(1,261 - 1,280 of 183,850)
Pages
-
-
Title
-
lex042vol01p0082
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:334781
-
Text
-
LOUISIANA TERRITORY hump over the shoulders was also a favorite portion. When cooked in the Indian fashion this was regarded as a most exquisite delicacy. It was done by rolling the meat in a piece of green hide and baking it in an earth oven, where a fire had been previously kindled, and over which another fire was kept burning until the flesh Was thoroughly done. Such‘ a dish was regarded as the finest feast that could be set before a company of chiefs and warriors. The savages were as careful of their herds of buffaloes as the farmer is of his flocks. Although millions of them browsed on the plains, no Indian ever slew one in mere wantonness. It was different, however, when the white man appeared on the scene. Then the animals were hunted and slaughtered for sport, so—called. They were killed for the love of killing or for their hides, horns and bones, until the race is now extinct, except for the few specimens that the Government has preserved in the National Park of Wyoming. Such a fact is not complimentary to our civil- ization. , Having marched well within the present borders of Kansas, Coronado selected a small band of his most resolute men, and dismissing the rest with orders to return home, he continued his progress in the same direc- tion which he had so long pursued. For forty-two days he kept steadily on his course, over the rolling prairie hills which afforded but little change or diversity of scenery; until at lengthehe came to a stream of considerable propor- 82
-
-
Title
-
lex042vol09pb3381
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:334716
-
Text
-
INTRODUCTION TO THE MACHINERY EXHIBITS The steam for the operation of these engines was gen- erated in the Steam, Gas, and Fuels Building, a fireproof structure 350 feet long by 300 feet wide, located about 100 feet distant from Machinery Hall. The pipe lines, convey- ing the steam from the boilers to the engines and returning the condensed water back to the boilers from the condensers, filled
-
-
Title
-
BaptistHymnalPraiseBookpage318
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:74636
-
Text
-
'WORK.AND DUTY. Will There Be Any Stars. 453 E. E, HEWITT, JNO. R. SWENEY. ~11 . j i" '1 j .. jw ~n—4——-—I—4——¢—+— '—-—!r- -+.J_:_J“ i__,.__. —A 3‘ . 5 , ' I ,‘ I . ——1h—% ' 3:: '0‘ "' W0‘ "‘ "' "' "' 7?“ 1. I am think - ing to - day of that beau - ti - ful land I shall 2. In the strength of the Lord let me la - bor
-
-
Title
-
Rosenberg1996page133
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:67856
-
Text
-
Twins, Mirrors, and Shadows I I 5 and terrific secrets.”4 That the meeting takes place within Affery’s “dream,” with an air of unreality, only reinforces the connection. It re- calls too the descriptions of one “waking” portion of the brain observ- ing a second “sleeping” portion found most notably in Oliver Twist and the essay “Lying Awake.” The description of “Mr. Flintwinch awake . . . watching Mr. Flintwinch asleep” echoes almost verbatim the words of “Lying Awake” (“one part of my brain, being wakeful, sat up to watch the other part which was sleepy” [UC, 431]), and the inexplicable enmity of the waking toward the sleeping Flintwinch (“He looked about him for an offensive weapon, and. . . lunged at the sleeper as though he would have run him through the body” [LD, 427]) may be understood as the denial by the rational of the dreaming mind. And the scene makes explicit the connections among three of Dickens’s most recurrent images of the fragmented or dual personality: the sleeper, the double, and the “reflection in a glass.” Altogether few episodes in Little Dorrit are both so extraneous to its plot and so expressive of its meaning. Duplicate Flintwinches might be expected in a novel where, as Susan K. Gillman and Robert L. Patten have observed, the act of doubling is so pervasive that “the world itself seems twinned.”5 As the discussion in chapter 4 has suggested, nearly every character in Little Dorrit is caught in one or more relationships with alter egos, surrogates, or psychological complements: Clennam creates Nobody and is paralleled by Rigaud, who in turn forms a symbiotic pair with Cavalletto; Little Dorrit creates the tiny woman and is shadowed and enlarged by Maggy; for Tattycoram there are Pet Meagles and Miss Wade, for Flora, Mr. F’s Aunt, for Casby, Pancks, and so it goes throughout the novel. The literal Flintwinch twins concretize these many figurative doublings, as does the second set of identical siblings in the novel, Pet and her dead twin sister, Lillie. Indeed, despite the fact that one happens no longer to be alive, the Meagles twins form an even more overt psychological unit than do the Flintwinch twins and embody even more clearly the fragmentation of personality. “ ‘Pet and her baby sister,’ ” Mr. Meagles recollects, were so exactly alike, and so completely one, that in our thoughts we have never been able to separate them since. It would be of no use to tell us that 4. Dickens, Letters, vol. 6, 279. 5. Gillman and Patten, “Doubles,” 446.
-
-
Title
-
Rodini1984page240
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:64476
-
Text
-
. . . ). F ilologiai Kozlony (Budapest) 22 (1976): 169-89. Considerations on the problems attendant on a translation into Hungarian of the OF; includes the text of his translation of canto 29. *4-3 810. SIMONE, ALBERTO. “Le Lettere di Ludovico Ariosto.” Giomale it- aliano di filologia 20 (1967-1968): 299-302. Review essay of Ludovico Ariosto, Le Lettere, edited by Angelo Stella (en- try 827). Concludes
-
-
Title
-
civc000048p0309
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:367442
-
Text
-
THE PALMYRA MA ssA ORE 309 The gifted but eccentric P. Donan, while conducting the Lexington Caucasian, published in October of each year in burning words the details of the tragedy, with the statement that he should publish it annually while John McNeil lived. In 1870 McNeil made an effort to gain some favor with the people by entering the campaign on behalf of the liberal and against
-
-
Title
-
civc000078p0221
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:367474
-
Text
-
XV. “ Whate’er success awaits my future life, The bcautgiful is gone»--t7zat comes no more.” AND this is the story of the Body-. Guard. It is not claimed for them that they showed a. rarer courage than tens of thousands of others in this war. But theirs was the singular fortune to go to their first battle under a cloud of reproach, though blameless, and to return from it victorious, to the punishment reserved for the gravest military ioffences. They did their whole duty and more. They lit up the dark war-cloud, further blackened by Ball’s Bluff, with a lightning ray of victory, and earnest of what was to fol- low. For this they were dismissed the
-
-
Title
-
Langan1996page051
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:16254
-
Text
-
Experience (New York: Scribner’s, 1948), and "8 and Some Philosophers, 2d ed. (Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 1952). 37
-
-
Title
-
lex042vol05pa0015
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:334785
-
Text
-
, which still retains pre—Columbian crop plants and modes of cultivation, now numbers less than five hundred. Their industries, mortu- ary customs, and religious observances are curiously ad- justed to the annual freshets of the Colorado, which are reg- ular as the floods of the Nile; they migrate semi—annual1y from the fertile river bottoms to arid foot-hills or sandy wastes, and thence back
-
-
Title
-
lex050ap0078
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:334724
-
Text
-
mat bie etfte ‘llbteiinng » 11i1tet1'i<'[)t§3w unb (Et3ie[)nngBmefen« aiu%fe[)Iief;[id) 1n1tetge[>taeI)t in bent fiiblicf) bet >~‘13Ia5a ©t. 8oni6« geiegenen @1‘5iL‘[)ll1Ig§}.\t1[CIfiIC. Die 1lntetric[)t§a[>teilnng 3t‘.I‘fi€[ in 8 Gfitnppenz fiit Giemeiitatiiiltetticbt ((S5t. 1), ‘))iitte[feI)n[nntettiibt ((3513. 2), .S3od)fe[)n[1n1tettie[)t nnb lliiivetfitdtéivefeni ((831: 3
-
-
Title
-
civr000067p0017
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:367432
-
Text
-
THIRD MISSOURI CAVALRY. 17 movements of the regiment, and it is to this purpose that this chapter will be devoted. From the 1st of January, 1863, up to the llth of that month, we have nothing to record that would prove of interest to the reader, therefore we will pass over the space that intervened between those dates, and commence our further record with the battle of Hartville, which took place
-
-
Title
-
sav1913p230
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:58269
-
Text
-
flflvhiral Svnrivty OFFICERS Presidem‘—~—VV1n. l\=I. Findley Vice—Pres'ide72.t——~R. LN. Holcombe Secretary-Cl‘re(1.su're7'—--—R. R. Simmons Dr. C. LI. Jackson Dr. Woodson lVIoss Dr. C. VV. Greene Dr. D. H. Dolley HONORARY Dr. A. VV. B.-IoAlester FACULTY Dr. G. L. Noyes Dr. 0. W. H. Mitchell Dr. W. J. Calvert GRADUATES Albert L. Jones E. Bloomer C. W. Bressler B. Colby W. D. Davis W
-
-
Title
-
Hymn&TuneBookMethEpiscSouthPage417
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:99190
-
Text
-
”" T!!! 10“ ml’ fl1°“8h"3 311311 511; The calm retreat. the silent sheds, 309181193» when SW11!!! Of 3°_1'!‘°W 10W°l‘y With prsyenand praise agee; M! W11 31311 P100“ thy W111 And seen: by thy sweet bounty made - My hfied eyq. without a tear. For those who follow thee. The ga.th’x-mg storm shall see; as W3'llz'am Cotrptr. IF 53:17.1"-.3. IUL . 1 I 9 7' '* ' I
-
-
Title
-
TheHymnalp482
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:71299
-
Text
-
476 FOR CHILDREN. J1 2 Holy Saviour, Who in meekness Didst vouohsafe a child to be, Guide their steps and help their weakness, Bless and make them like to Thee. Bear Thy lambs when they are weary In Thine arms and at Thy breast; Through life’s -desert, dry and dreary, Bring them to Thy heavenly rest. 3 Spread Thy golden pinions o’er them, Holy Spirit from above; Guide them, lead them, go before
-
-
Title
-
civc000086p0432
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:367464
-
Text
-
432 KANSAS IN tum SIXTIES a First Lieutenant J ames Graham, Topeka; mustered in as 1st Lt. Oct. 29, 1868. Second Lieutenant James P. Hurst, Topeka; mustered in as 2nd Lt. October 29, 1868. A
-
-
Title
-
civc000079p0101
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:367471
-
Text
-
HISTORY OF CHARLES W. QUANTRELL 101 killed others there, your comrades. I did not know, till afterwards, what kind of a devil we had around our very messes---—a devil who prowled about the camp fires and shot soldiers in the night that broke bread with him in the day. Can you guess what brought me here?” i I The shifting phases of this uncommon episode at- tracted all; even Quantrell himself
-
-
Title
-
GoodOldSongspage406
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:89339
-
Text
-
705 It THE GOOD OLD SONGS. Harwell. 8s and 7s. . 3 >33 /\ AK K I l \ I l 47 L L RR R D A - I IdL_ _,,- 9:! 1. Hark! ten thou - sand harps and voi - ces Sound the notes of praise a - bove; 2. Je - sus, hail! whose glo - ry b1'ight—ens 3. King of glo - ry, reign for- ev - er, Thine an ev - er - last-ing crown; 4. Sav- iour, has - ten Thine ap - pear - ing; Bring, 0 bring the glo-rious day
-
-
Title
-
CRS86124Lpage24
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38622
-
Text
-
cns-1s Tate, Dale. Reagan's deficit-cutting bid may spotlight line-item veto. Congressional Quarterly weekly report, v. 42, Jan. 21, 1984: 114-115. "President Reagan has seized on two ideas to help him fight the federal deficit, but both would need constitutional amendments., One would require a balanced federal budget; the other would give the presi- dent line-item veto power over
Pages