Linley Sambourne's Diary 1898
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St Martin's Church East Woodhay Index, Catalogue and Condition Of
ST MARTIN’S CHURCH EAST WOODHAY INDEX, CATALOGUE AND CONDITION OF MEMORIAL AND OTHER INSCRIPTIONS 1546-2007 Prepared by Graham Heald East Woodhay Local History Society 2008 Developed from the 1987 Catalogue prepared by A C Colpus, P W Cooper and G G Cooper Hampshire Genealogical Society An electronic copy of this document is available on the Church website www.hantsweb.gov.uk/stmartinschurch First issue: June 2005 Updated and minor corrections: February 2008 St Martin’s Church, East Woodhay Index, Catalogue and Condition of Memorial Inscriptions, 1546 - 2007 CONTENTS Page Abbreviations 1 Plan of Memorial Locations 2 Index 3 Catalogue of Inscriptions and Condition Churchyard, Zone A 11 Churchyard, Zone B 12 Churchyard, Zone C 15 Churchyard, Zone D 28 Churchyard, Zone E 29 Churchyard, Zone F 39 Churchyard, Zone G 43 Church, East Window 45 Church, North Wall (NW) 45 Church, South Wall (SW) 48 Church, West Wall (WW) 50 Church, Central Aisle (CA) 50 Church, South Aisle (SA) 50 Pulpit, Organ and Porch 51 Memorials located out of position (M) 51 Memorials previously recorded but not located (X) 52 The Stained Glass Windows of St Martin’s Church 53 St Martin’s Church, East Woodhay Index, Catalogue and Condition of Memorial Inscriptions, 1546 - 2007 ABBREVIATIONS Form of Memorial CH Cross over Headstone CP Cross over Plinth DFS Double Footstone DHS Double Headstone FS Footstone HS Headstone K Kerb (no inscription) Kerb KR Kerb and Rail (no inscription) PC Prostrate Cross Plinth Slab Slab (typically 2000mm x 1000mm) SS Small Slab (typically 500mm -
The Magic Mushroom Growers Guide Version 3.2 Updated 10-02-96
The Magic Mushroom Growers Guide Version 3.2 Updated 10-02-96 This document provides complete directions for cultivating psilocybin mushrooms in your home. The strain this guide is intended to help you grow is Psilocybe cubensis (Amazonian strain) mushrooms. It is the intent of this document to enable the first time grower to succeed at a minimal cost and with a minimal amount of effort. This growing guide is the only reference you will need. After a person has completed the entire cycle successfully, later generations of mushrooms can be grown with even less cost and effort. The initial cash outlay will be well under $100 for a fully automated shroom factory. Subsequent crops can be produced for several dollars with expected yields of several ounces of dried mushrooms. What has changed since version 3.1 Following is a list of changes made to the document. • Version number was changed from 3.1 to 3.2 • Change pictures in opening. • Suggest ways to get help and provide PGP public key for private messages • Poor Man's terrarium setup. • Bulk growing. • Cris Clays email address and such. • Link to http://www.xs4all.nl/~psee/ as a spore seller. • No more packing of the substrate. • Vacuum cleaner instead of hair dryer. • Link to PF's pages. • Timer stuff. • Arrowhead Mills no longer sells brown rice flour as a mail order item. • Caution about jars sitting flat in boiling pan. • Low humidity cap appearance • Sealing a cake in a jar to reduce contamination risk when growing for spores. • Changing plates after start of spore print for lower contamination risk. -
SIR ARTHUR SULLIVAN: Life-Story, Letters, and Reminiscences
This is a reproduction of a library book that was digitized by Google as part of an ongoing effort to preserve the information in books and make it universally accessible. https://books.google.com SirArthurSullivan ArthurLawrence,BenjaminWilliamFindon,WilfredBendall \ SIR ARTHUR SULLIVAN: Life-Story, Letters, and Reminiscences. From the Portrait Pruntfd w 1888 hv Sir John Millais. !\i;tn;;;i*(.vnce$. i-\ !i. W. i ind- i a. 1 V/:!f ;d B'-:.!.i;:. SIR ARTHUR SULLIVAN : Life-Story, Letters, and Reminiscences. By Arthur Lawrence. With Critique by B. W. Findon, and Bibliography by Wilfrid Bendall. London James Bowden 10 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, W.C. 1899 /^HARVARD^ UNIVERSITY LIBRARY NOV 5 1956 PREFACE It is of importance to Sir Arthur Sullivan and myself that I should explain how this book came to be written. Averse as Sir Arthur is to the " interview " in journalism, I could not resist the temptation to ask him to let me do something of the sort when I first had the pleasure of meeting ^ him — not in regard to journalistic matters — some years ago. That permission was most genially , granted, and the little chat which I had with J him then, in regard to the opera which he was writing, appeared in The World. Subsequent conversations which I was privileged to have with Sir Arthur, and the fact that there was nothing procurable in book form concerning our greatest and most popular composer — save an interesting little monograph which formed part of a small volume published some years ago on English viii PREFACE Musicians by Mr. -
A Room of His Own: a Literary-Cultural Study of Victorian Clubland
&A Room of His Own A Literary-Cultural Study of Victorian Clubland B ARBARA BLACK ohio university press • athens Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments ix Prologue 1 Introduction The Man in the Club Window 5 Chapter 1 A Night at the Club 33 Chapter 2 Conduct Befitting a Gentleman Mid-Victorian Clubdom and the Novel 88 Chapter 3 Clubland’s Special Correspondents 112 Chapter 4 Membership Has Its Privileges The Imperial Clubman at Home and Away 147 Chapter 5 The Pleasure of Your Company in Late-Victorian Pall Mall 175 Chapter 6 A World of Men An Elegy for Clubbability 201 Epilogue A Room of Her Own 219 Notes 239 Bibliography 277 Index 293 v Illustrations P.1. “The Guys Who Look Remarkably Alike Club,” by Hilgerdt, 2007 4 I.1. “The Man in the Club Window,” frontispiece for Hogg’s Habits of Good Society, 1859 13 I.2. Frequency of use of club and gentlemen’s club, 1800–2000 29 1.1. Travellers’ Pie recipe 35 1.2. Cotelettes de Mouton à la Reform recipe 35 1.3. Garrick Club Beefsteak dinner menu, 1890 36 1.4. Garrick Club dinner menu featuring turtle soup, 1899 37 1.5. Garrick Club dinner bill of James Christie, 1892 38 1.6. Garrick Club dinner bill of James Christie, 1891 39 1.7. Garrick Club dinner bill of Mr. Kemble, 1893 39 1.8. Illustrated Garrick Club house dinner menu, 1913 40 1.9. Garrick Club menu card (autographed), 1880 41 1.10. “The Smoking Room at the Club,” by Doyle, 1862 43 1.11. -
Andy Warhol: When Junkies Ruled the World
Nebula 2.2 , June 2005 Andy Warhol: When Junkies Ruled the World. By Michael Angelo Tata So when the doorbell rang the night before, it was Liza in a hat pulled down so nobody would recognize her, and she said to Halston, “Give me every drug you’ve got.” So he gave her a bottle of coke, a few sticks of marijuana, a Valium, four Quaaludes, and they were all wrapped in a tiny box, and then a little figure in a white hat came up on the stoop and kissed Halston, and it was Marty Scorsese, he’d been hiding around the corner, and then he and Liza went off to have their affair on all the drugs ( Diaries , Tuesday, January 3, 1978). Privileged Intake Of all the creatures who populate and punctuate Warhol’s worlds—drag queens, hustlers, movie stars, First Wives—the drug user and abuser retains a particular access to glamour. Existing along a continuum ranging from the occasional substance dilettante to the hard-core, raging junkie, the consumer of drugs preoccupies Warhol throughout the 60s, 70s and 80s. Their actions and habits fascinate him, his screens become the sacred place where their rituals are projected and packaged. While individual substance abusers fade from the limelight, as in the disappearance of Ondine shortly after the commercial success of The Chelsea Girls , the loss of status suffered by Brigid Polk in the 70s and 80s, or the fatal overdose of exemplary drug fiend Edie Sedgwick, the actual glamour of drugs remains, never giving up its allure. 1 Drugs survive the druggie, who exists merely as a vector for the 1 While Brigid Berlin continues to exert a crucial influence on Warhol’s work in the 70s and 80s—for example, The Philosophy of Andy Warhol , as detailed by Bob Colacello in the chapter “Paris (and Philosophy )”—her street cred. -
Why This? the Quarterly Newsletter of the University Club of Toronto
The quarterly newsletter of the University Club of Toronto September, 2016 Editor: Donald Rumball As the quartet’s residency coincides with their project to perform all of Beethoven’s string quartets, we are the beneficiaries of an extraordinary learning opportunity. Prior to each concert, the quartet introduces us to the music we are about to hear by playing extracts and illustrating how the piece is put together. They show us how experimental Beethoven was in his time, and how startlingly modern some of his work still sounds. We also get a sense of how the quartet functions as individual voices within the strict discipline of the string quartet idiom, giving credence to a comment often attributed to Goethe, “One hears four intelligent people conversing with one another, and believes one might learn something from their discourse.” Tapestry Opera We will continue to collaborate with Tapestry Opera, who presented two opera evenings last season: one featuring opera Diana Wiley introducing the New Orford String Quartet stars mezzo-soprano Krisztina Szabó and tenor David at a concert held in the lounge Pomeroy, who filled the Library with thrilling sounds in an evening of best-loved opera arias; and the other a working Music programming @uct rehearsal with the full orchestra and cast of a brand new opera that was performed to critical acclaim a week later. By Diana Wiley Over the past few years, we have been building an exceptional Jazz evenings music program, with classical, opera and jazz concerts Part of the fun of the music evenings is that they include performed by world class musicians. -
Adventures and Letters by Richard Harding Davis
Adventures and Letters by Richard Harding Davis Adventures and Letters by Richard Harding Davis This etext was prepared with the use of Calera WordScan Plus 2.0 ADVENTURES AND LETTERS OF RICHARD HARDING DAVIS EDITED BY CHARLES BELMONT DAVIS CONTENTS CHAPTER I. THE EARLY DAYS II. COLLEGE DAYS III. FIRST NEWSPAPER EXPERIENCES IV. NEW YORK V. FIRST TRAVEL ARTICLES VI. THE MEDITERRANEAN AND PARIS page 1 / 485 VII. FIRST PLAYS VIII. CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA IX. MOSCOW, BUDAPEST, LONDON X. CAMPAIGNING IN CUBA, AND GREECE XI. THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR XII. THE BOER WAR XIII. THE SPANISH AND ENGLISH CORONATIONS XIV. THE JAPANESE-RUSSIAN WAR XV. MOUNT KISCO XVI. THE CONGO XVII. A LONDON WINTER XVIII. MILITARY MANOEUVRES XIX. VERA CRUZ AND THE GREAT WAR XX. THE LAST DAYS CHAPTER I THE EARLY DAYS Richard Harding Davis was born in Philadelphia on April 18, 1864, but, so far as memory serves me, his life and mine began together several years later in the three-story brick house on South Twenty-first Street, to which we had just moved. For more than forty years this was our home in all that the word implies, and I do not believe that there was ever a moment when it was not the predominating influence in page 2 / 485 Richard's life and in his work. As I learned in later years, the house had come into the possession of my father and mother after a period on their part of hard endeavor and unusual sacrifice. It was their ambition to add to this home not only the comforts and the beautiful inanimate things of life, but to create an atmosphere which would prove a constant help to those who lived under its roof--an inspiration to their children that should endure so long as they lived. -
California State University, Northridge Exploitation
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE EXPLOITATION, WOMEN AND WARHOL A thesis submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Art by Kathleen Frances Burke May 1986 The Thesis of Kathleen Frances Burke is approved: Louise Leyis, M.A. Dianne E. Irwin, Ph.D. r<Iary/ Kenan Ph.D. , Chair California State. University, Northridge ii DEDICATION This thesis is dedicated to Dr. Mary Kenon Breazeale, whose tireless efforts have brought it to fruition. She taught me to "see" and interpret art history in a different way, as a feminist, proving that women's perspectives need not always agree with more traditional views. In addition, I've learned that personal politics does not have to be sacrificed, or compartmentalized in my life, but that it can be joined with a professional career and scholarly discipline. My time as a graduate student with Dr. Breazeale has had a profound effect on my personal life and career, and will continue to do so whatever paths my life travels. For this I will always be grateful. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS In addition, I would like to acknowledge the other members of my committee: Louise Lewis and Dr. Dianne Irwin. They provided extensive editorial comments which helped me to express my ideas more clearly and succinctly. I would like to thank the six branches of the Glendale iii Public Library and their staffs, in particular: Virginia Barbieri, Claire Crandall, Fleur Osmanson, Nora Goldsmith, Cynthia Carr and Joseph Fuchs. They provided me with materials and research assistance for this project. I would also like to thank the members of my family. -
Reciprocal Club Listing Domestic List
Reciprocal Club Listing The Racquet Club of Philadelphia has reciprocity with over 200 clubs worldwide. Members of the club enjoy the extraordinary benefit of choosing from a plethora of four and five star accommodations and facilities in nearly every major city during business and personal travels. A Racquet Club member in search of overnight accommodations, dining reservations or use of athletic facilities must contact the visiting club directly. In order for a member to use reciprocal facilities, a letter of introduction must be sent by The Racquet Club. Letters of introduction are only issued to members in good financial standing with the club. After personal arrangements are made, please contact Devron Owens, the Front Desk Manager of The Racquet Club at [email protected] or (215) 735-1525 to request a letter of introduction. In order to expedite your request, please provide your name, membership number, the name of the reciprocal club, and the dates of your visit. Guests of members are not permitted to visit the reciprocal clubs unless accompanied by a Racquet Club member. The subsequent pages list both our domestic and international Reciprocal Clubs. Domestic List ALASKA EL PASO CLUB THE COLLIER ATHLETIC CAPTAIN COOK ATHLETIC CLUB CLUB THE UNIVERSITY CLUB OF DENVER THE ST. PETERSBURG THE PETROLEUM CLUB OF YACHT CLUB ANCHORAGE CONNECTICUT THE SURF CLUB THE GRADUATE CLUB ALABAMA THE UNIVERSITY CLUB OF ORLANDO THE CLUB THE HARTFORD CLUB THE UNIVERSITY CLUB OF ARIZONA THE NEW HAVEN LAWN TAMPA CLUB THE UNIVERSITY CLUB OF GEORGIA PHOENIX THE QUINNIPIACK CLUB THE CHATHAM CLUB CALIFORNIA DELAWARE THE CITY CLUB OF CALIFORNIA YACHT CLUB THE UNIVERSITY & WHIST CLUB BUCKHEAD CORAL CASINO BEACH & THE HEALY POINT CABANA CLUB DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COUNTRY CLUB THE LOS ANGELES THE ARMY AND NAVY THE PINNACLE CLUB ATHLETIC CLUB CLUB THE UNIVERSITY THE ARTS CLUB OF HAWAII ATHLETIC CLUB WASHINGTON THE HONOLULU CLUB THE CITY TAVERN CLUB THE SANTA BARBARA CLUB THE PACIFIC CLUB THE GEORGETOWN CLUB OF D.C. -
Gentlemen's Clubs in London
The Clubs THE Club is a nineteenth-century development of English social-life. It was first planted and raised on English soil. Its origin might be traced to the London coflee-houses which flourished in the reigns of William and Mary, and Queen Anne. Readers of Addison and Macaulay are suffciently familiar with their history. Boswell's "Johnson" has furnished us with a satisfactory definition of the word itself. And later authorities have liberally added to our stock of information regarding the conveniences of club-life; adding thereto not a little entertaining and instructive gossip as to be of the more distinguished of those who, from the latter part of the last century to the present day, have been among the recognised chiefs of London clubland. In no country, save perhaps in America, does the club flourish as it does in England. There is scarce a town of any importance within its borders that does not include among its more imposing-looking buildings, one or more erected, and dedicated, to club-purposes, political or social. But London itself is the club-capital, possessed of more stately edifices of this kind, affording at a moderate expense to individual members, more commodious, varied, and liberal domestic conveniences than any other city in the world. The curious visitor has but to seek the friendly aid of some hospitable member of the Carlton, the Reform, the Junior Carlton, the Army and Navy in one class; of the Constitutional and the National Liberal clubs in another, to satisfy himself of this: the four first-named located in Pall Mall, the last two in Northumberland Avenue. -
Integrity Table of Contents
Integrity Table of Contents WHAT IS INTEGRITY?: WEEK 1 ..............................................................................................2 Week 1 - BIBLE CLUB..................................................................................................................2 Week 1 - SKIT................................................................................................................................8 Week 1 - MEMORY VERSE .........................................................................................................9 Week 1 - PRACTICAL LIVING..................................................................................................11 Week 1 - READ-A-LOUD ...........................................................................................................14 Week 1 - CRAFTS........................................................................................................................15 Week 1 - RECREATION..............................................................................................................16 LIVING TRUTH: WEEK 2..........................................................................................................20 Week 2 – BIBLE CLUB...............................................................................................................20 Week 2 - SKIT..............................................................................................................................29 Week 2 - MEMORY VERSE .......................................................................................................31 -
EVELYN PAPERS (16Th Century-Early 20Th Century) (Add MS 78168-78693) Table of Contents
British Library: Western Manuscripts EVELYN PAPERS (16th century-Early 20th century) (Add MS 78168-78693) Table of Contents EVELYN PAPERS (16th century–Early 20th century) Key Details........................................................................................................................................ 1 Provenance........................................................................................................................................ 2 Add MS 78172–78178 Papers of the Earl of Leicester78172–78178. EVELYN PAPERS. Vols. V–XI. Papers of and relating to Robert......................................................................................................... 8 Add MS 78179–78185 Papers relating to the Royal Household. ([1547–1601])....................................... 16 Add MS 78187–78188 EVELYN PAPERS. Vols. XX, XXI. Horoscopes by John Wells, mathematician and Treasurer of the Stores at............................................................................................................ 25 Add MS 78189–78200 : Official Correspondence ([1631–1682]).......................................................... 27 Add MS 78201–78209 Papers relating to Diplomatic Service ([1575–1665])............................................ 35 Add MS 78210–78219 Privy Council Papers78210–78219. EVELYN PAPERS. Vols. XLIII–LII. Papers of Sir Richard Browne relating to.............................................................................................. 55 Add MS 78220–78224 Family and Personal Correspondence