give her into your hand 18 and on the Creed I swear 19 there is not her equal 20 from here to the Tamar Bridge. 21 I beg you to be good to her 22 and she will all you want, 23 for she is a child and truthful withal. 24 Go and let her have her own way.
Despite his fame, he was dissatisfied, because he felt the Spanish continually treated him with injustice and lack of faith. Lewes Lewknor wrote of Schenck's dissatisfaction, 'Nothing ever more moved Skinke than the indignity of this dealing; and so telling the duke, that he would be loath, now he had spent all that ever he had in the Kings service, to be accounted a captain of freebooters, took his leave, bending his mind presently to revenge; and forthwith surprising Nuis by stratagem, delivered both the same, and the castle of Lemmicke, and withal, his own person, into the service of the States; of whom he was received with such honour as to a man of such worthiness belonged.'Lewes Lewkenor, The Estate of English Fugitives. 1595 On 25 May 1585, he declared his allegiance to the foundling Dutch Republic, which made him Lieutenant Governor of Gelderland and Marshall of Camp in the Dutch States Army.
In 1908, J. Nilsen Laurvik wrote: > In the sculpture of Barnard, as in the work of Rodin, we see the vital, > almost consuming energy that appears to bestir itself within the clay or > marble as it flows out in the undulating, rhythmic movements of thews > [sinews] and muscles, in the suggestions of the delicate yet withal powerful > bony structure of the body under its finely drawn covering of soft flesh and > smooth envelope of skin, as in the prostrate figure of the Two Natures, > where the shoulder blades and the delicate ridge and furrow of the backbone > are modeled with a supple, caressing, quivering touch as of life itself. > This is no less true of his well-known bronze figure Pan, which adorns the > northeastern corner of Columbia University campus. With the discerning, this > lazy creature of infinite good nature has already become a sort of a classic > in the art of our country—one of the very few so far, and one destined to > remain incomparable for some time to come. In its suavity and suppleness of > modeling it reveals Barnard's virtuosity in a striking manner.
In terms of physical appearance, Sue was also less attractive than her fair-haired older sister. As historians Jane & William Pease described her, “Sue never made the splash as a belle that Caroline did. She lacked the winsome expression, the long curls, and the delicate coloring that contemporary ideas of beauty dictated. Severely nearsighted, she stumbled and bumbled when she most wanted to be graceful.”Pease 54. Sue at first rejected Henry’s marriage proposal, much to the admonishment of her mother and sister. Her aunt Louise Porcher, on the other hand, considered it “safer & wise to refuse than accept,” for she could not “bear that so young a girl should be urged on that subject, as it is a step one cannot retrieve when once taken, & all the trials it may entail must be borne alone & in silence, as it is one of the few trial[s] that the sympathy of friends cannot alleviate but rather enhances.” Sue thought Henry “very short very broad & very round shouldered, & withal a little lame,” and Aunt Louise echoed that his looks presented a potential wife “substantial objection.”Porcher, Louise.
He is in truth a compound of conceit, stupidity, > ignorance and self importance, with a total incapacity for business of the > meanest kind; withal he is mischievous and malignant; altogether as great an > infliction on the poor Province of Canterbury as could have been sent, and > for this Canterbury has to thank the tender mercies of Sir Geo. Grey." William Travers sarcastically referred to him as a "genius"Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle, 27 March 1852, page 19 and Charlotte Godley (the wife of "father of Canterbury" John Robert Godley) described Campbell in letters to her mother by saying:Letters From Early New Zealand, Charlotte Godley, 14 October 1851, pages 243 & 255 > "There is a certain old Colonel Campbell, who had many dealings with the C. > Assoc. in early days, and ended by quarrelling with everyone and writing an > insulting letter to Lord Lyttelton, after innumerable statements on his part > had turned out to be perfectly false... He is naturally predisposed to > dislike the plan, and the Colonists, and goes about abusing the place, the > land, and all belonging to it, to anyone who will listen to him. The new- > comers are his especial prey...he is a very bad element in our society.

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