Judith Bailey: List of Compositions by Opus Number
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KOERNER S HAVES by BUFFALO N Vv
; KOERNER S HAVES BY BUFFALO N Vv ! = \A #1 t : 4 ¢ Jack the Giant=Killer. The Giant Stepped on Jack’s Trap and Fell Headlong into the Pit. [° the days of the renowned King Arthur there lived a Cornishman named Jack, who was famous for his valiant deeds. His bold and warlike spirit showed itself in his boyish days; for Jack took especial delight in listening to the wonderful tales of giants and fairies, and of the extraordinary feats of valor displayed by the knights of King Arthur’s Round Table, which his father would sometimes relate. Jack’s spirit was so fired by these strange accounts, that he determined, if ever he became a man, that he would destroy some of the cruel giants who infested the land. Not many miles from his father’s house there lived, on the top of St. Michael’s Mount, a huge giant, who was the terror of the country round, who was named Cormoran, from his voracious appetite. It is said that he was eighteen feet in height. When he required food, he came down from his castle, and, seizing on the flocks of the poor people, would throw half a dozen oxen over his shoulders, and suspend as many sheep as he could carry, and stalk back to his castle. He had carried on these depredations many years ; and the poor Cornish people were well-nigh ruined. Jack went by night to the foot of the mount and dug a very deep pit, which he covered with sticks and straw, and over which he strewed the earth. -
Tam Kernewek
Tam Kernewek “ A bit of Cornish” Volume 32 Issue 3 Fall 2014 Cornish American Heritage Society Cornish American Heritage 48 Presidents’ Messages I can't believe the excitement of the 17th Gathering is over! It has been a whirlwind and a great success. The Cornish Society of Greater Milwaukee pulled it off well, if I do say so myself. Thanks to all the great presenters and Cornish Cous- ins who really made it a family reunion. It was a pleasure meeting many names I had only read before. I am so happy that Kathryn Herman has agreed to take over as president. After two years of working with her on the plan- ning committee, I know she is a woman of great organization and imagination. Her knowledge of Cornwall and connec- tions there will give the CAHS a direction I couldn't give. I will be happy to continue serving as an officer (historian), so I can work on projects for the Society. As I hand over the role of president to Kathryn, I will be finishing up some things started at the Gathering. (And Kathryn deserves to catch her breath!) Our business meeting was cut short. Ultimately that may be an advantage, since some questions might be better addressed via e-mails with the participants, rather than a hurried discussion we would have had there. If any of the CAHS members not present at the Gathering would like to be included in the discussion, please write me. Again, thanks to all for the great Gathering! It is now a matter of continuing the energy we had in Milwaukee. -
Corpses, Coasts, and Carriages: Gothic Cornwall, 1840-1913
Corpses, Coasts, and Carriages: Gothic Cornwall, 1840-1913 Submitted by Joan Passey to the University of Exeter as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English in September 2019 This thesis is available for Library use on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. I certify that all material in this thesis which is not my own work has been identified and that no material has previously been submitted and approved for the award of a degree by this or any other University. Joan Passey Signature: ………………………………………………………….. Words: 91,425 1 Abstract While there are defined Irish, Welsh, and Scottish Gothic traditions, there has been a notable critical absence of a Cornish Gothic tradition, despite multiple canonical and less-canonical authors penning Gothic stories set in Cornwall throughout the long nineteenth century. This critical oversight is part of a longer tradition of eliding Cornwall from literary and cultural histories—even from those to which it has particular relevance, such as histories of the industrial revolution (in which its mining industry was a major contributor), and the birth of the tourist industry, which has shaped the county and its economy through to the present day. This thesis will rectify this gap in criticism to propose a Cornish Gothic tradition. It will investigate Gothic texts set in Cornwall in the long nineteenth century to establish a distinct and particular tradition entrenched in Cornwall’s own quest for particularity from other Celtic nations and English regions. It will demonstrate how the boom in Cornish Gothic texts was spurred by major changes occurring in the county in the period, including being the last county to be connected to the national rail network, the death of the mining industry, the birth of the tourist industry, large-scale maritime disaster on its coasts, and the resituating of the legendary King Arthur in Tintagel with the publication of Tennyson’s Idylls of the King. -
London Cornish Newsletter
Cowethas Kernewek Loundres www.londoncornish.co.uk For the LCA, this summer has had several identify this game from this rather vague Dates for your highlights, beginning with the Countryside description? My keywords have drawn a Parade which took place in Cornwall as part blank on google! diary of the celebrations to mark the Duke of As already mentioned, the main reason for Cornwall’s 70th birthday. The Association Family History Day our visit to Cornwall was to attend the 13th October 2018 was represented by our Chairman, Carol Gorsedd Awards Ceremony. Nominations Goodwin and members ‘Cilla Oates and for two of the Awards – the Pewas Map 10am to 4pm Don and Catherine Foster. Following this, Trevethan (Paul Smales Award) and the Pre-Christmas Lunch there were two pub lunches, a visit to the London Cornish Association Shield - are Richmond Rowing Club to meet up with coordinated by a Committee which includes 8th December 2018 members of the London Cornish Pilot Gig the President and some Vice-Presidents of 12 noon Association and, for some, attendance at the LCA. The Committee make recommen- the Rosyer Lecture at City Lit. dations but the final decision on the awards New Year’s Lunch At the end of August, several of us attended is made by the Gorsedd. 12th January 2019 12 noon the Gorsedd Awards Ceremony in New- We are now calling for nominations (with quay where our Chairman and Treasurer supporting motivation) for the 2019 awards: both received Awards from the Grand Bard. Further details of This was a proud moment for both the The Pewas Map Trevethan Award is pre- these events can be awardees and their friends and family. -
London Cornish Newsletter
Cowethas Kernewek Loundres www.londoncornish.co.uk The Piskeys crept in – but a tive. The only ‘complaint’ was about the size of the font. We apologise for happy outcome ensued that as we had not anticipated the original copy would be shrunk by Family History Day, Welcome to the Spring 2019 edition half, and therefore did not prepare AGM and Trelawny of the LCA newsletter. for it. That is easily corrected, and Lecture - 13th April, You will notice that our last newslet- this issue is going off with a larger 10am-4.30pm font size – so hopefully all will be ter – and now this Spring issue – Rugby Union Match well from now on. look different to those from the past. – Cornish Pirates Apart from an increase in the font About the time you receive this vs London Scottish size in future (sorry to those who newsletter, we will be celebrating St RFC - 13th April , struggled with the Winter copy!), this Piran’s Day with a cream tea at a 3pm will be our new format. London hotel, and just two weeks Two big changes were introduced later, following the success of our Mid-Summer Lunch with the winter newsletter – the intro- Annual Dining Event last year, we 6th July, 12 noon duction of coloured pictures in the will return to the same hotel where hard copy, and the reduction in page we look forward to another excellent July events tbc: size. While the coloured pictures meal and a very enjoyable after- were planned, the change in size noon. County Finals day at was not. -
Some Big Names in Myth and Folklore John Giants Can Be Found in Folklore All Around the World
good john © good john © good john © good john © good john © john © good good john © john © good good good john good john © john good © © john good good © john good good good © john good john good © So what makes a real giant? Everyone knows that to be a giant you have to be tall. But can john human beings ever be called giants? The tallest person that ever lived was the American Robert good © Wadlow, who was a staggering 8 foot 11 and john (2.72m) tall when he died, aged only 22. Some believe that he Some big names in myth and folklore would have topped 9 foot if he had lived longer. In September Giants can be found in folklore all around the world. Here are good 2009 the Guinness Book of World Records officially named Sultan some of the most famous: Kösen, from Turkey, as the “World’s Tallest Man”, he measured © in at a towering 8 foot 1 inch tall. When asked of his hopes for johnFinn MacCumhaill (MacCool) the future, Kösen replied that he would love to be able to drive A legendary Irish giant who is said to have built the a car (they are all too small for him!) and find a girlfriend. extraordinary Giant’s Causeway, a series of ‘steps’ of Such people are huge, but are not really giants as we think of © hexagonal basalt columns to be seen off the northern coast of them in fairy-tale terms. A real giant would have to be much Northern Ireland. According to legend, Finn MacCumhaill built john taller than that, and much bigger in every way: bigger hands, the causeway to help him cross the sea to the Scottish island bigger heads and bigger eyes, not to mention mouths big of Staffa (which has similar rock formations). -
August Newsletter
PRESIDENT’S We need to discuss our plans to MESSAGE hold a CAV Annual General Meeting later in 2020 with the ‘Dydh da’ (‘G’day’), help of ‘Zoom’ and the use of proxies. I hope this CORNISH ASSOCIATION Newsletter finds Some friends and former OF you well. colleagues have advised me that VICTORIA, INC. This is our August CAV other similarly incorporated Newsletter for 2020, yet we organizations like ours in Victoria NEWSLETTER haven’t met together since are using this approach. No. 134 February! Given the 40-minute time limit (‘Zoom’ is free for the first 40 AUGUST 2020 As we all know we are now in minutes), we might have to limit ‘lockdown’ once again here in those who, like me, tend to be Corporation Reg. No. A0008264A Melbourne and we are doing our verbose. best to cope with life under Now you’re smiling aren’t you? restrictions put in place to help For us there are some issues slow the spread of the surrounding this and how it might coronavirus (COVID-19). work in practice. CONTENTS I think that ‘social distancing’ will As a result I believe it may be with us for some time. require us to re-visit our President’s Report pp 1 & 3 As I write this it has just been procedures before our next announced that people living in AGM in 2021. Notices for Members p 2 metropolitan Melbourne and Of course we have plenty of time Mitchell Shire will now be to review these if we need to. Thanks, Special Awards and new required to wear face masks members p 3 outside their home, to protect What we need to focus on now against the coronavirus. -
Tam Kernewek
Tam Kernewek “ A bit of Cornish” Volume 31 Issue 1 Spring 2013 The Electronic Age See Living Color! If you receive your Tam Kernewek electronically, by e-mail, you receive a much livelier product. The photos are in color and show things as they really are. Color photos give the newsletter more punch and verve, the color making it come alive Save Money! Printing and mailing four issues of TK to each member of the Cornish American Heritage Society costs over $10 per member. That leaves practically nothing of our dues for any of the other expenses of running CAHS. Save Time! TK will arrive in you inbox just seconds after it is sent. You will not have to wait for the printed edition to be collated, folded, fastened, labeled, stamped and mailed. You will not have to wait the three days to two weeks it takes to arrive in your mailbox. And it will arrive in pristine shape without the tears or wrinkles that are inevi- table when it goes through the postal system. Save Trees! For the environmentalists among us, it is important that the electronic version of TK uses no paper and no ink and therefore destroys no trees or other precious resources. Save Space! Printed newsletters do take up space. And I would never think of throwing one out! For those of you who read it and recycle it, space is not a problem. But, after collecting the pages of TK since 1983 as I have, space be- comes a real concern. With an electronic copy received through email, you just store it in your TK folder and it takes no space. -
Opened the Casement, and Beheld Both of the Giants Coming Together
H I STHE T O R Y O F J A C K T H E GIANT-KILLER LONDONPUBLISHED BY JACK THE GIANT-KILLER. IN the reign of King Arthur, near to the Land’s End of England, in the county of Cornwall, lived a worthy farmer, who had a son named Jack. He was brisk, and of read y wit, so whatever he could not perform by force and strength, he completed by wit and policy ; never was any person heard of that could worst him ; for the very learned he baffled b y his cunning and sharp inventions. In those days the Mount of Cornwall, was kept by a large Giant of eighteen feet high, and about three yards in circum ference, and of a fierce and grim countenance, the terror of the neighbouring towns and villages. His habitation was in a cave, in the midst of the mount ; never would he suffer any living creature to keep near him. His feeding was on other men’s cattle, which often were his prey ; for when he wanted food, he would wade over to the main land, where he would well furnish himself with what he could find, for the people at his approach would all forsake their habitations. Then would he seize their cows and oxen at once, and as for their ducks and geese, he would tie them round his waist like a bunch of candles. This he practised for many years, so that a great part of the county of Cornwall was much impoverished by him. -
Boundary Commission for England Proceedings At
BOUNDARY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND PROCEEDINGS AT THE 2018 REVIEW OF PARLIAMENTARY CONSTITUENCIES IN ENGLAND HELD AT NEW COUNTY HALL TREYEW ROAD, TRURO, TR1 3AY ON FRIDAY 11 NOVEMBER 2016 DAY TWO Before: Ms Anita Bickerdike, The Lead Assistant Commissioner ______________________________ Transcribed from audio by W B Gurney & Sons LLP 83 Victoria Street, London SW1H 0HW Telephone Number: 0203 585 4721/22 ______________________________ THE LEAD ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER: Good morning, welcome to day two of the public inquiry into the Boundary Commission’s initial proposals for the new parliamentary constituency boundaries in the South West region. We do have a speaker who was booked to speak at nine o’clock. However, yesterday he cancelled that slot, so perhaps I can check whether or not that speaker is here: Mr Michael Chappell? (No response). On that basis our next speaker is booked at 9.30, so I will adjourn the hearing until 9.30. After a short break Time Noted: 9.30 am THE LEAD ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome back to day two of the public hearing into the initial proposals of the Boundary Commission for the new parliamentary constituencies in the South West region. My name is Anita Bickerdike and I am an Assistant Commissioner with the Boundary Commission and my role is to come and listen to what people locally want to come and tell me and then, with my fellow Commissioner, to actually look at those oral representations, together with any written representations that are received during the consultation period. Once all those consultations have been concluded, then my job with my Assistant Commissioner, as I have indicated, is to send a report to the Commissioners to see whether or not the initial proposals need to be amended. -
Comparative–Contrastive Analyze of Anthropomorphic Figures Of
International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Culture Available online at https://sloap.org/journals/index.php/ijllc/ Vol. 6, No. 1, January 2020, pages: 24-31 ISSN: 2455-8028 https://doi.org/10.21744/ijllc.v6n1.810 Comparative – Contrastive Analyze of Anthropomorphic Figures of Evil in English and Georgian Languages Tamar Shiukashvili a Article history: Abstract The article deals with the research of anthropomorphic figures which is Received: 27 September 2019 related to the evil in folk tales. According to this our aims to pursue a Accepted: 09November 2019 typological analysis of the English and Georgian folk tales Our research Published: 09 January 2020 based on Georgian and English folk tales of XX-XIX centuries as the object of research – Georgian folk tales the publishing house “Nakaduli”, Tbilisi 1976 year and the English folk tales collected by Joseph Jacobs http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/. The articles aimed to make a comparative-contrastive study of the anthropomorphic figures that are shown Keywords: as evil faces in Georgian and English folk tales and it was discovered that anthropomorphic figures; throughout the study more similarities than differences were observed in both anthropomorphism; of the collections. It was also observed that Georgian and English folk tales folk tales; represent universals expressed with the anthropomorphic figures of evil and mythology; deal with similar cultures. The article argues that anthropomorphic figures of typological analyses; evil in these folk tales result from the feeling of envy, jealousy, greed, dread or the struggle for power and superiority. International journal of linguistics, literature and culture © 2020. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/). -
PZ Fishing Boats Boat Name Boat Details Aaltje Adriaantje PZ 198 Aaltje Adriaantje
PZ Fishing Boats Boat Name Boat Details Aaltje Adriaantje PZ 198 Aaltje Adriaantje. Beam Trawler. Steel hull. 28.6m long, 700hp Stork engine, built 1967. (Smart:29 says it was built in Holland in 1970). Named by previous owners after two little Dutch girls. Stevenson Fleet 2001. List: 431 Chappell; 3660 Lenton. References: Stevenson & Perry 2001:143. NA 80, 3642. Model boat made by Donald Smith & Son, Kintore, Aberdeen andf lent by Billy Stevenson to show alongside the exhibition, Carl Cheng Ghost Ships at Newlyn Art Gallery 11/10/1997-8/11/1997. Abner (Missing PZ No) Abner. Crew 1851 census: William Jacko, M, 33 (Master); Nicholas Willis, M, 29; John Blewet, M, 40; John Lobb, U, 54; William Wilkins, U, 22; Benjamin Downing, U, 34; James Pollard, U,34. Reference: 1851 census. ABS PZ 203 ABS. Beam Trawler. Steel hull. 25.28 long, 535 Deutz engine. Built 1960 as A490 Camperdown. Renamed PZ 203 ABS in 1969. Initials of Anthony Bryan Stevenson. In 2007 renamed TO50 Emma Louise Stevenson Fleet 2001. List: 431 Chappell; 3660 Lenton. References: Perry 2001:143. NA 1133 (photo). Acacia PZ 319 Acacia. Name changed from PZ 319 Girl Lilian to PZ 319 Acacia. Ben Ridge Jn bought PZ319 Acacia previously PZ 319 Girl Lilian in 1936. Kerney 'Cake' Payne was skipper. Commandeered by the Admiralty for the duration of WW2. Owner Richard Henry Richards who sailed it with Henry and Freddy Richards (JF). The Richards were kin of Jenny Fitton and the family have a painting of this boat. See 113. Operating at Newlyn around 1932 and later.