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* Colum, Padraic et al., The Golden Fleece and the Heroes who Lived Before Achilles, The Macmillan Company ( 1921 ).
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Colum and Padraic
Together with Lady Gregory, Martyn, and other writers including J. M. Synge, Seán O ' Casey, and Padraic Colum, Yeats was one of those responsible for the establishment of the " Irish Literary Revival " movement.
In 1918 he illustrated a children's retelling of Homer, The Adventures of Odysseus and the Tale of Troy written by Padraic Colum.
Amongst the most prominent followers of the early Yeats were Padraic Colum ( 1881 – 1972 ), F. R. Higgins ( 1896 – 1941 ), and Austin Clarke ( 1896 – 1974 ).
The previous tenant was the poet Padraic Colum who had left behind old copies of The Peasant and Sinn Féin.
He was associated with David Houston, Thomas MacDonagh, and Padraic Colum in founding and editing the Irish Review ( published March 1911-November 1914 ).
The magazine featured fiction, poetry, drama and reviews and contributors included more or less every significant Irish writer of the period, including Samuel Beckett, Austin Clarke, Padraic Fallon, Padraic Colum, Patrick Kavanagh and Blanaid Salkeld among others.
It staged many plays by eminent or soon-to-be eminent authors, including Yeats, Lady Gregory, Moore, Martyn, Padraic Colum, George Bernard Shaw, Oliver St John Gogarty, F. R. Higgins, Thomas MacDonagh, Lord Dunsany, T. C. Murray, James Cousins and Lennox Robinson.
The Irish Review was founded in 1910 by poet and writer James Stephens, with David Houston, Thomas MacDonagh, Padraic and Mary Colum and Joseph Mary Plunkett.
The song was first collected in Donegal by Longford poet Padraic Colum and musicologist Herbert Hughes, and published by Boosey & Hawkes in London in a work entitled Irish Country Songs in 1909.
Colum and who
Saint Columba ( 7 December 521 – 9 June 597 AD )— also known as Colum Cille, or Chille ( Old Irish, meaning " dove of the church "), Colm Cille ( Irish ), Calum Cille ( Scottish Gaelic ), Colum Keeilley ( Manx Gaelic ) and Kolban or Kolbjørn ( Old Norse )— was a Gaelic Irish missionary monk who propagated Christianity among the Picts during the Early Medieval Period.
The colophon of the book ( f. 9r ) contains an erased and overwritten note which, according to one interpretation, is by " Colum " who scribed the book, which he said he did in twelve days.
This support did not permit them to appoint it abbot, who was selected from Colum Cille's own extended family at the start.
She finds English there with a warrant to arrest Colum, who is the head of the Fenian Brotherhood, a group of Irish terrorists planning to revolt against the English.
Colum and Macmillan
Colum and 1921
71 ( July – December 1921 ) Sherwood Anderson, Padraic Colum, Arthur Dove, Anatole France, D. H. Lawrence, Wyndham Lewis, Amy Lowell, Marianne Moore, J. Middleton Murry, Pablo Picasso, Ezra Pound, Logan Pearsall Smith, Arthur Schnitzler, Max Weber, William Butler Yeats
Colum and ).
In the sixth and seventh centuries, Irish monks established monastic institutions in parts of modern-day Scotland ( especially Columba, also known as Colmcille or, in Old Irish, Colum Cille ), and on the continent, particularly in Gaul ( especially Columbanus ).
In America, Colum took up children's writing and published a number of collections of stories for children, beginning with The King of Ireland's Son ( 1916 ).
Padraic and who
Another Northern poet of note is Padraic Fiacc ( 1924-), who was born in Belfast, but lived in America during his youth.
Liam Padraic Aiken ( born January 7, 1990 ) is an American actor who has starred in a number of films, such as Stepmom and Good Boy !.
Padraic Fallon ( 1905-1974 ) was an Irish poet who was born in Athenry, County Galway, and later moved to Dublin to work as a civil servant.
Artists who have participated in it include Gary Farrelly, Padraic E. Moore, Alexander Reilly, Liam Ryan and Sophie Iremonger.
Padraic and Company
Padraic and ).
et and al
The present Republican leadership as practiced by Mundt, Goldwater, Bridges, Dirksen, et al, is repeating the errors of the party leadership of the 1930s.
The technique of cutting sections was essentially the same as that described by Coons et al ( 1951 ).
Reliability and validation work with the Children's Anxiety Scale by Castaneda, et al demonstrated results closely similar to the findings with the adult scale.
Sarason et al present evidence that the anxious child will suffer in the test-like situation, and that his performance will be impaired unless he receives supporting and accepting treatment from the teacher.
For example, while most of today's Altaic languages have vowel harmony, Proto-Altaic as reconstructed by Starostin et al.
Supporters of Altaic formerly set the date of the Proto-Altaic language at around 4000 BC, but today at around 5000 BC ( Starotsin et al.
Based on the proposed correspondences listed below, the following phoneme inventory has been reconstructed for the hypothetical Proto (- Macro )- Altaic language ( taken from Blažek's summary of the newest Altaic etymological dictionary et al.
* Derek Whitelock et al., Adelaide: a sense of difference Melbourne: Arcadia, 2000 ISBN 978-0-87560-657-6
" In Trzaskoma, Stephen, et al., eds., Anthology of Classical Myth: Primary Sources in Translation ( Hackett ).
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