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A sermon preached before the Kings majestie, at White-Hall, on Wednesday the XXV of December, A.D. MDCXXII, being Christmasse Day / Essays. Of studies (1597) ; Of studies (1625) ; Of discourse (1597) ; Of discourse (1625) ; Of truth ; Of adversity ; Of simulation and dissimulation ; Of envy ; Of atheism ; Of empire ; Of cunning ; Of nature in men / The proficience and advancement of learning, divine and human / Poems. At the round earths imagin'd corners, blow ; Death be not proud ; Batter my heart, three person'd God / To Sir Edward Herbert at Julyers ; The autumnall ; Good Friday, 1613; riding westward ; A nocturnall upon S. Lucies Day ; The apparition ; A valediction : forbidding mourning ; The good-morrow ; Song ; Womans constancy ; The sunne rising ; The indifferent ; The canonization ; Lovers infinitenesse ; Song ; Aire and angells ; The anniversarie ; Loves growth ; The flea ; An anatomie of the world ; Elegie on his mistris ; The extasie ; Loves deitie ; The funerall ; The relique ; The dissolution ; A hymne to Christ ; Satyre III ; A hymne to God the Father ; Hymne to God my God, in my sicknesse ; Devotions upon emergent occasions ; Sermon XXIII preached at S. Pauls, for Easter-day, 1628 / Epigrammes. To the reader ; To my booke ; On some-thing, that walkes some-where ; To William Camden ; On my first daughter ; To John Donne ; On my first sonne ; To William Roe ; On Lucy Countesse of Bedford ; To Lucy, Countesse of Bedford with Mr. Donnes satyres ; To Sir Henrie Savile ; To John Donne ; Inviting a friend to supper ; Epitaph on S.P. ; Epitaph on Elizabeth, L.H. / The forest. To Penshurst ; To Sir Robert Wroth ; Song : To Celia ; To the same ; Song : To Celia ; Epode / Under-woods. A hymne to God the Father ; A hymne on the Nativitie of my Saviour / Under-woods. A celebration of charis. His excuse for loving ; How he saw her ; Her triumph / Under-woods. In the person of woman kind ; My picture left in Scotland ; An elegie ; An ode, to himselfe ; A fit of rime against rime ; An epistle answering to one that asked to be sealed of the tribe of Ben ; To the immortall memorie, and friendship of that noble paire, Sir Lucius Cary, and Sir H. Morison / To the memory of my beloved, the author Mr. William Shakespeare ; Ben. Johnsons sociable rules for the Apollo / Songs from the masques and plays. Song ; Hymne ; Song ; Song / The vision of delight presented at court in Christmas, 1617 ; Timber, or, Discoveries /
Shut door and close of probation in James and Ellen White letters 1846-1855 -- Releases from James White letters for Gerard Damsteegt -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother Collins, Aug 1846, about the death of Mary Ann Lawrence -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Howland, Mar 1847, about Ellen G. White and what has occurred since they left Topsham -- Letter from James White to dear Sister Hastings, May 1847, about the copies of the visions -- Letter from James White to dear Sister Hastings, Aug 1847, about the letter from Brother Bates -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Apr 1848, about Brother Matthias, Ellen G. White and her vision on the Sabbath -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother, Jul 1848, about Ellen White and Henry not being so well -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Aug 1848, about his trip with Ellen G. White to New York City -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister, Aug 1848, about the invitation to visit with them -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Oct 1848, about the general meeting of the "Outcasts" in Maine -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Jan 1849, about general matters -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Feb 1849, about the offer of a home -- Letter from James White to beloved Bro. and Sister Collins, Sep 1849, about general matters in Maine -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Bowles, Oct 1849, about their visit to Connecticut and Western New York -- Letter from James White to beloved Brother Bowles, Nov 1849, about general matters and Western New York -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Jan 1850, about the letter from Brother Bates -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Hastings, Jan 1850, about the baby being sick and the time at Brother B. C. Stoors -- Letter to dear Brother and Sister Collins, Jan 1850, about his intent to be at Fairhaven -- Letter from James White to dear Bro. and Sr. Collins and Gilbert and Deborah, Feb 1850, about Jesus and general matters -- Letter from my dear afflicted Brother Hastings, Mar 1850, about the death of the wife of Brother Hastings -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Hastings, Jul 1850, about publishing the Testimonies (handwritten) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Hastings, Jul 1850, about publishing the Testimonies (typed) -- Letter from James White to my dear Bro. Hastings and all your dear children, Nov 1850, about the printing -- Note by James White at end of Ellen G. White letter dated April 1, 1851, Davis, Maine -- Letter from James White to dear brethren in Jackson, Aug 1851, about the publishing at Saratoga Springs -- Letter from James White to dear Brethren in Christ, Nov 1851, about our conferences at Medford, Washington, Bethel and Johnson -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Sep 1852, about Ellen G. White's vision -- Letter from James White to brethren in Jackson, Michigan, Dec 1852, about being free of debt -- Letter from James White to beloved Brother Dodge, Jul 1853, about the tracts -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Abraham, Jul 1853, about general matters -- Letter from James White to Brother Abram, Dec 1853, about Brother Rhodes -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister Smith, Aug 1854, about the box of books -- Letter from James White to brethren Cornell and Dodge, Nov 1854, about general matters -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Feb 1855, about the present situation of Brother J. N. Andrews -- Letter from James White to Bro. Abram, Mar 1855, about the article with Sister Knight's letter -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Lyon, Jul 1855, about the ill health of Brother Lyon and general matters -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Aug 1855, about letters received from Michigan -- Private letter from James White, 1855, about a vision of Ellen G. White -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Dodge, Aug 1855, about locating the Review West (handwritten) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Dodge, Aug 1855, about locating the Review West (typed) -- Letter from James White to Sister Below, Nov 1856, about her moving from New York -- Letter from James White to dear Sister, Nov 1856, about her coming to Battle Creek -- Letter from James White to my dear Sister, or shall I say Mother, Mar 1857, about her moving circumstances -- Letter from James White to my dear Edson, Jan 1860, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to my dear Edson, Mar 1860, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Oct 1860, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about the meeting -- Letter from James White to my dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about his time in Knoxville and his health -- Letter from James White to my dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about the meeting at Marion -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about going to Wisconsin -- Letter from James White to my dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about Brother Frisbie and general matters and the Mississippi River Boat, "War Eagle" -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about praying with Brother Ingraham and Sanborn -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about his health -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about general matters -- Letter from James White to Brother E. P. Butler, Dec 1861, about the Andrews' difficulty -- Letter from James White to the gentlemen, Oct 1862, about William Hall -- Letter from James White to Brother and Sister Abbey, Dec 1863, about the death of Henry White -- Letter from James White to Sister Steward, Sep 1864, about the Cure and the philosophy of health taught there -- Letter from James White to Brother Abbey, May 1865, about finding a place to live in Michigan -- Letter from James White to my dear niece, (Mary Clough), Jun 1865, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to Brethren - directors of the Health Institute, Aug 1867, about building and property considerations -- Letter from James and Ellen G. White, Sep 1867, about the Health Institute -- Letter from James White to dear Willie, Sep 1867, about general matters -- Letter from James White to my dear Willie, Oct 1867, about Battle Creek -- Letter from James White to my dear Willie, Oct 1867, about going from Michigan to Maine -- Letter from James White to O. H. Pratt, Mar 1869, about the Monroe Church -- Letter from James White to Sister Hall, Jul 1869, about general matters -- Letter from James White to dear son, May 1870, about Mrs. Kittle and her place -- Letter from James White to Willie, Lucinda, May (Mary?) and Anna, Jun 1870, about the importance of having oversight over the entire work and about being in the field more -- Letter from James White to dear Edson, Apr 1871, about the deed from McDearmon and his indefiniteness relative to the peas and the plants -- Letter from James White to Brother Andrews, May 1871, about the tract "The Sabbath on the Round World" still being in type -- Letter from James White to Lucinda and Willie, Jun 1871, about future plans to go to Wisconsin and Minnesota -- The Saviour of sinners / Letter from James White to Sister Lucinda, Oct 1871, about coming with them to Boston -- Letter from James White to my dear son Willie, Nov 1871, about Sister White's dream concerning Edson, Henry, Byron Sperry and Willie himself -- Letter from James White to dear Willie, Nov 1871, about their appointments from Maine to Michigan -- Letter from James White to dear children, Edson and Emma, Dec 1871, about Edson and prosperity only in the Lord
Oxford [Oxfordshire] ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1985.
0192820737 (paperback)
'Fowls in the frith' -- 'Lord, Thou Clèpedest me' -- 'When I see on Rood' -- 'Why have you no ruth?' -- Roundel ('Now welcome, summer') from The Parliament of Fowls -- Unto Adam, His Own Scrivèyn -- Roundel ('Since I from Love escapèd am') from Merciless Beauty -- 'I shall say what inordinate love is' -- 'Onmes gentes plaudite!' -- 'Blessed Mary' -- 'Peace maketh plenty' -- 'Hail, Queen of Heaven' -- 'I have been a foster' -- 'Western wind' -- 'Though ye suppose' -- 'Madam, withouten many words' -- 'Who hath heard' -- 'The enemy of life' -- 'Sighs are my food' -- 'Lux, my fair falcon' -- 'Throughout the world' -- The Spouse to the Younglings -- 'Thou sleepest fast' -- To an Old Gentlewoman that Painted Her Face -- 'The lowest trees have tops' -- Epigram ('Were I a king') -- To His Son -- 'What is our life?' -- 'Even such is time' -- 'Sleep, baby mine, Desire' -- 'Like those sick folks' -- 'Whenas man's life' -- Bathsabe's Song ('Hot sun, cool fire') from David and Bethsabe -- Bridal Song ('Now, Sleep, bind fast') from The Masque of the Middle Temple and Lincoln's Inn -- 'Thyrsis, sleepest thou?' -- 'A sparrow-hawk proud' -- 'Thule' -- 'My love in her attire' -- 'Since first I saw your face' -- 'Love me not' -- 'Sweet, let me go!' -- 'He that hath no mistress' -- 'Sweet Cupid, ripen her desire' -- To His Wife, for Striking Her Dog -- Song ('O mistress mine') from Twelfth Night -- Song ('When daffodils begin to peer') from The Winter's Tale -- song ('Jog on, jog on') from The Winter's Tale -- Song ('Full fathom five') from The Tempest -- Song ('The master, the swabber, the boatswain and I') from The Tempest -- Song ('Where the bee sucks') from The Tempest -- A Remembrance of My Friend Mr. Thomas Morley -- 'Happy were he' -- 'Happy were he' -- De Puero Balbutiente -- 'Fair summer droops' -- 'When thou must home' -- 'Never weather-beaten sail' 'Thrice toss these oaken ashes in the air' -- 'Thus I resolve' -- 'Sleep, angry beauty' -- Think'st thou to seduce me then' -- Song ('In a maiden-time professed') from The Witch -- Melancholy Conceit -- Song ('Care-charming sleep') from The Tragedy of Valentinian --
Eighteenth century forerunners. The tree ; from The petition for an absolute retreat ; To the nightingale ; A nocturnal reverie / A fairy tale ; A night-piece on death ; A hymn to contentment / The highland laddie ; My Peggy ; Sweet William's ghost ; Through the wood laddie ; An thou were my ain thing ; from The gentle shepherd. Patie and Peggy / Preface to the evergreen / The braes of Yarrow / William and Margaret ; The Birks of Endermay / Grongar Hill ; The fleece. from Book I / The seasons. from Winter ; from Summer ; from Autumn ; A hymn on the seasons ; The castle of indolence, from Canto I ; Tell me, thou soul of her I love ; To Amanda ; Preface to winter /
Invitation to Hsiao Chü-shih / Inviting a friend to supper / Epistle 1.5 / from The life of Samuel Johnson / from My mother's house / The walrus and the carpenter / To Thomas Manning / Here's a bottle and an honest friend / My boat / To the bachelor of arts P'ei Ti / Horses in flowers / The pasture / The evils of Spain /
Banned by neglect: Tom Sawyer, teaching the conflicts / Growing up with the Alice series by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor / Facing intolerance: All-American Boys by Frank Mosca / Always Running from the real issues: why kids should read about gangs and drugs / The amazing bone: any book can offend someone / Stock phrases for all occasions: the lessons of As I Lay Dying / Censors "who like to watch" curricula: Jerzy Kosinski and the banning of Being There / Un-Beloved? / Censorship and Bless Me, Ultima: a journey through fear to understanding / Protecting them from what? In praise of Blubber / The portrayal of sexuality in Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye / In defense of The Boy Who Lost His Face / Bridge to Terabithia: too good to miss / Stephen King's cases against child abuse: Carrie and The Shining / Defending Ayla: two novels about being different / In defense of Crazy Lady / Keep Cujo unleashed / Examining the power of Courses, Hexes & Spells / Defending children's schooltime reading: Daddy's Roommate and Heather's Mommies / A defense of A Day No Pigs Would Die / The Drowning of Stephan Jones by Bette Greene / The invisible adolescent: Robert Cormier's Fade / Defending Fallen Angels by Walter Dean Myers: framing--not taming--controversy / Lois Lowry's The Giver / Goosebumps by R.L. Stine / In defense of Gilly / Things fade and alternatives exclude: truth and myth in John Gardner's Grendel / Communicating pleasure: Halloween ABC by Eve Merriam / Called to be a Handmaid: defending Margaret Atwood / Defending Harry Potter / The Headless Cupid by Zilpha Keatley Snyder / In defense of Cupid / Isabel Allende's The House of the Spirits / Rationale for How to Eat Fried Worms / Journey to understanding: defending I Am the Cheese / In the Spirit of Crazy Horse: censorship and the FBI-AIM wars of the 1970s / Sexual development: letting kids know It's Perfectly Normal / Roald Dahl's James and the Giant Peach / Julie-Miyax: the emergence of dual identity in Julie of the Wolves and Julie / Kaffir Boy: a rationale / In defense of Killing Mr. Griffin / Harry Mazer's The Last Mission, and more / Afraid of the dark: censorship, Ray Bradbury, and The Martian Chronicles / My Brother Sam Is Dead: embracing the contradictions and uncertainties of life and war / Censored: an author's perspective / Literature, history, and social value: in defense of Native Son / Sweet dreams: in support of Nightmares / The pigman's story: teaching Paul Zindel in the 21st century / Keeping their parents happy: Roald Dahl's Revolting Rhymes / Running with, not from, Running Loose / Conquering our fears: Alvin Schwartz's Scary Stories series / Will McBride's Show Me! / Not so loathsome after all: in defense of Hastings and Wijngaard's Sir Gawain and the Loathly Lady / Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon: an African American epic / Clorox the dishes and hide the books: a defense of Snow Falling on Cedars / Defending The Stupids / Bette Greene's Summer of My German Soldier: the war within the human heart / Judy Blume's Tiger Eyes: a perspective on fear and death / Sex, swearing, and sacrilege: a rationale for Vision Quest / The avenger strikes again: We All Fall Down / Understanding sexuality education: two books by Lynda Madaras / The subversive quality of respect: in defense of The Witches / Breaking the rules: a defense of A Wrinkle in Time / Yellow Raft in Blue Water /
Funeral Oration -- On His Condemnation to Death -- On the Union of Greece to Resist Persia -- On the Crown -- The Second Oration Against Philip -- In Support of the Oppian Law -- To His Soldiers -- First Oration Against Catiline -- The Fourth Philippic -- To the Conspirators -- To His Troops -- On the Treatment of the Conspirators -- The Catilinarian Conspirators -- Oration on the Dead Body of Julius Caesar. -- A Second Crusade -- Sermon to the Birds -- Before the Diet of Worms -- On Suffering Persecution -- Before Invading Silesia, 1740 -- Before the Battle of Leuthen, 1757 -- Advocating the Execution of Louis XVI -- Agaist the Charge of Treason -- "To Dare again, Ever to Dare!" -- "Let France Be Free!" -- Defense Against the Charges -- The Festival of the Supreme Being -- At the Beginning of the Italian Campaign -- On Entering Milan -- On Beginning the Russian Campaign -- Farewell to the Old Guard -- Against Imperialism -- Voltaire -- To the Young Men of Italy -- To His Soldiers -- Rome and Italy -- America's Welcome -- To the Delegates from Alsace -- Appeal for Dreyfus -- Christian Democracy -- War and Armaments in Europe -- Germany and the War -- Address to the German People -- Last Speech -- The Spirit of France -- Coronation Day Sermon -- One Aim: Victory -- To Workingmen and Soldiers -- To the Red Army -- The Dictatorship of the Proletariat -- Napoleon -- Naval Disarmament. -- On the Dissolution of Parliament -- On a Moriton for His Removal -- God's Love to Fallen Man -- On the right of Taxing America -- Conciliation with America -- Indictment of Warren Hastings -- At the Trial of Warren Hastings -- On His Refusal to Negotiate with Bonaparte -- On Refusal to Negotiate with Bonaparte -- The Fall of Napoleon -- On the Reform Bill -- The Effects of Protection on Agriculture -- The "Trent" Affair -- Peace with Honor -- On Domestic and Foreign Affairs -- Anti-Semitism -- The British Empire -- Militant Suffragists -- England's Position -- An Appeal to the Nation -- The Fourth of July -- Peace -- Women in Politics -- On His Seventieth Birthday -- Justice for Ireland -- Protest Against Sentence as Traitor -- The Home Rule Bill -- The Irish Free State. -- Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God -- The Boston Massacre -- "Give Me Liberty, or Give Me Death!"-- American Independence -- On the Faults of the Constitution -- The States and the Federal Government -- Justice and the Federal Constitution -- The Federal Constitution -- Inaugural Address -- Farewell Address -- First Inaugural Address -- Alexander Hamilton -- Red Jacket -- Tecumseh -- Adams and Jefferson -- Reply to Hayne -- Second Inaugural Address -- The Murder of Lovejoy -- The Preservation of the Union -- Slavery -- On the Compromise of 1850 -- The Crime Against Kansas -- The Irrepressible Conflict -- On being Sentenced to Death -- On the Death of John Brown -- Reply to Lincoln -- On Withdrawal from the Union -- On His Nomination to the Senate -- Farewell Address at Springfield -- Address at Gettysburg -- Second Inaugural Address -- The System of Slavery -- On Woman's Right to Suffrage -- Blaine-The Plumed Knight -- Oration at His Brother's Grave -- On the Death of Garfield -- First Inaugural Address -- The Columbian Oration -- The American Standard -- The Cross of Gold -- The Republic That Never Retreats -- The Retention of the Philippines -- Address at Buffalo -- Manhood or Money -- The Strenuous Life -- Washington's Birthday -- Lincoln, Man and American -- Peace Without Victory -- Declaration of War -- The Fourteen Points -- The League of Nations -- The League of Nations -- On Receiving Sentence -- A Plea for the League of Nations -- "Live-I Am Coming!"
Préface -- Le rendez-vous manqué entre Napoléon et le sultan -- La France et l'Empire ottoman, un long passé commun -- L'Empire ottoman à la fin du-XVIIIe siècle -- Bref historique des relations diplomatiques entre la France et l'Empire ottoman -- Bonaparte puis Napoléon, continuateur d'une diplomatie ancienne -- La Turquie plutôt que de la Vendée, août 1795-mars 1796 -- Les lectures et les écrits d'un jeune officier -- Général de brigade d'infanterie à l'armée de l'Ouest -- Quitter la France pour la Turquie -- Le 15 septembre 1795, deux décisions contradictoires -- La fin du projet turc en vendémiaire an IV, Commandant en chef de l'armée d'Italie le 12 ventôse an IV (2 mars 1796) -- Un échange d'ambassadeurs pendant le Directoire, 1796-1797 -- Le lieutenant-général Aubert-Dubayet, 33e ambassadeur, 2 octobre 1796 -- Morali Seyyid Ali Effendi, ambassadeur de la Porte en France, 28 juillet 1797 -- Le général Bonaparte en Italie et la Porte ottomane, avril 1796-septembre 1797 -- Après Campo-Formio, le retour du général Bonaparte à Paris le 5 décembre 1797 -- La mort d'Aubert-Dubayet à Constantinople le 17 décembre 1797 -- L'Égypte, mai 1798-septembre 1799 -- L'Égypte avant l'arrivée de Bonaparte -- Une idée de Talleyrand, reprise par Bonaparte, acceptée par le Directoire -- La conquête, 1798 -- Bonaparte et les religions en Égypte -- Le retour en France -- La situation difficile du chargé d'affaires Ruffin à Constantinople pendant l'occupation de l'Égypte -- Le Consulat, 1799-1804 -- Le retrait d'Égypte, les préliminaires de la paix avec les Anglais et les Turcs, 1 er et 9 octobre 1801 -- La mission de Sebastiani à Constantinople en 1801 -- Paix d'Amiens, 25 mars 1802 -- La mission de Mehmed Said Galib Effendi, 4 juin 1802 - Le traité de Paris, 25 juin 1802 -- La République des Sept-Iles, les îles ioniennes -- Les départs d'Ali Effendi (16 juillet 1802) et de Galid Effendi (14 septembre 1802) -- La seconde mission de Sebastiani en Orient en 1802 -- Le général Guillaume Marie-Anne Brune, 34e ambassadeur, 1803-1804 -- Mehmed Said Halet Effendi, lettres de créance du 2 octobre 1803 -- L'Empire, 1804-1814 -- Selim ne reconnaît pas à Napoléon le titre d'empereur -- Le départ de Brune, décembre 1804 -- Le projet de Talleyrand d'alliance avec l'Autriche impliquant l'Empire ottoman, octobre 1805 -- Valachie, Moldavie, Bessarabie -- La reconnaissance, le 6 février 1806 -- Les Provinces illyriennes, la frontière adriatique française avec l'Empire ottoman, 1805 -- Le quotidien et le départ de Mehmed Said Halet Effendi, octobre 1806 -- L'ambassadeur Seyyid Abdurrahim Muhib Effendi, 5 juin 1806-31 août 1811 -- Le général Horace Sebastiani, 36e ambassadeur, mai 1806 -- La crise avec la Russie, octobre 1806 -- Après l'échec de la quatrième coalition, le retournement de la Porte, novembre 1806 -- Sebastiani défend Constantinople contre la flotte anglaise, février 1807 -- Seyyid Mehmed Emin Vahid Effendi, envoyé extraordinaire, mars 1807 -- Selim III est déposé le 31 mai 1807, remplacé par Mustapha IV -- La mission du colonel Foy et les 500 canonniers envoyés par Marmont, 1807 -- Tilsit, le 7 juillet 1807, et ses conséquences
Books by Nathaniel Hawthorne -- Nathaniel Hawthorne: a chronology of his life and writings -- From obscurity to fame: Fanshawe, Twice-told tales, and Mosses from an Old Manse -- Young Hawthorne / An anonymous novel -- William Leggett, review of Fanshawe, a Tale, The Critic, 22 November 1828. Facsimile: Page from Hawthorne's copy of The American Book-Keeper; Facsimile: Title page of Hawthorne's copy of Laws of Bowdoin College; Box: Repudiating Fanshawe -- Accumulating a Collection. Facsimile: Pages from the Salem Athenaeum register; Facsimile: Transfer and certificate passing Mary Manning's Athenaeum membership to Hawthorne -- Reviews of Twice-Told Tales -- Horatio Bridge, review, Age, 5 April 1837. Box: A children's author; Facsimile: Hawthorne inscription to Robert Manning -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, review, North American Review, July 1837. Facsimile: First page of manuscript, "Time's Portraiture" -- Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, review, The New Yorker, 24 March 1838. Box: Calling on the Peabodys; Facsimile: Hawthorne inscription to Sophia Peabody; Box: A Weigher and Gauger; Facsimile: Hawthorne letter to Caleb Foote, 31 August 1840; Box: Hawthorne and Brook Farm; Facsimile: Hawthorne letter to George S. Hillard, 16 July 1841.
Favourite classics. Symphony no. 5 in C minor, op. 67. Allegro con brio / Bolero Solomon : HWV 67. Act 3. Sinfonia / Le quattro stagioni = The four seasons. Violin concerto no. 1 in E, RV 269 : 'Spring'. Allegro / Symphony no. 9 in E minor, op. 95 : 'From the New World'. Allegro con fuoco / Horn concerto no. 4 in E-flat, K. 495. Rondo-Allego vivace / Symphony no. 9 in D minor, op. 125. Ode to joy / 1812 overture : op. 49 Piano concerto no. 3 in D minor, op. 30. Allegro ma non tanto Carmina Burana. Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi. O Fortuna / Finlandia : op. 26 / The planets : op. 32. Jupiter, the bringer of jollity Romeo and Juliet. Suite no. 2, op. 64b. Montagues and Capulets : (Dance of the knights) Pomp and circumstance march : no. 1 in D. Land of hope and glory Suite in D. Trumpet voluntary : The Prince of Denmark's march / Aida. Triumphal chorus & grand march : "Gloria all'Egitto" / Radetzky march : op. 228 /
Early Lessons at Home and School -- From The Colloquy (c. 1000) / From On the Properties of Things (c. 1200) / ABC of Aristotle (c. 1430) / from The Schoole of Vertue and Booke of Good Nurture (1557) / From The Boke of Nurture, or Schoole of Good Manners (1577) / From A Jewell House of Art and Nature (1594) / Hornbook -- Battledore -- Domestic Writing: Juvenilia -- 'A new yeres gift' (1581) / 'George Bercklay to his grandfather' (1610) and 'George to Mrs Cave his mothers wayting woman' (c. 1613) / Letter to her Father: Mary Downing to Emmanuel Downing (1635) / Mothers' Advice and Grief -- From Miscelanea, Meditations, Memoratives (1604) / From The Mothers Blessing (1616) / From The Mothers Legacie to her Unborne Childe (1624) / From A Ladies Legacie to her Daughters (1645) / 'On the death of my first and dearest childe' (1655) / 'On the Death of my dear Daughter' (1703) / Writing of Clergymen and Schoolmasters -- From This Historie of Four-Footed Beastes (1607) / From Orbis Sensualium Pictus (1659) / Puritan 'Hell-Fire': Warnings and Warmth -- From Milk for Babes (1646) / 'Upon my Son Samuel' (1657) and 'In reference to her Children' (1659) / From A Token for Children (1672) / From War with the Devil (1673) / From The New England Primer (1683-1830) -- From A Book for Boys and Girls (1686) / Lyrical Instruction: Isaac Watts and his Contemporaries -- From Divine Songs (1715) and Moral Songs (1740) / From Fables (1727) / From Poems on Several Occasions (1734) / Chapbooks and Penny Histories -- Elegy on the Death and Burial of Cock Robin (1744) -- Interesting Story of the Children in the Wood -- From The Life and Death of Tom Thumb -- From The Pleasant History of Thomas Hickathrift -- Trial of an Ox, for Killing a Man -- From The Riddle Book -- Boreman, Cooper, and Newbery: 'Instructions with Delight' -- From The Gigantick History (1741) / From A Little Pretty Pocket-Book (1744) / From Nurse Truelove's New Year's Gift (1755) -- From The History of Little Goody Two-Shoes (1765) -- Rational Moralists -- From The Governess (1749) / From The Adventures of a Pincushion (c. 1780) / From Poems an Various Subjects (1783) / From Her Journal Book (1783) / From The History of Sandford and Merton (1783) / From Cobwebs to Catch Flies (c. 1783) / From Original Stories (1788) / From Mental Improvement (1794) / From The Village School (c. 1795) / 'The Purple Jar' from Early Lessons (1801) / From The Young Emigrants (1826) / From The Affectionate Parent's Gift (1828) / From Mary's Grammar (1835) / From Rollo at School (1839) / 'Janetta and her Jujubes' from Farewell Tales (1840) / From Make the Best of It (1843) / Sunday School Moralists -- From Early Piety (1777) / From Hymns in Prose for Children (1781) and Lessons for Children: Part IV (1788) / From Fabulous Histories (1786) and The Charity School Spelling Book (c. 1798) / From Divine Hymns (1790) and Instructions for Children (1794) / Black Giles, the Poacher: Part II (1796) / From The History of the Fairchild Family (1818) / From The Peep of Day (1833) / From Flowers That Never Fade (1838) / From Dutch Tiles (1842) / Harbingers of the Golden Age -- From Hymns for the Amusement of Children (1772) and 'My Cat Jeoffry' from Jubilate Agno / From Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1794) / From The Infant's Library (c. 1800) / From Original Poems for Infant Minds (1804-5) and Rhymes for the Nursery (1806) / From The Daisy (1807) / Butterfly's Ball and the Grasshopper's Feast (1807) / Peacock 'At Home' (1807) / From Poems (1808) / From Poetry for Children (1809) / From Peter Piper's Practical Principles of Plain and Perfect Pronunciation (1813) -- 'A Visit from Saint Nicholas' (1823) / From Poems for Our Children (1830) / Story of the Three Bears (1831) / From Sketches of Natural History (1834) / From Holiday House: A Series of Tales (1839) / From New Nursery Songs for All Good Children (1843) / From The Book of Nonsense (1846) / From The English Struwwelpeter (1848) / Sad Tale of Mrs Mole and Mrs Mouse (c. 1849) /
Cambridge, Mass. : Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, [2012]
9780674065680 (alkaline paper)
Confessio amantis / The vision of Piers Plowman / The Canterbury tales / La male regle de T. Hoccleue / King Henry VI's triumphal entry into London / London lickpenny / Collyn Clout / "London, thou art of townes a per se" / "Tagus, farewell, that westward with thy streams" / "Who list his wealth and ease retain" / "London, hast thou accusèd me" / The ballad which Anne Askew made and sang when she was in Newgate / The lover to the Thames of London, to favour his lady passing thereon / The manner of her will, and what she left to London and to all those in it, at her departing / Prothalamion / King Edward the First / Tichborne's elegy / Poly-olbion / Henry VI, part II / Henry V / Henry VIII / Summer's last will and testament / Skialetheia / The devil is an ass / On the famous voyage / Satire 1 / To Mr. E.G. / Epithalamion made at Lincoln's Inn / Satire 4 / Twickenham Garden /
Preliminary note on the characterization of women in Western drama -- Preface -- Restoration -- Cleopatra, with Royal ceremony, joins Antony in death $g (1671) / All for love, Mrs. Pinchwife, forced by her husband to write to Horner rejecting his advances, substitutes another letter The country wife, Olivia mocks the plain dealer, and dismisses him The plain dealer, The Duchess of Eboli, frustrated in her ambition, determines to settle for adulterous love Don Carlos, Statira's rage against Alexander is undermined by her infatuation for him The rival queens, or The death of Alexander the Great, Lady Knowell pretends to classical learning and visits scorn on everything Sir Patient Fancy, Lady Fancy complains to her new lover of her unabatingly attentive husband Sir Patient Fancy, Cornelia reminds her sister of the dullness of the marriage compared to playing at "courtezanship" / The feigned courtezans, Cleomena banishes pity for her dead lover, vowing revenge instead The young king,