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17 Jun 2009, 6:47 am
He then asked her to refer to the initial letter she recieved from Shook, Hardy and Bacon and asked her to talk about the first call she made to Plaintiffs in response to that letter. [read post]
27 Feb 2024, 12:01 am by rhapsodyinbooks
On this day in history, President Thomas Jefferson sent a letter to William Henry Harrison, the eventual 9th President of the US, who was then serving as the first governor of the Indiana Territory. [read post]
4 Jan 2009, 3:45 pm
Thomas Hardy would be the somber adult example, although most of the entries on the list involve children or young people. [read post]
23 Aug 2016, 10:03 am
Dimitrov, The Paris Agreement on Climate Change: Behind Closed Doors Thomas Hale, “All Hands on Deck”: The Paris Agreement and Nonstate Climate Action Shannon K. [read post]
11 Apr 2014, 8:42 pm by Buce
 If on a mountain top, then Thomas Mann's Magic Mountain. [read post]
9 Jan 2014, 6:39 am by David Post
 He is as distant a figure from my students, say, as Thomas Hardy is to me – from, literally, another age. [read post]
2 Jun 2007, 10:53 am
It's a good day...To be born...The same day...As Lydia Lunch and Frank Rich ...And Jerry Mathers and the Marquis de Sade ...And Johnny Weismuller, Martha Washington, and Thomas Hardy ...You could go anywhere. [read post]
12 Aug 2018, 5:37 pm
. 'I had an impression'—[Somerset Maugham wrote about Thomas Hardy] —'that the real man, to his death unknown and lonely, was a wraith that went a silent way unseen between the writer of his books and the man who led his life, and smiled with ironical detachment at the two puppets….'"From "On Being a Writer" by V.S. [read post]
5 Jun 2014, 2:03 pm
Thomas Hardy used it in "Tess of the d'Urbervilles": "Yes, though nobody else should reproach me if we should stay together, yet somewhen, years hence, you might get angry with me for any ordinary matter, and knowing what you do of my bygones you yourself might be tempted to say words, and they might be overheard, perhaps by my own children. [read post]
18 Oct 2017, 9:34 am
With George Eliot’s Middlemarch and Thomas Hardy’s The Mayor of Castebridge we see a move from the midcentury project of pressing on readers the importance of relationality for individual agency and for the morality of choice, toward explorations of the constraining implications of living in a web of relationships. [read post]
18 Oct 2017, 9:34 am by Christine Corcos
With George Eliot’s Middlemarch and Thomas Hardy’s The Mayor of Castebridge we see a move from the midcentury project of pressing on readers the importance of relationality for individual agency and for the morality of choice, toward explorations of the constraining implications of living in a web of relationships. [read post]
19 Oct 2015, 4:00 am
This post examines an opinion recently issued by a U.S. [read post]
2 Jan 2023, 6:33 pm by Thomas James
The Tower Treasure (Hardy Boys) The Tower Treasure is the first book in the Hardy Boys series of mystery books that Franklin W. [read post]
15 Mar 2010, 9:37 am by Ken
She adds Thomas Aquinas and others. [read post]
1 Apr 2010, 9:24 am by Ashby Jones
The saga has its roots in a December 1985 sale of a batch of late 18th century wine at Christie’s that the auction house, together with Rodenstock, touted as having once belonged to Thomas Jefferson. [read post]
20 Nov 2019, 6:46 am
The best one is from Thomas Hardy (1922): "Should anything of this sort in the following adumbrations seem ‘queer’—should any of them seem to good Panglossians to embody strange and disrespectful conceptions of this best of all possible worlds, I apologize; but cannot help it. [read post]
21 May 2020, 6:09 am
In one, I'm quoting something in an article about a great writer retiring:There have always been writers, like Thomas Hardy and Saul Bellow, who kept at it until the very end, but there are many more, like Proust, Dickens and Balzac, who died prematurely, worn out by writing itself.The other is in my account of Chapter 2 of Bob Dylan's book "Chronicles. [read post]
7 Mar 2019, 5:20 am
There are a number of references to it in books of the period, as in The Dynasts by Thomas Hardy, published 1904-8 but set at the time of the Napoleonic wars: “I’d sooner have a nipperkin of our own real ‘Bristol milk’ than a mash-tub full of this barbarian wine! [read post]