The Nineteenth Century (1800- 1900)
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Edmund Blunden
Edmund Blunden: An Inventory of His Papers at the Harry Ransom Center Descriptive Summary Creator: Blunden, Edmund, 1896-1974 Title: Edmund Blunden Papers Dates: 1909-1970, undated Extent: 95 boxes (39.90 linear feet), 10 galley folders (gf), 7 oversize folders (osf) Abstract: World War I British poet and English professor Edmund Blunden’s papers consist almost entirely of materials acquired from him during his lifetime. Nearly all of Blunden’s poetry, fiction, and nonfiction is represented in the Works series. Among the most extensive correspondences are those of fellow poet Siegfried Sassoon, publisher Rupert Hart-Davis, second wife Sylva Norman, and literary agent A. D. Peters. Four indexes (for Works, Letters, Recipients, and Miscellaneous) follow the Container List and provide more detailed access to the contents of these papers. Call Number: Manuscript Collection MS-0426 Language: The bulk of the collection is in English , with some materials in Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Spanish, and Welsh. Access: Open for research. Researchers must create an online Research Account and agree to the Materials Use Policy before using archival materials. Use Policies: Ransom Center collections may contain material with sensitive or confidential information that is protected under federal or state right to privacy laws and regulations. Researchers are advised that the disclosure of certain information pertaining to identifiable living individuals represented in the collections without the consent of those individuals may have legal ramifications (e.g., a cause of action under common law for invasion of privacy may arise if facts concerning an individual's private life are published that would be deemed highly offensive to a reasonable person) for which the Ransom Center and The University of Texas at Austin assume no responsibility. -
SPYCATCHER by PETER WRIGHT with Paul Greengrass WILLIAM
SPYCATCHER by PETER WRIGHT with Paul Greengrass WILLIAM HEINEMANN: AUSTRALIA First published in 1987 by HEINEMANN PUBLISHERS AUSTRALIA (A division of Octopus Publishing Group/Australia Pty Ltd) 85 Abinger Street, Richmond, Victoria, 3121. Copyright (c) 1987 by Peter Wright ISBN 0-85561-166-9 All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher. TO MY WIFE LOIS Prologue For years I had wondered what the last day would be like. In January 1976 after two decades in the top echelons of the British Security Service, MI5, it was time to rejoin the real world. I emerged for the final time from Euston Road tube station. The winter sun shone brightly as I made my way down Gower Street toward Trafalgar Square. Fifty yards on I turned into the unmarked entrance to an anonymous office block. Tucked between an art college and a hospital stood the unlikely headquarters of British Counterespionage. I showed my pass to the policeman standing discreetly in the reception alcove and took one of the specially programmed lifts which carry senior officers to the sixth-floor inner sanctum. I walked silently down the corridor to my room next to the Director-General's suite. The offices were quiet. Far below I could hear the rumble of tube trains carrying commuters to the West End. I unlocked my door. In front of me stood the essential tools of the intelligence officer’s trade - a desk, two telephones, one scrambled for outside calls, and to one side a large green metal safe with an oversized combination lock on the front. -
Howard J. Garber Letter Collection This Collection Was the Gift of Howard J
Howard J. Garber Letter Collection This collection was the gift of Howard J. Garber to Case Western Reserve University from 1979 to 1993. Dr. Howard Garber, who donated the materials in the Howard J. Garber Manuscript Collection, is a former Clevelander and alumnus of Case Western Reserve University. Between 1979 and 1993, Dr. Garber donated over 2,000 autograph letters, documents and books to the Department of Special Collections. Dr. Garber's interest in history, particularly British royalty led to his affinity for collecting manuscripts. The collection focuses primarily on political, historical and literary figures in Great Britain and includes signatures of all the Prime Ministers and First Lords of the Treasury. Many interesting items can be found in the collection, including letters from Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Robert Browning Thomas Hardy, Queen Victoria, Prince Albert, King George III, and Virginia Woolf. Descriptions of the Garber Collection books containing autographs and tipped-in letters can be found in the online catalog. Box 1 [oversize location noted in description] Abbott, Charles (1762-1832) English Jurist. • ALS, 1 p., n.d., n.p., to ? A'Beckett, Gilbert A. (1811-1856) Comic Writer. • ALS, 3p., April 7, 1848, Mount Temple, to Morris Barnett. Abercrombie, Lascelles. (1881-1938) Poet and Literary Critic. • A.L.S., 1 p., March 5, n.y., Sheffield, to M----? & Hughes. Aberdeen, George Hamilton Gordon (1784-1860) British Prime Minister. • ALS, 1 p., June 8, 1827, n.p., to Augustous John Fischer. • ANS, 1 p., August 9, 1839, n.p., to Mr. Wright. • ALS, 1 p., January 10, 1853, London, to Cosmos Innes. -
Adroddiad Blynyddol / Annual Report 1974-75
ADRODDIAD BLYNYDDOL / ANNUAL REPORT 1974-75 WILLIAM GRIFFITHS 1975001 Ffynhonnell / Source The late Miss A G Jones, M.A., Aberaeron, per Miss Olive M Jones, Aberaeron. Blwyddyn / Year Adroddiad Blynyddol / Annual Report 1974-75 Disgrifiad / Description Correspondence, journals, diaries, etc., of Rev William Griffiths (1788-1861), Calvinistic Methodist minister in Gower, co. Glamorgan, including journals for the years 1816-19, 1822-7 (numbered vol. 5), 1827-34 (vol. 6), 1834-42 (vol. 7), 1842-7 (vol. 8), and 1848-55 (vol. 9) (for vol. 4, 1819-22, see Calvinistic Methodist Archives 8710); printed diaries 1837; 1943-5; 1850-1 (very few entries); a `day book' or diary, 1854-61, with additional entries at the end by his son also named William Griffiths; a note-book containing autobiographical data compiled at intervals ? up to 1860; thirteen letters, 1825-6, addressed by him to his future wife Miss A. G. Jones, and one letter, 1826, written by him to his wife; twenty-five miscellaneous letters, 1840-60 and undated, received by him; thirty letters, 1846-9 and undated, received by him and his wife from their son William; printed copies of reports and notices of general meetings of the Glamorganshire Banking Company, 1845-58, addressed to him; bundles of sermon notes, 1817-61 ; two note-books containing a record of subscriptions towards the support of the ministry at Bethesda Church, Gower, 1838-43; a manuscript volume described on the title-page as `A Series of Questions and Answers on the more prominent doctrines of the Holy Bible written for the use of the Sabbath Schools belonging to Burry Green and Cherriton Chaples (sic) by Rev. -
Conference About Succession
A CONFERENCE ABOUT THE NEXT SUCCESSION 1 ________________________________________________________________________ SUMMARY: The document below is a modern-spelling edition of A Conference about the Next Succession to the Crown of England. The frame story of A Conference is a fictitious conference in Amsterdam in the spring of 1593, fully described in the Preface to Part I. In that fictitious frame story, the principal speakers are two lawyers, the one an expert in the civil law of England, the other an expert in the common law. This frame story in itself makes it clear that the author himself had a legal background. The civil lawyer puts forward his arguments in Part I (or rather, the author of A Conference puts forward his arguments through the mouth of the fictitious civil lawyer). In Part II, it is the turn of the fictitious expert in the common law. The title page promises that ‘a new & perfect arbour or genealogy of the descents of all the Kings and Princes of England from the Conquest unto this day’ can be found at the end of the tract whereby the claims of all the current pretenders to the English crown will be made plain. This ‘arbour’ or genealogy may have been based on the work of Francis Peto (see below, and TNA SP 70/137, ff. 319-21). Unfortunately this promise is not fulfilled. The ‘arbour or genealogy’ does not appear, suggesting that the author of A Conference did not play a role in the book’s publication. A Conference is a well organized and well thought out presentation. -
Ibmtnewsletter
IBMT Newsletter www.international-brigades.org.uk Issue 41 / 1-2016 INTERNATIONAL BRIGADE MEMORIAL TRUST Saturda y 12 March 2016 from 11am-5pm at the Manchester Conference Centre, 78 Sackville St, Manchester M1 3BB Professor Paul Preston Fees and booking WOMEN Pasionaria of steel: the life of G £15 including buffet lunch (payment Dolores Ibárruri by 28 February) & G £10 entrance only (payment on Professor Helen Graham the day) THE G Send cheques payable to IBMT SPANI SH Wars of development: to: Charles Jepson, Aysgaard, Margaret Michaelis’s images Beardwood Brow, Blackburn BB2 7AT of 1930s Barcelona (no receipts will be sent); or pay online via PayPal: [www.international- CIVIL WAR Dr Sylv ia Mart in brigades.org.uk/catalog/ Aileen Palmer and the British conferencestalks]; queries: [clarioncc International Brigade Medical Unit: ‘our secretary, @yahoo. co.uk] 01254 51302 Memorial Trust our interpreter, our dogsbody’ Further information 2016 Len Crome Dr Linda Palfreeman G Dolores Long: [doloreslong@ fastmail. fm] 0161 226 2013 Memorial Conference Fernanda Jacobsen: G Hilary Jones: [hilary.m.jones@ www.international-brigades.org.uk Samaritan or spy? btinternet.com] 01625 527 540 NEWS r e e t a M l l a h s r a M : o t o h p r e v o C Issue 41 / 1-2016 Cover story Stained glass window unveiled in Belfast City Hall: pages 11-12 3-6 & 8 News Including report from the IBMT’s Annual General Meeting in Aberdeen 7 Letter from Spain Justin Byrne writes from Madrid GLASGOW GATHERING: Anti-fascist campaigners from Hope not Hate held a commemoration for the International 9-10 Secretarial notes Brigades on 19 September at the Pasionaria memorial overlooking the Clyde in Glasgow. -
Club, Community and Coal: a Case Study of Dunfermline Athletic Football Club in the 1980S James Canavan MA Sports History and Cu
Club, Community and Coal: A Case Study of Dunfermline Athletic Football Club in the 1980s James Canavan MA Sports History and Culture De Montfort University August, 2015 Acknowledgements Over the past year I have been overwhelmed by the support and guidance by many people associated with Dunfermline Athletic Football Club. From an initial, exploratory post on fans’ forum dafc.net in late July, 2014, I was immediately contacted by Donald Adamson and Jason Barber, who offered to help. Through Jason I was able to interview Jim Leishman and Ian Westwater, and Donald provided me with a high level of information about the club, in addition to the links with coal mining. I cannot thank Donald and Jason enough for their assistance. The following people have also provided help and information along the way: Gordon Baird, Alan Bairner, Kenny Cowan, Joe Graham, Jim Leishman, Duncan Simpson, John Simpson, and Ian Westwater. Every single person is a credit to themselves and to Dunfermline Athletic Football Club for giving up their free time to help me with this dissertation. I would also like to apologise to the staff at the temporary library at St Margaret’s House for my inability to work the microfiche readers, and to thank them for their help. At DMU, Matt Taylor has been very helpful in terms of the structure of the dissertation, and Neil Carter provided initial guidance. Lastly, I would like to thank my Father, Frank Canavan, for being a constant inspiration to complete this project. Since his death in 2009, I have visited Dunfermline every year, taking in a Pars match as a personal tribute. -
The Life-Boat, Or
THE LIFE-BOAT, OR JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION. [PmCB 6n. VOL. V.—No. 52.] APEIL IST, 1864. ISSUED QDiETEKLT. AT the Annual General Meeting of the EOYAL NATIONAL LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION held at the London Tavern, on Tuesday, the 15th day of March, 1864, the Eight Honourable Sir JOHN S. PAKINGTON, Bart., G.C.B., M.P., in the Chair, The following Eeport of the Committee was read :— boats of inferior description, or obsolete cha- ANNUAL REPORT. racter, by others embodying all the latest ON this the fortieth anniversary of the improvements. ROYAL NATIONAL LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION, To one of those gifts the Committee have the. Committee have the satisfaction to pre- much pleasure in drawing especial attention, sent to its supporters and to the British not alone on account of its large amount, people, the Annual Report of their pro- but as one springing from the very highest ceedings—once more have they to place order of motives on the part of a commer- on record the success which, with the cial firm, and which cannot but be appre- Divine blessing, has rested on their labours, ciated in this great mart of commerce, while and to express their gratitude to a liberal it is invested with additional interest as pro- public for its continued support. ceeding from members of one of the most In their last Annual Statement, the Com- highly respected native communities amongst mittee had to report a falling off in the our fellow-subjects in India. The splendid previous year's income, as compared with gift to which they allude, is that of 2,0001. -
What Do Yeats and the Citadel Have in Common?
Against the Grain Volume 28 | Issue 5 Article 33 2016 Bet You Missed It--What Do Yeats and The itC adel Have in Common? Bruce Strauch The Citadel, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/atg Part of the Library and Information Science Commons Recommended Citation Strauch, Bruce (2016) "Bet You Missed It--What Do Yeats and The itC adel Have in Common?," Against the Grain: Vol. 28: Iss. 5, Article 33. DOI: https://doi.org/10.7771/2380-176X.7530 This document has been made available through Purdue e-Pubs, a service of the Purdue University Libraries. Please contact [email protected] for additional information. Bet You Missed It Press Clippings — In the News — Carefully Selected by Your Crack Staff of News Sleuths Column Editor: Bruce Strauch (The Citadel) Editor’s Note: Hey, are y’all reading this? If you know of an article that should be called to Against the Grain’s attention ... send an email to <[email protected]>. We’re listening! — KS ENDURING QUOTABILITY BOOK DEFICIT GUILT by Bruce Strauch (The Citadel) by Bruce Strauch (The Citadel) In 1919, Yeats wrote his chilling poem “The Second Coming.” And Of course no one’s actually read Ulysses. It just sits on the shelf. yes, you know it because someone is constantly quoting from it. “And what But you feel bad about it. What to do? rought beast, its hour come round at last, Slouches towards Bethelehem to Curtis Sittenfeld wrote the 2016 best-selling Eligible — a retell- be born?” “The centre cannot hold.” “Things fall apart.” “The best lack ing of Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. -
THE NEW OXFORD BOOK of AUSTRALIAN VERSE Chosen by Les a Murray
THE NEW OXFORD BOOK OF AUSTRALIAN VERSE Chosen by Les A Murray Melbourne Oxford University Press Oxford Auckland New York CONTENTS Foreword xxi Sam Woolagoodjah Lalai (Dreamtime) 1 Barron Field (1786-1846) The Kangaroo 6 Richard Whately (1787-1863) There is a Place in Distant Seas 7 Anonymous A Hot Day in Sydney 8 The Exile of Erin 11 Hey Boys' Up Go We' 12 The Lime juice Tub 13 John Dunmore Lang (1799-1878) Colonial Nomenclature 14 Anonymous Van Diemen s Land 15 The Convicts Rum Song 16 Hail South A ustraha' 16 The Female Transport 17 The Lass m the Female Factory 18 Francis MacNamara (Frank the Poet) (b 181P) A petition from the chain gang 19 For the Company underground 22 A Convict s Tour to Hell 23 Robert Lowe (1811-1892) Songs of the Squatters I and II 28 Charles Harpur (1813-1868) A Basket of Summer Fruit 31 Wellington 32 A Flight of Wild Ducks 33 Anonymous The Song of the Transportationist 34 Children s Ball bouncing Song 35 Louisa Meredith (1812-1895) Tasmanian Scenes 36 Aboriginal Songs from the 1850s Kilaben Bay song (Awabakal) 36 Women s rondo (Awabakal) 37 CONTENTS Two tongue pointing (satirical) songs (Kamilarot) 38 The drunk man (Wolaroi) 38 Anonymous Whaler s Rhyme 38 The Diggms oh 39 WilhamW Coxon (') The Flash Colonial Barman 41 Charles R Thatcher (1831-1882) Dick Bnggs from Australia 42 Taking the Census 45 Moggy s Wedding 46 Anonymous The Banks of the Condamme 48 The Stnngybark Cockatoo 49 Henry Kendall (1839-1882) Bell birds 50 Beyond Kerguelen 51 Anonymous John Gilbert was a Bushranger 53 Jack McGuire (>) The Streets -
James Kenneth Stephen - Poems
Classic Poetry Series James Kenneth Stephen - poems - Publication Date: 2012 Publisher: Poemhunter.com - The World's Poetry Archive James Kenneth Stephen(25 February 1859 – 3 February 1892) James Kenneth Stephen was an English poet, and tutor to Prince Albert Victor, eldest son of Albert Edward, Prince of Wales. <b>Early Life</b> Stephen was the second son of Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, barrister-at-law, and his wife Mary Richenda Cunningham. James Kenneth Stephen was known as 'Jem' among his family and close friends; he was first-cousin to Virginia Woolf (née Stephen). He was a King's Scholar at Eton, where he proved to be a highly competent player of the Eton Wall Game; and then went up to King's College, Cambridge, again as a King's Scholar. In the Michaelmas term of 1880, he was President of the Cambridge Union Society. In 1883 he became tutor to Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale, and was made a Fellow of King's College in 1885. He was a renowned intellectual; and it was said that he spoke in a pedantic, but highly articulate and entertaining manner. <b>Poetry</b> Stephen became a published poet, his work being identified by the initials J. K. S. His collections of poems Lapsus Calami and Quo Musa Tendis were both published in 1891. <a href="http://www.poemhunter.com/rudyard- kipling/">Rudyard Kipling</a> called him "that genius" and told how he "dealt with Haggard and me in some stanzas which I would have given much to have written myself". -
Offer Regional School Remedy
Wertlier V; • Bain ending during the day; fa the Red Baak putt* let* J ^** high In the 5fa. Cloudy to- nlgbt; tow in the 40s. Partly after 6 p. ro- Wednesday*.awl ' J«-, - cloudy tomorrow; Ugh In the Friday*, Bed Bank'*'two ibop. 50s. See page 2. ping nights. An Independent Newspaper Under Same Ownership 4^ Since 1878 Y C A R R PAGE 0NE VOLUME 82, NO. 164 Inued Dally. Mandiy through Friday, entered as Second Class Mailer RED BANK, N. J., THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1960 7c PER COPY ' 3fo p E R WEE K at the Post Otl!c« at Red Bank. N. J.. under the Act ol March 3. 1810. Four Year Estimate Offer Regional On Matawan School To Avoid Triple Sessions, Using School Remedy Auditorium, Cafeteria: Dolan May Prevent AF Plane MATAWAN - "It will be at least four years before Matawan Separation has additional school'facilities," It's Official: stated Harold J. Dolan, presi- Ditched, dent of the Board of Education, In Matawan in a progress report to the Cit- School Head izens Council for Better Schools FREEHOLD — "This so- at a meeting Tuesday night. To Resign lution appears almost too 3 Perish Mr. Dolan said that at a con- good to be true." ference which the board had with FREEHOLD — Dr. Robert B. PATRICK AIR FORCE BASE. the Borough Council, Township Norn's announced at a press con- That was the comment Fla. (AP)—An Air Force tanker Committee, the architects, and ference yesterday afternoon that last night by Matawan with trouble in two of its four consultant Dr.