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from The revival of Irish literature. "The necessity of de-Anglicizing Ireland" / from Abhráin grádh chúige Connacht = Love songs of Connacht. "Dá d'téinnse siar" = "If I were to go west" / from The united Irishman. "Parnell" / from The Irish monthly. "The associations of scenery" / from From the land of St. Lawrence. "The orange lilies" / from Some experiences of an Irish R.M. "Lisheen races, second hand" / from Ideals in Ireland. "The battle of two civilizations" / from Ideals in Ireland. "The literary movement in Ireland" / from Imagination and reveries. "Nationality or cosmopolitanism" / from Workers' republic. "Physical force in Irish politics" / from Irish Literary Society gazette. Lecture by Mr. W.B. Yeats / from The ballad of Reading gaol /
New York, New York : The Library of America, [2011]
1598530887 (alk. paper)
Calling a Secession Convention, November 1860. What Shall the South Carolina Legislature Do? November 3, 1860 / "Alarms from the South" : Illinois, November 1860. Memoranda Regarding Abraham Lincoln, November 5-6, 1860 / The Threat of Secession, November 1860. Going to Go, November 9, 1860 / The Need for Southern Cooperation, November 1860 / Debating Secession, Georgia, November 1860. Speech at Milledgeville, November 15, 1860 / "States cannot exist disunited," November 1860. The Right of States to Secede, November 16, 1860 / "I am for the Union as it is," Texas, November 1860 / "Our sore national sickness : New York, November 1860. Diary, November 20, November 26-December 1, 1860 / "This dangerous game" : Missouri, November 1860. Diary, November 22, 1860 / The "Wicked Spirit" of Secession : Tennessee, November 1860 / Lincoln, and Slavery : December 1860. The Late Election, December 1860 / Secessionism in Louisiana, December 1860. William T. Sherman to Thomas Ewing Sr. and to John Sherman, December 1, 1860 -- Washington, D.C., December 1860. From the Annual Message to Congress, December 3, 1860 / The Benefits of Slavery : December 1860. The Non-Slaveholders of the South, December 5, 1860 / Advocating Secession : Georgia, December 1860 / Restating Positions on Slavery : December 1860 / Rejecting Coercion : December 1860. The Right of Secession, December 17, 1860 / "I stand by the Union" : December 1860. Remarks in the U.S. Senate, December 17, 1860 / A Compromise over Slavery, December 1860. Remarks in the U.S. Senate, December 18, 1860 / "Meanness and rascality" : Washington, D.C., December 1860 / A Confidential Message : Illinois, December 1860. Memorandum Regarding Abraham Lincoln, December 22, 1860 / Charleston, December 1860. South Carolina Declaration of the Causes of Secession, December 24, 1860 -- Occupying Fort Sumter : South Carolina, December 1860. From Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Moultrie in 1860-'61 / "A terrible revulsion of feeling" : South Carolina, December 1860. Diary, December 26-27, 1860 / Urging Kentucky to Secede: December 1860 / "The tempest bursting" : 1860. Misgivings / "Sad foreboding": Georgia, January 1861 / "All depends on Virginia" : Washington, D.C., January 1861 / Jackson, January 1861. Mississippi Declaration of the Causes of Secession, January 9, 1861 -- "A warlike aspect." Washington, D.C., January 1861 / The "Star of the West" : South Carolina, January 1861. Diary, January 9-13, 1861 / Washington, D.C., January 1861. Farewell Address in the U.S. Senate, January 21, 1861 / The Evils of Anarchy and Civil War: January 1861 / Montgomery, Alabama, February 1861. Inaugural Address, February 18, 1861 / Hopes for Lincoln's Administration: March 1861. The New President, March 1861 / Washington, D.C., March 1861. First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861 / "That wretch Abraham Lincoln" : North Carolina, March 1861. Diary, March 4, 1861 / Vindicating Slavery: Georgia, March 1861. "Corner-Stone" Speech, March 21, 1861 / Relieving Fort Sumter: Washington, D.C., March-April 1861. Diary, March 9-April 8, 1861 / Seward and Fort Sumter: Washington, D.C. March 1861. Memoir of Events, March 1861 / Challenging Lincoln: Washington, D.C., April 1861. Memorandum for the President, April 1, 1861 / "I must do it": Washington, D.C., April 1861 / The War Begins: South Carolina, April 1861. Diary, April 7-15, 1861 / Bombardment and Surrender: South Carolina, April 1861. From Reminiscences of Forts Sumter and Moultrie in 1860-'61 / New Yorkers Respond : April 1861. Diary, April 13-16, 1861 / Vindicating National Honor: April 1861. The People and the Issue, April 15, 1861 / Fighting "the mad rebellion": April 1861. The War Begun-The Duty of American Citizens, April 15, 1861 / Celebration in Charleston: South Carolina, April 1861. From My Diary North and South, April 17, 1861 / "Infidel" Enemies : Georgia, April 1861 / Secessionism in Richmond: Virginia, April 1861. Diary, April 15-22, 1861 /
Disc 1. Sleeping murder / screenplay, Stephen Churchett ; director, Edward Hall -- Disc 2. By the pricking of my thumbs / screenplay, Stewart Harcourt ; director, Peter Medak -- Disc 3. The moving finger / screenplay, Kevin Elyot ; director, Tom Shankland -- Disc 4. The Sittaford mystery / screenplay, Stephen Churchett ; director, Paul Unwin.
Poems 1956-1963 -- Conversation among the ruins -- Winter landscape, with rooks -- Pursuit -- Bucolics -- Tale of a tub -- Southern sunrise -- Channel crossing -- Prospect -- The Queen's complaint -- Ode for Ted -- Firesong -- Song for a summer's day -- Two sisters of Persephone -- Vanity Fair -- Strumpet song -- Tinker Jack and the tidy wives -- Faun -- Street song -- Letter to a purist -- Soliloquy of the solipsist -- Dialogue between ghost and priest -- The Glutton -- Monologue at 3 a.m. -- Miss Drake proceeds to supper -- Recantation -- The Shrike -- Alicante lullaby -- Dream with clam-diggers -- Wreath for a bridal -- Epitaph for fire and flower -- Fiesta melons -- The Goring -- The Beggars -- Spider -- Spinster -- Rhyme -- Departure -- Maudlin -- Resolve -- Landowners -- Ella Mason and her eleven cats -- Crystal gazer -- November graveyard -- Black rook in rainy weather
Moses bids Israel farewell -- Funeral oration by Pericles (Athens, 430 BCE) -- Cicero's first oration against Catiline (Rome, 63 BCE) -- Jesus and the blessed (Galilee, circa 30 AD) -- Muhammad : Turn thy face (Arabian peninsula, circa 620 AD) -- Urban II declares a crusade (Clermont, 1095) -- Martin Luther refuses to recant (Diet of Worms, 1521) -- Thomas More confronts his accuser (London, July 7, 1535) -- Elizabeth I faces the Armada : "I myself will be your general" (Tilbury, 1588) -- John Winthrop's "City upon a hill" (June, 1630) -- Oliver Cromwell dismisses Parliament, "In the name of God, go!" (London, April 20, 1653) -- Patrick Henry makes the case for liberty, or death (Virginia, March 25, 1775) -- Washington addresses dissidents in the army (Newburgh, March 15, 1783) -- Charles Fox assails the East India Company (London, December 1, 1783) -- Robespierre justifies terror (Paris, Feb. 5, 1794) -- Georges Danton : We must dare, dare again, always dare (Paris, September 2, 1792) -- Thomas Jefferson and the world's best hope (Washington, DC, March 4, 1801) -- Red Jacket defends Native American religions (Central New York, 1805) -- Napoleon bids farewell to the Old Guard (April 20, 1814) -- Simón Bolivar rallies South America (Angostura, September 15, 1819) --The cause of Old Ireland : Daniel O'Connell's last monster meeting (October 1, 1843) -- Karl Marx on free trade (Brussels, January 9, 1848) -- Frederick Douglass's Fourth of July speech (Rochester, New York, 1852) -- Abraham Lincoln's address at Cooper Institute (New York, February 27, 1860) -- Garibaldi addresses his troops : "To arms, then, all of you!" (Naples, September, 1860) -- Susan B. Anthony : a woman's right to suffrage : "Aren't women persons?" (Monroe County, 1873) -- William Jennings Bryan and the cross of gold (Chicago, July 9, 1896) -- King Albert of Belgium defies the Kaiser's army (Brussels, August 4, 1914) -- Padraig Pearse : Ireland unfree will never be at peace (Dublin, August 1, 1915) -- Helen Keller, Strike against war (New York, January 5, 1916) -- Woodrow Wilson's fourteen points (Washington, January 8, 1918) -- Gandhi gives voice to non-violence and non-cooperation (Abmadabad, India, March 18, 1922) -- Sun Yat-sen pleads for Pan-Asian resistance to Western imperialism (Kobe, Japan, November 28, 1924) -- Haile Selassie pleads for his country (Geneva, June 30, 1936) -- Franklin Roosevelt sees the ill-housed, ill-clad, ill-nourished (Washington, January 20, 1937) --
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.
Boca Raton : CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, 2022
9781138612952
Public health theory / The global reality : forced migration and health / Introduction to migration and global health / Forced migration and global health governance / Why are people forced to displace and seek refuge? / International standards, humanitarian principles and forced migration / Refugee health policy, international standards and humanitarian principles / The right to health for forced migrants / Refugee health needs and response / Health needs of refugees and internally displaced persons in camp settings / Health cluster coordination mechanism / The needs of migrants in transit / Lived experiences of refugees and accessing services in a host country / Cultural competency and cultural adjustment of services / Applied pubic health / Health needs assessments in the context of forced displacement / Mainstreaming refugee health / Providing healthcare in protracted refugee situations : a health system-strengthening approach / Health policy and advocacy to improve the health of forced migrants / Considerations in the initial healthcare assessment for new arrivals / Facilitating access to healthcare / Introduction to safeguarding / Protecting and supporting children on the move / Sexual and reproductive health, maternity and newborns / Gender-based violence and migration / Trafficking / Disability / Older people / Detention / The humanitarian practitioner / The professional humanitarian practitioner / Personal ethics in humanitarian practice / Resilience and mental health / Ongoing education and maintaining competencies / Managing team dynamics and effective communication / Accountability and sustainability /
xxxv, 387 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN:
9780820332772 (cloth : alk. paper)
9780820332772 (cloth : alk. paper)
We must be careful / Earth is a living thing / Mountains of California, part I / Mountain road ends here / Queen Anne's lace / On summer / Yellow jacket / Eclogue at twilight / Ruellia noctiflora / Evening primrose / Night-blooming cercus / September night / Sweet enough ocean, cotton / Metamorphism / Brown girl's nature poem: provincetown / What more? / Be careful / Watching blackbirds turn to ghosts / If winter comes, can spring? / 31 words * prose poems [#12] /