Summer 2019 the FIRST FORTY-FIVE

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Summer 2019 the FIRST FORTY-FIVE From: Vol. 1, No. 1—Fall | Winter 1974 To: Vol. 45, Nos. 1 & 2—Spring | Summer 2019 THE FIRST FORTY-FIVE YEARS 1 2 1974, Vol. I, No. 1 – Fall / Winter Articles: * A Note on G. K.C. (Reginald Jebb) * An Everlasting Man (Maurice B. Reckitt) * Chesterton and the Man in the Forest (Leo A. Hetzler) * Chesterton on the Centenary of His Birth (Elena Guseva) * Chesterton as an Edwardian Novelist (John Batchelor) * To Gilbert K. Chesterton, a poem (Lewis Filewood) News & Comments: * Letter from Secretary of the Chesterton Society (1. Reviewing centenary year; 2. Announcing meeting of Chesterton Society) * Letter from Secretary of the H.G. Wells Society (Wants to exchange journals with the Chesterton Society) * Note about books: G.K. Chesterton: A Centenary Appraisal by John Sullivan; G. K. Chesterton by Lawrence J. Clipper; G. K. Chesterton: Critical Judgments by D.J. Conlon, and The Medievalism of Chesterton by P.J. Mroczkowski * Spode House Review announcement: publishing of the Chesterton Centenary Conference proceedings * Notes on Articles: “Some Notes on Chesterton” (CSL: The Bulletin of the New York C.S. Lewis Society, May 1974); “Chesterton on Dickens: The Legend and the Reality,” (Dickens Study Newsletter, June 1974); “Chesterton’s Colour Imagery in The Man Who Was Thursday” (Columbia University Pastel Essays Series, September 1974); “Chesterton, Viejo Amigo” (Incunable No. 297, September 1974-spanish); “Gilbert Keith Chesterton: A Fond Tribute” (Thought, XXVI, July 1974, Delhi, India) * Note on: Chesterton Centenary Conference at Notre Dame College of Education in Glasgow, by the Scottish Catholic Historical Association, September 1974 * Note on: Chesterton Conference at Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA, October 1974 * Letter from: John Fenlon Donnely, President of Donnely Mirrors on the Conference at Notre Dame College, Glasgow * Note on Adrian Cunningham (U. of Lancaster) writing about Distributism Notes on Contributors: *Reginald Jebb * Maurice B. Reckitt * Leo A. Hetzler * Elena Guseva * John Batchelor 3 1975, Vol. I, No. 2 – Spring / Summer Articles: * The Origins of Chesterton’s Medievalism (Marshall McLuhan) * The Failure of Distributism (Sir Henry Slesser) * The Formation of the Distributist Circle (Jay P. Corrin) * The Other Face: That Distributist Decade (Gregory Macdonald) * Some Centenary Celebrations in England (John Sullivan) * Le Retour de Don Paradox: Chesterton en France (François Riviere) * Chesterton in Poland (Andrzej Jaroszynski) * A Selection of Chesterton Quotations (James P. Breig) News & Comments: * Note on the Death of Maisie Ward * Announcement: Vice-Presidents of the Chesterton Society: Cardinal Flahiff (Archbishop of Winnipeg), The Rt. Hon. J. R. Cartwright (Judge of the Supreme Court), Prof. R. Kirk (Author and Columnist, Editor of the University Bookman), D. Collins (Chesterton’s Secretary and literary executrix), John Sullivan (Author), Maurice B. Reckitt (Author) * Notice of dates of Chesterton Society Meetings in: Boston, Chicago, Detroit/Windsor, Houston, Los Angeles, Montreal, New York, Rochester, San Diego, Saskatoon, Toronto and Vancouver * Note from Mrs. Freda Bayley, Chesterton Secretary (Detailing time with G.K.C.) * Note from Brother Alberic Gerard of Our Lady of Guadelupe Trappist Abbey in Lafayette, Oregan (Suggests future essays and poems to be published) * Note on “Chesterton, Madmen, and Madhouses” an essay by Prof. Russell Kirk * Note on publications printing articles: about G.K.C.: in Madrid, the journal Arbor (Nov. 1974), in the Mexican periodical Abside (volume 38, number 4, 1974), the Irish periodical The World (May 1974), and the Canadian journal Library Review (volume 24, number 5). *Note on article about Hilaire Belloc in Libertarian Forum (July 1974) * Note on new Chesterton books: (Two new editions of previously published, four new books) * Note: Readings from Chesterton at Shaw Festival by Tony van Bridge, August 1975 * Subscription Information: C.S. Lewis Society Bulletin * Subscription Information: Arnold Bennet Newsletter * Note on: Mr. Robert Knille on proposed book on Chesterton’s two trips to America * Note on upcoming publication of The Critical Judgements * Note on Spode House Review issue with proceedings of Chesterton Centenary Conference Letters: * “A ‘Contradiction’ in The Man Who Was Thursday” (Martin Gardiner) * “Chesterton the Journalist” (John McMaster) 4 * “Cecil Chesterton in America” (Rev. M.J. Oliver, C.S.B) Notes on Contributors: * James P. Breig * Jay P. Corrin * Andrezej Jaroszynski * Gregory MacDonald * Marshall McLuhan * François Riviere * The Right Honourable Sir Henry Slesser, Q.C. * John Sullivan, K.S.G. 5 1975-1976, Vol. II, No. 1 – Fall /Winter Chesterton Items: * Chesterton’s Notre Dame Poem: The Arena (G.K. Chesterton, Dedicated to the University of Notre Dame, Indiana) * Crooked (G.K. Chesterton, poem) * The Appeal of the Peers (G. K. Chesterton, poem) Articles: * The Humour of Chesterton (George Purnell) * A Lawyer’s Reading of Chesterton (John R. Cartwright) * Chesterton in Canada (Edmund J. McCorkell) * Chesterton at Notre Dame (John J. Connolly) * Chesterton’s Teen-Age Writings (Leo A. Hetzler) * Chesterton, Propaganda, and the Gregorian Heresy: Four New Chesterton Books (Denis Conlon) * Chesterton’s Polish Journalism (Wieslaw Toporowski) * G.K. Chesterton-Kai: The Chesterton Society in Japan (Kazumi Yamagata) * Chesterton Bibliography Continued (John Sullivan) * Another Look at “Chesterton’s Other Face”: Some Responses to Gregory Macdonald (Dudley Barker, Brocard Sewell, Patrick Cahill, Maurice B. Reckitt, G.C. Heseltine) News & Comments: * Announcement: Mr. Paul McGuire (Adelaide, Australia) as Vice-President of the Chesterton Society * Announcement: Meeting of the Chesterton Society in Saskatoon (marking official incorporation of the Society) * Announcement: Speakers of the West Coast meetings have been rescheduled * Announcement: Meeting of the New York Chesterton Society (Fordham University Feb. 21, 1976) * Report from the Chesterton Society in Canada Montreal Meeting * Reprint of report from Courier-Journal of Rochester on the Chesterton Society Meeting (June 11, 1975) * Report from the Chesterton Society Toronto Meeting, Detroit/Windsor Meeting and Boston Meeting (June 7, 1975) * Note: Colour Reproduction of Chesterton Window at U. of Notre Dame at Wilcox, SK * Report from the Chesterton Society Chicago Meeting * Report from Mr. Robert Knille on progress of research for book Chesterton in America * Announcement: Garry Wills, Ph.D. (Yale) as Vice-President of the Chesterton Society * Announcement: Mr. John Sullivan as President of the Chesterton Society * Notice: Increase of subscription rate to The Chesterton Review 6 * Note: Request for book collection for Top Meadow. Letters: * “Chesterton and the Present Difficulties of Catholics” (Charles Gorman) * “Chesterton’s First Book” (Joe Ratchford) Notes on Contributors: * John R. Cartwright * Denis Conlon * Senator John Connolly * Leo Hetzler * Edmund McCorkell * George Purnell * John Sullivan * Wieslaw Toporowski * Kazumi Yamagata 7 1976, Vol. II, No.2 – Spring / Summer Chesterton Items: * Quote (G.K. Chesterton, G.K.’s Weekly, November 23, 1933, poem) * Perfection (G.K. Chesterton, G.K.’s Weekly, November 16, 1933, poem) * Ballad of a Morbid Modern (G.K. Chesterton, G. K.’s Weekly, November, 1933, poem) * The Heritage of Wonder, The Two Kinds (G. K. Chesterton, G.K.’s Weekly, September 7, 1933, poem) Articles: * An Economist’s View of Chesterton (Colin Clark) * Revising the Black Legend (Jay P. Corrin) * Chesterton and T.S. Eliot (Russell Kirk) * Chesterton and W.B. Yeats: Vision, System and Rhetoric (David L. Derus) * Chesterton and Ibsen: A Misunderstanding (Vincent J. Balice) * Chesterton and Kipling: Brothers under the Skin (C. Fred MacRae) * Job and the Gargoyles: A Study of The Man Who Was Thursday (Karin Youngberg) * Formal Causality in Chesterton (Marshall McLuhan) * Chesterton in South America: What’s Wrong With the World Revisited (Mario Amadeo) * Chesterton Bibliography Continued (John Sullivan) * An Escape from The Steel Trap: Some Notes on the Distributist Settlement and Langenhoe (John Hawkswell) News & Comments: * Report on Operating Expenses of the Chesterton Society (May 1974 - June 1975) and Subscriber Information * Note on a previous seminar on Chesterton in Cracow, Poland * Report on the Chesterton Society Meeting New York (Prof. J. A. Quinn) * Announcement: Chesterton Review’s Editor’s Meeting (St. Thomas More College May 17- 20, 1976) * Chesterton Society Meeting, Rochester (May 27) * Chesterton Society Meeting Los Angeles and upcoming meetings in England, France and Poland (May 2) * Note on exhibition of St. Dominic’s Press Books * Note: Chesterton Review Articles: annotated and indexes in Historical Abstracts and America: History and Life * Notice from Northeast Victorian Studies Association in NY * Announcement of new journal: Four Decades * Announcement of three Chesterton letters from Mr. Frank A. Petta: “The Danger in Female Labour”, “Justice for the Jews” and Dickens and Little Bethel” 8 * Note from Belgium from Prof. Denis Conlon regarding delay in printing of collection of Chesterton Criticism * Note on book on Cecil Chesterton from Brocard Swell * Note from Liverpool on Distributism of the fifties and sixties from Mr. Anthony Cooney. Letters: * “Chesterton’s First Book” (John Sullivan) * “Chesterton in Vancouver” (E. Peter W. Nash, S.J.) * “The Arena” (Joseph A. Breig) Notes on Contributors: * Colin Clark * Jay Corrin * Karin Youngberg *
Recommended publications
  • National Council on the Humanities Minutes, No. 11-15
    Office of th8 General Counsel N ational Foundation on the Aria and the Humanities MINUTES OF THE ELEVENTH MEETING OF THE NATIONAL COUNCIL ON THE HUMANITIES Held Monday and Tuesday, February 17-18, 1969 U. S. Department of State Washington, D. C. Members present; Barnaby C. Keeney, Chairman Henry Haskell Jacob Avshalomov Mathilde Krim Edmund F. Ball Henry Allen Moe Robert T. Bower James Wm. Morgan *Germaine Br&e Ieoh Ming Pei Gerald F. Else Emmette W. Redford Emily Genauer Robert Ward Allan A. Glatthorn Alfred Wilhelmi Members absent: Kenneth B. Clark Charles E. Odegaard John M. Ehle Walter J. Ong Paul G. Horgan Eugene B. Power Albert William Levi John P. Roche Soia Mentschikoff Stephen J. Wright James Cuff O'Brien *Present Monday only - 2 - Guests present: *Mr. Harold Arberg, director, Arts and Humanities Program, U. S. Office of Education Dr. William Emerson, assistant to the president, Hollins College, Virginia Staff members present; Dr. James H. Blessing, director, Division of Fellowships and Stipends, and acting director, Division of Research and Publication, National Endowment for the Humanities Dr. S. Sydney Bradford, program officer, Division of Research and Publication, NEH Miss Kathleen Brady, director, Office of Grants, NEH Mr. C. Jack Conyers, director, Office of Planning and Analysis, NEH Mr. Wallace B. Edgerton, deputy chairman, NEH Mr. Gerald George, special assistant to the chairman, NEH Dr. Richard Hedrich, Director of Public Programs, NEH Dr. Herbert McArthur, Director of Education Programs, NEH Miss Nancy McCall, research assistant, Office of Planning and Analysis, NEH Mr. Richard McCarthy, assistant to the director, Office of Planning and Analysis, NEH Miss Laura Olson, Public Information Officer, NEH Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • London Calling: BBC External Services, Whitehall and the Cold War 1944- 57
    London calling: BBC external services, Whitehall and the cold war 1944- 57. Webb, Alban The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author For additional information about this publication click this link. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/jspui/handle/123456789/1577 Information about this research object was correct at the time of download; we occasionally make corrections to records, please therefore check the published record when citing. For more information contact [email protected] LONDON CALLING: SSC EXTERNAL SERVICES, WHITEHALL AND THE COLD WAR, 1944-57 ALBAN WEBB Queen Mary College, University of London A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of London for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D) 1 Declaration: The work presented in this thesis is my own. Signed: '~"\ ~~Ue6b Alban Webb Declaration: The work presented in this thesis is my own. Signed: Alban Webb ABSTRACT The Second World War had radically changed the focus of the BBC's overseas operation from providing an imperial service in English only, to that of a global broadcaster speaking to the world in over forty different languages. The end of that conflict saw the BBC's External Services, as they became known, re-engineered for a world at peace, but it was not long before splits in the international community caused the postwar geopolitical landscape to shift, plunging the world into a cold war. At the British government's insistence a re-calibration of the External Services' broadcasting remit was undertaken, particularly in its broadcasts to Central and Eastern Europe, to adapt its output to this new and emerging world order.
    [Show full text]
  • Virginia Woolf's Portraits of Russian Writers
    Virginia Woolf’s Portraits of Russian Writers Virginia Woolf’s Portraits of Russian Writers: Creating the Literary Other By Darya Protopopova Virginia Woolf’s Portraits of Russian Writers: Creating the Literary Other By Darya Protopopova This book first published 2019 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2019 by Darya Protopopova All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-5275-2753-0 ISBN (13): 978-1-5275-2753-9 TABLE OF CONTENTS Note on the Text ........................................................................................ vi Preface ...................................................................................................... vii Introduction ................................................................................................ 1 Russia and the British Search for the Cultural ‘Other’ Chapter One .............................................................................................. 32 Woolf’s Real and Fictional Russians Chapter Two ............................................................................................. 58 Woolf and Dostoevsky: Verbalising the Soul Chapter Three ........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Volume 89 Number 1 March 2020 V Olume 89 Number 1 March 2020
    Volume 89 Volume Number 1 March 2020 Volume 89 Number 1 March 2020 Historical Society of the Episcopal Church Benefactors ($500 or more) President Dr. F. W. Gerbracht, Jr. Wantagh, NY Robyn M. Neville, St. Mark’s School, Fort Lauderdale, Florida William H. Gleason Wheat Ridge, CO 1st Vice President The Rev. Dr. Thomas P. Mulvey, Jr. Hingham, MA J. Michael Utzinger, Hampden-Sydney College Mr. Matthew P. Payne Appleton, WI 2nd Vice President The Rev. Dr. Warren C. Platt New York, NY Robert W. Prichard, Virginia Theological Seminary The Rev. Dr. Robert W. Prichard Alexandria, VA Secretary Pamela Cochran, Loyola University Maryland The Rev. Dr. Gardiner H. Shattuck, Jr. Warwick, RI Treasurer Mrs. Susan L. Stonesifer Silver Spring, MD Bob Panfil, Diocese of Virginia Director of Operations Matthew P. Payne, Diocese of Fond du Lac Patrons ($250-$499) [email protected] Mr. Herschel “Vince” Anderson Tempe, AZ Anglican and Episcopal History The Rev. Cn. Robert G. Carroon, PhD Hartford, CT Dr. Mary S. Donovan Highlands Ranch, CO Editor-in-Chief The Rev. Cn. Nancy R. Holland San Diego, CA Edward L. Bond, Natchez, Mississippi The John F. Woolverton Editor of Anglican and Episcopal History Ms. Edna Johnston Richmond, VA [email protected] The Rev. Stephen A. Little Santa Rosa, CA Church Review Editor Richard Mahfood Bay Harbor, FL J. Barrington Bates, Prof. Frederick V. Mills, Sr. La Grange, GA Diocese of Newark [email protected] The Rev. Robert G. Trache Fort Lauderdale, FL Book Review Editor The Rev. Dr. Brian K. Wilbert Cleveland, OH Sheryl A. Kujawa-Holbrook, Claremont School of Theology [email protected] Anglican and Episcopal History (ISSN 0896-8039) is published quarterly (March, June, September, and Sustaining ($100-$499) December) by the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church, PO Box 1301, Appleton, WI 54912-1301 Christopher H.
    [Show full text]
  • Heythrop College London G.K. Chesterton's Concept Of
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Heythrop College Publications HEYTHROP COLLEGE LONDON G.K. CHESTERTON’S CONCEPT OF HOLINESS IN DAILY LIFE A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY BY MARTINE EMMA THOMPSON LONDON 2014 1 Abstract The term holiness and the concept of sainthood have come under much scrutiny in recent times, both among theologians and the modern laity. There is a sense that these terms or virtues belong to an age long past, and that they are remote and irrelevant to modern believers; that there is the ‘ideal’ but that it is not seriously attainable in a secular, busy modern world with all its demands. Moreover, many believe that sainthood is accessible only to the very few, attained by those who undergo strict ascetic regimes of self-denial and rejection of a ‘normal’ life. However, these conceptions of holiness are clearly at odds with, and may be challenged by others, including the Roman Catholic Church’s teaching of a ‘universal call to holiness’. One of the aims of this thesis is to address those misconceptions with particular focus upon the theological concepts of the writer G.K. Chesterton and his understanding of holiness in the ordinary. Having been a popular writer and journalist, it has proved difficult for some academics and laypeople to accept Chesterton as a theologian. Furthermore, Chesterton considered himself to be an ordinary man, he did not belong to a religious order or community, and yet he was a theological writer who formulated an original conception of holiness in the ordinary.
    [Show full text]
  • Cat Smith MP Transforming Democracy Prem Sikka Industrial Strategy Dave Lister Academy Failures Plus Book & Film Reviews
    #290 working_01 cover 27/12/2017 01:09 Page 1 CHARTIST For democratic socialism #290 January/February 2018 £2 Tories on thin ice John Palmer Peter Kenyon Brexit follies Mica Nava Sexual abuse Mary Southcott Cat Smith MP Transforming democracy Prem Sikka Industrial strategy Dave Lister Academy failures plus Book & Film reviews ISSN - 0968 7866 ISSUE www.chartist.org.uk #290 working_01 cover 27/12/2017 01:09 Page 2 Contributions and letters deadline for Editorial Policy CHARTIST #291 The editorial policy of CHARTIST is to promote debate amongst people active in 08 February 2018 radical politics about the contemporary Chartist welcomes articles of 800 or 1500 words, and relevance of democratic socialism across letters in electronic format only to: [email protected] the spectrum of politics, economics, science, philosophy, art, interpersonal Receive Chartist’s online newsletter: send your email address to [email protected] relations – in short, the whole realm of social life. Chartist Advert Rates: Our concern is with both democracy and socialism. The history of the last century Inside Full page £200; 1/2 page £125; 1/4 page £75; 1/8 page £40; 1/16 page £25; small box 5x2cm £15 single has made it abundantly clear that the sheet insert £50 mass of the population of the advanced We are also interested in advert swaps with other publications. To place an advert, please email: capitalist countries will have no interest [email protected] in any form of socialism which is not thoroughly democratic in its principles, its practices, its morality and its ideals.
    [Show full text]
  • IMAGINATIVE Apologetics
    IMAGINATIVE Apologetics Theology, Philosophy and the Catholic Tradition Foreword by John Milbank Edited by Andrew Davison k Andrew Davison, ed. Imaginative Apologetics Baker Academic, a division of Baker Publishing Group, © 2011. Used by permission. Davison_ImagtinativeApolo.indd 3 2/21/12 10:00 AM foreword These websites are hyperlinked. monologues take the form (in some measure) of apologias, which are never without extreme ambiguity. In his first long poem,Paracelsus, the www.bakerpublishinggroup.com message would seem to be that the speaking protagonist has tried to www.bakeracademic.com perfect the human race through power under the inspiration of romantic love, while wrongly despising the little that can be made of faint loves or www.brazospress.com even hates that conceal an unadmitted love at their hearts. And yet he is www.chosenbooks.com brought to the realisation that he is ‘from the over-radiant star too mad / to drink the light-springs’ by one ‘Festus’, whose very name surely invites www.revellbooks.com caution in the reader who recalls Acts and another eponymous diagnosti- www.bethanyhouse.com © 2011 by Andrew Davison cian of supposed insanity. This surely further invites her to read Paracel- sus’ final hope for a day when human advance through a mere refusal of E-book copyright sample. Published in 2012 by Baker Academic the worst will be surpassed, and his own offer of full ‘splendour’ can be a division of Baker Publishing Group admitted on earth, as truly belonging to Christian eschatology parsed in © 2000 by Copyright holder P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287 www.bakeracademic.com terms of a magical or technological release of all natural powers.2 Published by Baker But in other poems by Browning this order of apologetic and of suspi- a division of Baker Publishing Group First published in the UK by SCM Press (an imprint of Hymns Ancient & Modern) in 2011 cious counter-apologetic is exactly reversed.
    [Show full text]
  • Transatlantic Connections 2 Confer - That He Made, and the Major Global and Transatlantic Projects He Is Currently Ence, 2015
    GETTING TO BUNDORAN Located at Donegal’s most southerly point, Bundoran is the first stop as you enter the county from Sligo and Leitrim on the main N15 Sligo to Donegal Road. By Car By Coach Bundoran can be reached by the following routes: Bus Eireann’s Route 30 provides regular coach TRANSATLANTIC From Dublin via Cavan, Enniskillen N3 service from Dublin City and Dublin Airport From Dublin via Sligo N4 - N15 to Donegal. Get off the bus at Ballyshannon From Galway via Sligo N17 - N15 Station in County Donegal. Complimentary CONNECTIONS 2 From Belfast via Enniskillen M1 - A4 - A46 transfer from Ballyshannon to Bundoran; advanced booking necessary A Drew University Conference in Ireland buseireann.com SPECIAL THANKS Our sincere gratitude to the Institute of Study Abroad Ireland for its cooperation and partnership with Drew January 1 5–18, 2015 University. Many thanks also to Michael O’Heanaigh at Donegal County Council, Shane Smyth at Discover Bundoran, Martina Bromley and Joan Crawford at Failte Ireland, Gary McMurray for kind use of Bundoran, Donegal, Ireland cover photograph, Marc Geagan from North West Regional College, Tadhg Mac Phaidin and staff at Club Na Muinteori, Maura Logue, Marion Rose McFadden, Travis Feezell from University of the Ozarks, Tara Hoffman and Melvin Harmon at AFS USA, Kevin Lowery, Elizabeth Feshenfeld, Rebeccah Newman, Macken - zie Suess, and Lynne DeLade, all who made invaluable contributions to the organization of the conference. KEYNOTE SPEAKERS DON MULLAN “From Journey to Justice” Stories of Tragedy and Triumph from Bloody Sunday to the WWI Christmas Truces Thursday, 15 January • 8:30 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Orme) Wilberforce (Albert) Raymond Blackburn (Alexander Bell
    Copyrights sought (Albert) Basil (Orme) Wilberforce (Albert) Raymond Blackburn (Alexander Bell) Filson Young (Alexander) Forbes Hendry (Alexander) Frederick Whyte (Alfred Hubert) Roy Fedden (Alfred) Alistair Cooke (Alfred) Guy Garrod (Alfred) James Hawkey (Archibald) Berkeley Milne (Archibald) David Stirling (Archibald) Havergal Downes-Shaw (Arthur) Berriedale Keith (Arthur) Beverley Baxter (Arthur) Cecil Tyrrell Beck (Arthur) Clive Morrison-Bell (Arthur) Hugh (Elsdale) Molson (Arthur) Mervyn Stockwood (Arthur) Paul Boissier, Harrow Heraldry Committee & Harrow School (Arthur) Trevor Dawson (Arwyn) Lynn Ungoed-Thomas (Basil Arthur) John Peto (Basil) Kingsley Martin (Basil) Kingsley Martin (Basil) Kingsley Martin & New Statesman (Borlasse Elward) Wyndham Childs (Cecil Frederick) Nevil Macready (Cecil George) Graham Hayman (Charles Edward) Howard Vincent (Charles Henry) Collins Baker (Charles) Alexander Harris (Charles) Cyril Clarke (Charles) Edgar Wood (Charles) Edward Troup (Charles) Frederick (Howard) Gough (Charles) Michael Duff (Charles) Philip Fothergill (Charles) Philip Fothergill, Liberal National Organisation, N-E Warwickshire Liberal Association & Rt Hon Charles Albert McCurdy (Charles) Vernon (Oldfield) Bartlett (Charles) Vernon (Oldfield) Bartlett & World Review of Reviews (Claude) Nigel (Byam) Davies (Claude) Nigel (Byam) Davies (Colin) Mark Patrick (Crwfurd) Wilfrid Griffin Eady (Cyril) Berkeley Ormerod (Cyril) Desmond Keeling (Cyril) George Toogood (Cyril) Kenneth Bird (David) Euan Wallace (Davies) Evan Bedford (Denis Duncan)
    [Show full text]
  • Books Added to Benner Library from Estate of Dr. William Foote
    Books added to Benner Library from estate of Dr. William Foote # CALL NUMBER TITLE Scribes and scholars : a guide to the transmission of Greek and Latin literature / by L.D. Reynolds and N.G. 1 001.2 R335s, 1991 Wilson. 2 001.2 Se15e Emerson on the scholar / Merton M. Sealts, Jr. 3 001.3 R921f Future without a past : the humanities in a technological society / John Paul Russo. 4 001.30711 G163a Academic instincts / Marjorie Garber. Book of the book : some works & projections about the book & writing / edited by Jerome Rothenberg and 5 002 B644r Steven Clay. 6 002 OL5s Smithsonian book of books / Michael Olmert. 7 002 T361g Great books and book collectors / Alan G. Thomas. 8 002.075 B29g Gentle madness : bibliophiles, bibliomanes, and the eternal passion for books / Nicholas A. Basbanes. 9 002.09 B29p Patience & fortitude : a roving chronicle of book people, book places, and book culture / Nicholas A. Basbanes. Books of the brave : being an account of books and of men in the Spanish Conquest and settlement of the 10 002.098 L552b sixteenth-century New World / Irving A. Leonard ; with a new introduction by Rolena Adorno. 11 020.973 R824f Foundations of library and information science / Richard E. Rubin. 12 021.009 J631h, 1976 History of libraries in the Western World / by Elmer D. Johnson and Michael H. Harris. 13 025.2832 B175d Double fold : libraries and the assault on paper / Nicholson Baker. London booksellers and American customers : transatlantic literary community and the Charleston Library 14 027.2 R196L Society, 1748-1811 / James Raven.
    [Show full text]
  • Un Mare Da Amare
    Scuola elementare Pier Paolo Edda Viler, nata il 10 luglio 1959 a Capodistria Vergerio il Vecchio di Capodistria (Slovenia), di madrelingua italiana. Dopo il “Siamo stati molto contenti di partecipare al Liceo scientifico italiano "Antonio Sema" di progetto Un mare da amare. Per noi che viviamo Pirano, frequenta la Facoltà di Lettere e filosofia vicino al mare, che ogni giorno sentiamo i suoi di Lubiana, indirizzo Lingua e letteratura flutti, è stato ancora più interessante perché lo UN MARE DA AMARE italiana e Sociologia, e la Facoltà di Studi consideriamo parte della nostra vita quotidiana. Un progetto ideato e curato da Edda Viler umanistici di Capodistria, indirizzo Italianistica. Abbiamo realizzato diverse ricerche, come Si occupa di poesia, prosa e teatro fin dai primi quella sul Rex, sul Titanic, sulle saline di Sicciole, anni delle medie inferiori; fa parte di gruppi sui miti e le leggende marine e sugli sport acqua- letterari e compagnie teatrali come autrice, tici. Abbiamo trovato i proverbi e i modi di dire: attrice e regista. quanti ce ne sono che riguardano la nostra Sia durante che dopo gli studi si impegna bellissima distesa marina! Abbiamo scritto nell'ambito della ricerca figurativa. Si dedica poesie e abbiamo capito meglio tutto ciò che il alla pittura dal 1975. Alcune sue opere figurano mare riesce a trasmetterci.” in collezioni pubbliche e private in Italia e nei paesi dell'ex Jugoslavia. Insegna lingua italiana presso le scuole Scuola media Lionello Stock elementari e medie inferiori e superiori, in di Trieste istituti e licei sia italiani che sloveni dove “Abbiamo lavorato a volte in gruppo a volte organizza anche laboratori di scrittura creativa.
    [Show full text]
  • Decadence, Homosexuality and Catholicism in the Life of John Gray
    Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University English Dissertations Department of English Fall 12-16-2019 "Enough of the World is Mine": Decadence, Homosexuality and Catholicism in the Life of John Gray Lewis Whitaker Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/english_diss Recommended Citation Whitaker, Lewis, ""Enough of the World is Mine": Decadence, Homosexuality and Catholicism in the Life of John Gray." Dissertation, Georgia State University, 2019. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/english_diss/229 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of English at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in English Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “ENOUGH OF THE WORLD IS MINE”: DECADENCE, HOMOSEXUALITY AND CATHOLICISM IN THE LIFE OF JOHN GRAY by LEWIS H. WHITAKER Under the Direction of LeeAnne Richardson, PhD ABSTRACT This project follows the life of the late-Victorian poet John Gray, who was born into lower- middle class poverty in London. Gray educated himself, rising from clerical positions with the Post Office and the Foreign Office, before meeting Charles Ricketts and Charles Shannon, who published his early work, and designed the seminal book of fin de siècle verse Silverpoints, for which Gray earned the epithet le plus decadent des decadents. This project considers the ways in which Gray’s associations with Ricketts and Shannon, along with Oscar Wilde, André Raffalovich and the aunt and niece couple writing as Michael Field impacted his life, from the publication of his early decadent poetry, to his renunciation of the London demimonde, to eventual ordination in the Roman Catholic Church.
    [Show full text]