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...v Christian, Aarhus (Dan.) Indra Talivaldo, Riga Isbrücker Julia, Den Haag Johnson Wilfred B., Birmingham Kamaryt Stanislav, d-ro, Bratislava Karczag ... ...to (60 p.) kaj en 1910 gramatikon. Al Torento. Novelo originale verkita de St. Engholm 1930, 93 p. “Torento estas la urbo de la junecaj revoj, poste l... ...pozicio. 19l4, 31 majo-1 junio en Meĥleno 6-a landa k. 1920 23-24 junio en St. Gilles 9-a landa (La 7-a kaj 8-a belgaj kongresoj okazis en Anglujo dum... ...de konata neologismo; ĉar tio ja ne estas trajto de la Bodó-verkoj. W . B. JOHNSON. Bo ll M. Granada Narcis, kataluno, inĝ. (ekspluatanto de karbmine... ... apero de la “Unua Libro” de Z (jul. 1887) artikolo en la Londona ĵurnalo “St. James's Gazette” pri lingvo nomata “Internacional” inventaĵo de d-ro E,... ...ikadonĝis kritik-arto, kian oni trovas en la kulturlingvoj. ” (Artikolo de Johnson en la Facila Legolibro 1932 p. 60.) Deshays (dehe) René, franco, li... ...Tyŭgaku, kie iam lekciis E-n. Nun instruas francan lingvon en St. Joseph's College, Blu , Y okohama. Milda, ne- sintrudema, serioza. — (Kaw.) Miŝima ... ...efonistino. Nask. 29 dec. 1896. E- istiĝis en 1917. Instruis E-n en Morley College, London, 1918-19. Ano de la administra komitato de BEA ktp. Roome (... ...e (krom la jam cititaj inter la stratoj Z-aj): Ĝenevo,ĉe str. Rue du Vieux College 10, marmora griza 60x45 cm, E- lingva teksto: „EN TIU DOMO LOĜIS EN...
...linear Dimensions of our Universe in a natural Causal sequence. Before the 1 st Linear Dimension could exist it had to have something to exist in.... ...rythingness was split in one direction an infinite number of times, was the 1 st Linear Dimension created. Before the 1 st Dimension could be crea... ... specific order: naturally… organically… logically. Impetus created the 1 st Dimension of Length by splitting Infinite Everythingness in one di... ...r culture. Unless you buy a book, pay money for a seminar, or spend years in college learning isolated, uncollated, unchallenged, and uncompared pi... ...ir first names became repetitious duplicates of their ancestors: Son of John… Johnson. These labels-identities were inflicted on each person at bir... ...r yet, espouse it to the already affluent: at stockbroker dinners and business colleges… to the acolytes… then sell TV shows worshipping the Lives of... ...telligence levels went up again… slightly. How fast have the IQ scores of college entrance exams gone down in the last forty years in America? ... ...r only tiny excuse of moral superiority? They were not as bad as the Earl of Nottingham? As the Spanish pirates? They were fucking worse. The hi...
... in his life, as well as in that of his son. The elder John Patteson was a colleger, and passed on to King’s College, Cambridge, whence, in 1813, he c... ...d be- loved, was the daughter of James Coleridge, of Heath’s Court, Ottery St. Mary, Devon, Colonel of the South Devon Vol- unteers. He was the eldest... ...eldest of the numerous family of the Rev. John Coleridge, Master of Ottery St. Mary School, and the poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, was the youngest. T... ...ations, and even then often picked up a passage in the sermons he heard at St. Giles’s-in-the-Fields from the Rev. J. Endell Tyler, and would give his... ...vity. Their tumultuous loyalty and audacity appear in Coley’s letter:— ‘In college, stretching from Hexter’s to Mother Spier’s was a magnificent repre... ...dreadful pain for some time. Then came the Queen’s carriage, and I thought college would have tumbled down with the row. The cheering was really treme... ...work, good flannel for under-shirts, or for making up into Crimean shirts, Nottingham drill, good towelling, huckaback, &c., ought to be worth while t...
...to the Abbé Gerbet’s Rome Chrétienne; for the Housewives of Lowenburg, and St. Stephen’s Crown, to Freytag’s Sketches of German Life; and for the stor... ...ell. These are the details of the Gallic occupation of Rome, the Legend of St. Genevieve, the Letter of Gertrude von der Wart, the stories of the Keys... ...st in the having absolutely forgotten self. 12 A Book of Golden Deeds THE ST THE ST THE ST THE ST THE STORIES OF AL ORIES OF AL ORIES OF AL ORIES OF ... ...for the ministry, even selling the oxen from the plough to provide for the college expenses. A small legacy had just fallen to the young man, from a r... ...nteenth century. It was soon after King Charles had raised his standard at Nottingham, and set forth on his march for London, that it became evident t... ...cent fireworks, and had blocked up the passage leading out by the Military College. A woman fell down in a fainting fit, others stumbled over her, and...
..., but Lord! you’re get- ting as fussy as Verona. Ever since she got out of college she’s been too rambunctious to live with—doesn’t know what she want... ...worker or some damn thing! Lord, and Ted is just as bad! He wants to go to college, and he doesn’t want to go to college. Only one of the three that k... ...e a movie actor and—And here I’ve told him a hundred times, if he’ll go to college and law-school and make good, I’ll set him up in business and—Veron... ... Homes for Folks Reeves Bldg., Oberlin Avenue & 3d St., N.E Zenith Omar Gribble, Esq., 376 North American Buildin... ... a little service.” “That’s a fact. Say, uh, speaknubout hotels, I hit the St. Francis at San Francisco for the first time, the other day, and, say, i... ...nd, say, it certainly is a first-class place.” “You’re right, brother! The St. Francis is a swell place— absolutely A1.” “That’s a fact. I’m right wit... ...s also, on dit, a leader of the British metal industries. As he comes from Nottingham, a favorite haunt of Robin Hood, though now, we are informed by ... ... my coat.” Swollen with greatness, slightly afraid lest the noble blood of Nottingham change its mind and leave him at any street corner, Babbitt para... ...ave to talk to women about primitives and polo! Good- ish thing to have in Nottingham, though; annoyed the mayor most frightfully when I got it; and o...
...ch hath not only given the lie to so many learned, pious, wise founders of colleges, for which we should be ashamed, hath doubtless been the chief cau... ...refore it is not to be wondered at, that so learned and devout a father as St. Jerome, after his wish to have seen Christ in the flesh, and to have he... ...Jerome, after his wish to have seen Christ in the flesh, and to have heard St. Paul preach, makes his third wish, to have seen Rome in her glory; and ... ... sure is it to a devout Christian, to see there the humble house in which St. Paul was content to dwell, and to view the many rich statues that are m... ...last example shall be that under valuer of money, the late provost of Eton College, Sir Henry Wotton, a man with whom I have often fished and con ver... ...ir, it is not in my power to resolve you; I leave it to be resolved by the college of Carthusians, who have made vows never to eat flesh. But, I have ... ... having his fountain in Staffordshire, and gliding through the counties of Nottingham, Lincoln, Leicester, and York, augmenteth the turbulent current ...
... his court at Chester, and went on the river Dee to visit the monastery of St. John, the eight oars of his boat were pulled (as the people used to del... ...ere terribly liable to sudden death in those days), and had been buried in St. Paul’s Cathedral. The A Child’s Histroy of England 54 King might possi... ...g none, young or old, armed or unarmed, were Oxford, Warwick, Le icester, Nottingham, Derby, Lincoln, York. In all these places, and in many others, ... ... convey the body to Caen, in Normandy, in order that it might be buried in St. Stephen’s church there, which the Conqueror had founded. But fire, of w... ...Lord Montacute how he should proceed. A Parliament was going to be held at Nottingham, and that lord recommended that the favourite should be seized b... ..., it being February, was filled with people; and the priests of Gloucester College were looking complacently on from a window, and there was a great c... ...fering of these two good Protestant men was in the City ditch, near Baliol College. On coming to the dreadful spot, they kissed the stakes, and then e... ...ssin, who confessed that he had been kept and trained for the purpose in a college of Jesuits. The Dutch, in this surprise and distress, offered to ma... ...vising them to be true to their religion, a Protestant cler gyman, named Johnson, the chaplain of the late Lord Russell, was actually sentenced to s...
...Adam said to Seth, with a sharp glance of surprise, “What! Dost think thee’st finished the door?” “A ye, sure,” said Seth, with answering surprise; “w... ...ht smile on his face as he said, in a gentler tone than before, “Why, thee’st forgot the panels.” The laughter burst out afresh as Seth clapped his ha... ... me to build her a oven this twelvemont.” “There’s reason in what thee say’st, Adam,” observed Seth, gravely. “But thee know’st thyself as it’s hearin... ...ve some large beautiful ear-rings, such as were all the fash- ion; to have Nottingham lace round the top of her gown, and something to make her handke... ...bation. Y ou perceive that Arthur Donnithorne was “a good fellow”— all his college friends thought him such. He couldn’t bear to see any one uncomfort... ... than I’ve had, and I think your life has been a better school to you than college has been to me.” “Why, sir, you seem to think o’ college something ... ...u seem to think o’ college something like what Bartle Massey does. He says college mostly makes people like bladders—just good for nothing but t’ hold...
...ir walks, and finally leading Clarence off after Punch into the Rookery of St. Giles’s, where she could not follow, because Emily was in her charge. T... ...fearless, dashed to the rescue of a boy under whom the ice had bro- ken in St. James’ Park, and held him up till assistance came? Martyn, who was with... ...seum library all I could discover about our new possession. The Chantry of St. Cecily at Earlscombe, in Somersetshire, had, it appeared, been founded ... ...D A HOUSEFUL at Christmas. The Rev. Charles Henderson, a Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, lately or- dained a deacon, had been recommended to us by ... ... her a miniature, and confided to her that the original was waiting till a college living should come to him in the distant future. Admiral Griffith c... ...hold what he called a symposium in his rooms, and to think it a mystery of college life not intended for young ladies. He really had prepared a sort o... ... an awful thing it was for English- men to be enrolled against each other. Nottingham Castle had just been burnt, and things looked only too like revo...
...R; REFORMATION: KNOX; PURITANISM. 99 LECTURE V.THE HERO AS MAN OF LETTERS. JOHNSON, ROUSSEAU, BURNS. ........131 LECTURE VI.THE HERO AS KING. CROMWELL... ...add that more so than any of them is man such an emblem. You have heard of St. Chrysostom’s celebrated saying in reference to the Shekinah, or Ark of ... ... be. Hero-worship endures forever while man endures. Boswell venerates his Johnson, right truly even in the Eigh- teenth century. The unbelieving Fren... ...dingly all persons, from the Queen Antoinette to the Douanier at the Porte St. Denis, do they not worship him? People of quality disguise themselves a... ... to be higher, beautifuler, nobler. Yes, from Norse Odin to English Samuel Johnson, from the divine Founder of Christianity to the withered Pontiff of... ...ll, notwithstanding the noise they make. What Act of Parliament, debate at St. Stephen’s, on the hustings or elsewhere, was it that brought this Shaks... ...e, before he became conspicuous. He was the son of poor parents; had got a college education; become a Priest; adopted the Reformation, and seemed wel... ...ey laugh so, have an affectionate, lovable kind of character. He is like a College-Tutor, whose whole world is forms, College- rules; whose notion is ... ...ddenly, with that unalterable luckless notion of his, at the head not of a College but of a Nation, to regulate the most complex deep-reaching interes...
..................................... 68 LECTURE IV. THE HERO AS PRIEST. LUTHER; REFORMATION: KNOX; PURITANISM. 99 LECTURE V.THE HERO AS MAN OF LETTERS. JOHNSON, ROUSSEAU, BURNS. ........ 131 LECTURE VI.THE HERO AS KING. CROMWELL, NAPOLEON: MODERN REVOLUTIONISM................................................................................................................. 165...
...rom playing with the dentist’s son who lived three doors below and who had St. Vitus’ dance. His little sister was much more tractable. She had been c... ...le around her waist, in place of a belt, she wore the huge dog-collar of a St. Bernard—a chic little idea which was all her own, and of which she was ... ...gh over Carter’s drunkenness. Blix knew the type. Catlin was hardly out of college; but the older girls, even the young women of twenty-five or six, e... ...e back room with its one mir- ror, six tables, and astonishing curtains of Nottingham lace; and the waiter, whose name was Richard or Riccardo, accord... ...onference over the counter. Then Richard appeared between the portieres of Nottingham lace, the telegram in his hand and the boy at his heels. Evident... ...hat I hate a masculine, unfeminine girl as much as you do.” “But a medical college, Blix! You don’t know what you are talking about.” “Yes, I do. Ther... ...e, Blix! You don’t know what you are talking about.” “Yes, I do. There’s a college in New York just for women. Aunt Kihm sent me the prospectus, and i... ...inevitable bands of white satin wrapped high and tight about her neck. The St. Bernard dog-collar did duty as a belt. She had disdained a veil, and he...
... she—Tibbott I mean—is a witch, and knows more than she ought.” “What mean’st thou? T ell me, children;” and Cis, nothing loath, since she was secured... ...ey, “that I could have thought was no other than the City that the blessed St. John saw descending from Heaven, so fair was it to look on, but they cr... ...’s Protestant principles. The book, however, proved to be a translation of St. Austin on the Psalms, and, of course, she could detect nothing that she... ...f that sort? The false Scot.” “Look you, father, I met in London that same Johnstone who was one of this lady’s gentlemen at one time. You re- member ... ...ngs. It may be, as a learned man told 175 Charlotte M. Yonge Johnstone, that the shock the Queen suffered when the brutes put Davy to de... ...side, consisting of a number of sets of separate chambers, like those of a college, opening on a quad- rangle in the centre, and with one side occupie... ...her tender youth from the shock. “Then,” said he, “I will leave a token at Nottingham where I have taken her; whether home or at once to Hull. If I le... ...ive her a certain relief. He meant to halt for the night at a large inn at Nottingham. There was much stir in the court, and it seemed to be full of t... ...aving Fotheringhay. He had under- stood by the colour of the horse left at Nottingham which road to take, and at the hostel at Hull had encountered Gi...
...a granddaughter survived her whom I remember to have seen. That is, as Dr. Johnson had a shadowy recollection of Queen Anne, as a stately lady in blac... ...le of all his school-companions. The same qualities secured him at Glasgow college a plentiful share of the same sort of notice. Half the youthful mob... ...ge, or made the least attempt to retort upon his tormentors. He slunk from college by the most secret paths he could discover, and plunged himself int... ... that the fugitive had not, in imitation of his mighty namesake, taken the college gates along with him in his retreat. To all appearance, the equanim... ...dill, Hinders witches of their will; Weel is them, that weel may Fast upon St. Andrew’s day. Saint Bride and her brat, Saint Colme and his cat, Saint ... ...hings is valour; If they be done to us, to suffer them Is valour too.— Ben Johnson. THE C OLONEL was walking pensively up and down the parlour, when t... ... A gigantic genius, fit to grapple with whole libraries. Boswell’s Life of Johnson. THE APPOINTED DAY ARRIVED, when the Colonel and Miss Mannering wer... ...e interest that uncertainty and misfortune can give. CHAPTER XXI. What say’st thou, Wise One?—that all-powerful Love Can fortune’s strong impediments ... ...Hatteraick growled through the recesses of the cave. “Hagel and donner!—be’st du?” “Are you in the dark?” “Dark? der deyvil! ay,” said Dirk Hatteraick...
...years of Elizabeth’s reign, having entered as Fellow Com- moner at Trinity College, and obtained a Fellowship at Trinity Hall. Naunton went to Scotlan... ...estminster, most remarkable for the courts of justice, the parliament, and St. Peter’s church, enriched with the royal tombs. At the distance of twent... ...alconer. 8 2. Dourgate, Vulgo Dowgate, I.E., Water-gate. The cathedral of St. Paul was founded by Ethelbert, King of the Saxons, and being from time ... ...re lies Seba, King of the East Saxons, who was con- verted to the faith by St. Erkenwald, Bishop of London, A.D. 677. On the other: Here lies Ethelred... ... In this city he brought about, by his own industry, the establishing of a College of Physicians, of which he was elected the first president. He was ... ...rs of divinity, one at Oxford, another at Cambridge, where she founded two colleges to Christ and to John His disciple. She died A.D. 1463, on the thi... ...of England in 1598. Charles Howard, of the Norfolk family, created Earl of Nottingham, 1597, Lord High Admiral of England, and Privy Counsellor. 42 F... ...e Cadiz voyage and action, she conferred it upon him, creating him Earl of Nottingham, to the great discontent of his colleague, my Lord of Essex, who...
...res and make his lady weep? Or soft Adonis, so perfumed and fine, Drive to St James’s a whole herd of swine? Oh filthy check on all industrious skill,... ...ylock’s wife: But thousands die, without or this or that, Die, and endow a college, or a cat. 30 To some, indeed, Heaven grants the happier fate, T’ e... ...es the dull cits, and joins (to please the fair) The well-bred cuckolds in St James’s air: First, for his son a gay commission buys, Who drinks, whore... ...ox for life. In Britain’s senate he a seat obtains, And one more pensioner St Stephen gains. My lady falls to play; so bad her chance, He must repair ... ...e, 136 The Poetical Works of Alexander Pope: V ol. 2 Lean Philips and fat Johnson. 6 Why should I stay? Both parties rage; My vixen mistress squalls;... ... The constant index to old Button’s wits, ‘Who’s here?’ cries Umbra: ‘Only Johnson.’ 86 —‘Oh! Your slave,’ and exit; but returns with Rowe: ‘Dear Rowe... ... of the great empire of Dulness, and cause of the continuance thereof. The college of the goddess in the city, with her private academy for poets in p... ...gs, In silks, in crapes, in garters, and in rags, From drawing-rooms, from colleges, from garrets, On horse, on foot, in hacks, and gilded chariots: A... ...110 On two unequal crutches propp’d he came, Milton’s on this, on that one Johnston’s name. The decent knight 390 retired with sober rage, Withdrew h...
...svenor Osgood A Penn State Electronic Classics Series Publication Life of Johnson by James Boswell, abridged and edited with an introduction by Charl... ...ocument or for the file as an electronic transmission, in any way. Life of Johnson by James Boswell, abridged and edited with an introduction by Charl... ... State University is an equal opportunity university. 3 Boswell’s Life of Johnson Life of Johnson by James Boswell Boswell’s Life of Johnson Abridged... ...ed reader of Boswell ask himself what glamor would fade from the church of St. Clement Danes, from the Mitre, from Fleet Street, the Oxford coach, and... ... Church was not delayed; for his baptism is re- corded, in the register of St. Mary’s parish in that city, to have been performed on the day of his bi... ...r tutors; so that when I came to Oxford, Dr. Adams, now master of Pembroke College, told me I was the best qualified for the University that he had ev... ...ford, and was entered 31 Boswell’s Life of Johnson a Commoner of Pembroke College on the 31st of October, 1728, being then in his nineteenth year. Th... ...enth year. The Reverend Dr. Adams, who afterwards pre- sided over Pembroke College with universal es- teem, told me he was present, and gave me some a... ... London as an adventurer in literature. He told me, that when he first saw St. John’s Gate, the place where that deserv- edly popular miscellany was o...
...Preface: In making this abridgement of Boswell?s Life of Johnson I have omitted most of Boswell?s criticisms, comments, and notes, all of Johnson?s opinions in legal cases, most of the letters, and parts of the conversation dealing with matters which were of greater importance in B...
...ity. Its very situation—withdrawn a little behind the facile splendours of St. Pancras— implied a comment on the materialism of life. Those two great ... ...gether, dear.” Margaret, out of politeness, invested a few hundreds in the Nottingham and Derby Railway, and though the Foreign Things did admirably a... ...ham and Derby Railway, and though the Foreign Things did admirably and the Nottingham and Derby declined with the steady dignity of which only Home Ra... ...he, too, almost without being pressed, consecrated a fraction of it to the Nottingham and Derby Railway. So far so good, but in social matters their a... ...enough at Queen’s Hall— and he walked over Westminster Bridge, in front of St. Thomas’s Hospital, and through the immense tun- nel that passes under t... ... not know the time of the train, she 84 Howards End strained her eyes for St. Pancras’s clock. Then the clock of King’s Cross swung into sight, a sec... ...Oxford. The men were down, and the candi- dates had been housed in various colleges, and had dined in hall. Tibby was sensitive to beauty, the ex- per... ...them for oth- ers, they rang the bell for the servant, they identified the colleges as the train slipped past Oxford, they caught books or bag-purses ... ...harm of which she did not wholly approve, and said nothing when the Oxford colleges were identified wrongly. “Male and female created He them”; the jo...
...wed aside by the large mines of the financiers. The coal and iron field of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire was discovered. Carston, Waite and Co. appea... ...n the lace-market at a time when so many lace-manufacturers were ruined in Nottingham. Her father, George Coppard, was an engineer—a large, handsome, ... ...en she was nineteen. He was the son of a well-to-do tradesman, had been to college in London, and was to devote himself to business. She could always ... ...wing to her health, she had left Sheerness. Her father had retired home to Nottingham. John Field’s father had been ruined; the son had gone as a teac... ...bout these props?’ An’ I says to him, ‘Why, what art talkin’ about? What d’st mean about th’ props?’ ‘It’ll never do, this ‘ere, ’ ‘e says. ‘You’ll be... ...readed the inter- view with Thomas Jordan. It was nearly eleven o’clock by St. Peter’s Church. They turned up a narrow street that led to the Castle. ... ...rge, and bare. Miriam had nailed on the wall a reproduction of Veronese’s “St. Catherine” . She loved the woman who sat in the window, dreaming. Her o... ...dark head over her cup. “And what of it?” “I’m merely going to the farming college at Broughton for three months, and I shall probably be kept on as a...
... Concord and Merrimack Rivers by Henry David Thoreau Where’er thou sail’st who sailed with me, Though now thou climbest loftier mounts, And f... ... not reclaimed so fast as the woods are cleared. Let us here read what old Johnson says of these meadows in his “Wonder working Providence,” which giv... ...this blossom on the bank of the Concord. After a pause at Ball’s Hill, the St. Ann’s of Concord voyageurs, not to say any prayer for the success of ou... ...at he might be up to the occasion. That is a superfluous wonder, which Dr. Johnson expresses at the assertion of Sir Thomas Browne that “his life has ... ...se. Its education has always been liberal, and its implied wit can endow a college. The world, which the Greeks called Beauty, has been made such by b... ... noon, between the territories of Nashua on the one hand, and Hudson, once Nottingham, on the other. From time to time we scared up a kingfisher or a ... ...true But stands ‘tween me and you, Thou western pioneer, Who know’st not shame nor fear, 127 HenryDavidThoreau By venturous spirit driven... ...s a building of considerable size, erected by the students of Williamstown College, whose buildings might be seen by daylight gleaming far down in the... ...t gleaming far down in the valley. It would be no small advantage if every college were thus lo cated at the base of a mountain, as good at least as ...
... honors, that he obtained a grant of arms from Clarencieux of the Heralds’ College. On this occasion he declared himself worth five hundred pounds der... ...heir own individual debt. Like that terrific chorus in Spohr’s oratorio of St. Paul, “Stone him to death” is the cry of the selfish and the illiberal ... ...f the subject. When we are seeking for the sources of the Euphrates or the St. Lawrence, we look for no proportions to the mighty volume of waters in ... ...st temptation, not “the murkiest den, The most opportune place, the strong’st suggestion Our worser genius can——,” should ever prevail to lay asleep h... ...he to Pope, Pope to Bishop Newton, the editor of Milton, and Newton to Dr. Johnson. This pedigree of the fable, however, adds nothing to its credit, a... ...assist his father in obtaining a re- newed grant of arms from the Herald’s College, and there- fore, of course, to re-establish his father’s fortunes.... ... six vols. 4to, in 1725; by Warburton, in eight vols. 8vo, in 1747; by Dr. Johnson, in eight vols. 8vo, in 1765; by Stevens, in four vols. 8vo, in 176... ... vols. 8vo, in 1789; by Alexander Chalmers, in nine vols. 8vo, in 1811; by Johnson and Stevens, revised by Isaac Reed, in twenty-one vols. 8vo, in 181... ...o more. The next event of importance in Goethe’s life was his re- moval to college. His own wishes pointed to Goettingen, but his father preferred Lei...
...gistrate, declared, as chair- man of a meeting held at the Assembly Rooms, Nottingham, on the 14th January, 1860, “that there was an amount of privati... ...r as “Clemenceau the murderer.” Similar events in the strike at Villeneuve St. Georges in 1908 led to the arrest of all the leading members of the Com... ...dition highly valued by educated Hindoos, but not loved by our schools and colleges. The Hindoo Nation- alist feels that his country has a type of cul...