... and
Fletcher, as a group, are sentimentally romantic, often in an extravagant degree, though their charm often
conceals the extravagance as well as the lack of true characterization. They are notable often ... noble architecture in cathedrals and palaces, of
formal religious ritual, and of the pomp and display of all elaborate pageantry. In the outcome they largely
reshaped the heavy mass of Anglo-Saxon ... instrumentality ofa single man, a certain English archdeacon of Welsh descent, Geoffrey of
Monmouth. Geoffrey, a literary and ecclesiastical adventurer looking about for a means of making himself
famous,...
... had followed Fabyan as an
English historian, and, above all, Latimer's Sermons had shown how to transform spoken Englishof the
raciest kind into literature. Lord Berners's translations ... fortunate abjuration and scouting whereof gave us the greatest possession in mass
and variety of merit that any literature possesses the Elizabethan drama from Shakespere and Marlowe to
Ford and Shirley. ... truth of its imagery. From a young
poet we always expect second-hand presentations of nature, and in Sackville's day second-hand presentation
of nature had been elevated to the rank ofa science....
... of classical and romantic fancy, of pagan and Christian theology, of
real and fictitious history, of tragical and comic incidents, of familiar and heroic manners, and of satirical and
sublime ... Chrestien's
'Perceval' it will be found, again and again, in the prose of Sir Thomas Malory; it will be found in many
ballads and ballad burdens, in 'William and Margaret,' in 'Binnorie,' ... Rossettis in England and of Longfellow and Dr. Parsons
in America that any poetry ofa really Dantesque inspiration and, at the same time, of high original value was
added to our literature. [18]
The...
... Beelzebub, and a crowd of allegorical personages. But
the battles and debats ofa chivalric age were not only religious; there are battles of wine and water, battles of
fast and feasting, battles of ... his character as a man, he belonged to an age of
philosophers and sentimentalists, an age of "virtue" and "nature." Shakespeare's translation is as strange as
that of his ... unedifying
jests and merry tales of the tavern. A comic, convivial, burlesque or picaresque literature became, as it were, a
parody of the literatureof preciosity. Saint-Amand (1594-1661) was at once a disciple...
... journals articles and
conference papers. The database is produced by the ARRB Transport Research
Library and is Australia’s major transport database. As well as the holdings of the
ARRB Transport ... accurate to label such behavioural adaptations as ‘compensation’.
While these changes may reflect a behavioural adaptation to age-related changes in
performance levels, other explanations are ...
considerably according to the different statistical procedures. As one example, Li,
Braver and Chen (2003) used US FARS data and a national probability sample of all
crashes (both non-casualty and...
... equal."
Then Arthur was sad no longer. He did as Merlin advised, and had a great round table made, at which there
was a seat for each one of his knights. After that there was no more quarreling ... horror of war had filled the land for so many
CHAPTER 19 47
was really to blame for it. So Aurelius Ambrosius and Uther Pendragon fled away to that part of France called
Brittany, where they remained ... the
armor, weapons, jewels, and other riches he had taken from the conquered people.
After the war with Britain was over Claudius had a Triumph. The fame of Caractacus had already reached
Rome, and when...
... then after one cycle eventually r
falls and then after one cycle eventually a
falls.
which can be rendered in CTL as (4).
(4) AG('-,r AAXr ~ AF(- ,a AAX (a
AAF(r AAX( ,r AAF (a AAX ,a) ))))) ... indicates the
passing of time (as measured by clock cycles) and
the vertical axis indicates the transition of signals
between the states of high and low. (A signal is
formula
AXc
AGb
AF(AX (a ...
are eliminated, and thus what was possible at t is no
longer available as an option at some t' later than t.
CTL uses formulas beginning with A to express
necessity. AG f is true at a...
...
institutions of the papacy and of the monastic orders and the emergence ofa feudal
civilization out of the chaos of the Dark Ages, the constant preoccupation of
architecture was to evolve from the basilica ... historical and biographical facts, together with brief
critical estimates and characterizations of leading schools and painters, are given in a
works.
Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator ... architecture appears as a connected chain of
causes and effects succeeding each other without break, each style growing out of that
A Historyof Sculpture.
BY
ALLAN MARQUAND, Ph.D., L.H.D.
AND
ARTHUR...
... but a new act of aggression soon called for reprisals, and at the head of an
immense naval armament Hongi set out for the waters of the Waitemata. Clad in his
helmet and coat of mail, he declaimed ... health of the invalid rapidly improved; the remembrance of past
injuries melted away before the sunshine of Christian love; and, before the ship
reached Australia, Ruatara was once again a man, ... more favourable—Preliminary voyage of Active—"Noah's Ark"—Arrival
of mission in New Zealand—Interview with Whangaroans—"Rangihoo"—Landing of
Marsden, &c.—Preparation...
... mnemonics of
the feature-based grammar to the nonterminal labels of
the treebank grammar. For example, our grammar main-
tains a fairly large number of semantic classes of singular
nouns, and it ... of application domain.
ã Development ofa manually-bracketed corpus (tree-
bank)
of the domain.
ã Creation ofa grammar with a large coverage ofa
blind test set of treebanked text.
Statistical ... fea-
Development and Evaluation
of a Broad-Coverage Probabilistic Grammar of
English- Language Computer Manuals
Ezra Black John Lafferty Salim Roukos
<black I j laff ] roukos>*watson,...
... Nicholas II at the Shipka Pass, and later an equestrian statue of the Tsar-Liberator
Alexander II was placed opposite the House of Parliament in Sofia.
Bulgaria meanwhile had been making rapid and ... entailing the bestowal of several pounds on the Hungarian state steamers and railways. As for the
sandjak of Novi-Pazar, it was turned into a veritable Tibet, and a legend was spread abroad that ... greater
independence of spirit (Montenegro was, after all, the ancient Zeta, and had always been a centre of national
life) and a number of at any rate eugenic if not exactly aristocratic Serb families; these families...
...
The accounts also stated what days' works were due from each tenant according to the
season of the year, and at the end of each year there was a careful valuation of live and
dead stock.[129] ... century a lease of 2 acres of arable land in Nowton,
Suffolk, let the land at 6d. an acre per annum for a term of six years.[150] It contains
no clauses about cultivation; the landlord warrants ... complained of
the decay of tillage.
Mediaeval prices and statistics are, it is well known, to be taken with great caution;
but we may assume that the normal annual value of land under cultivation...
...
variables actually increase the effect of stress on individual
functioning. Research by Green et al. (1990) and Kahana, Harel, and
Kahana (1988) suggests that individuals in each of the above-mentioned ... importance) were being away from home and family, uncertainty
of return date, sanitation, lack of privacy, lack of time off and long
work hours, environmental stressors (heat, insects), fear of ... Warfare, Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND
Corporation, MG-191 -A, 2005.
Hoge, C., et al., “Combat Duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mental Health
Problems, and Barriers to Care,” New England Journal of Medicine,...
... UNITED STATES IN 1850
ATTENDING ADULTS UNABLE SCHOOL TO READ STATE Population Males Females Total Males
Females Total
Alabama 2,265 33 35 68 108 127 235 Arkansas 608 6 5 11 61 55 116 California 962 ... General Coxe of Fluvanna County,
Virginia, taught about one hundred of his adult slaves.[2] While serving as a professor of the Military Institute
at Lexington, Stonewall Jackson taught a class of ... did not
reach all parts of the colony.[2] The Quakers of North Carolina, however, had local schools and actually
taught slaves. Some of these could read and write as early as 1731. Thereafter, household...