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Edmond and Malone
He returned to town from Burke's house in Beaconsfield and Edmond Malone wrote that " we left his carriage at the Inn at Hayes, and walked five miles on the road, in a warm day, without his complaining of any fatigue ".
but I have only one ye now, and hardly that .’ I was really quite touched ". On 5 November Reynolds, fearing he may not have an opportunity to write a will, wrote a memorandum intended to be his last will and testament, with Edmund Burke, Edmond Malone and Philip Metcalfe named as executors.
Edmond Malone asserted that " his appearance at first sight impressed the spectator with the idea of a well-born and well-bred English gentleman.
For example, many 18th-and 19th-century scholars, including Samuel Johnson, Lewis Theobald, George Steevens, Edmond Malone, and James Halliwell-Phillipps, placed the composition of Henry VIII prior to 1604, as they believed Elizabeth's execution of Mary, Queen of Scots ( the then king James I's mother ) made any vigorous defence of the Tudors politically inappropriate in the England of James I. Oxfordians cite these sources to place the composition of the play within Oxford's lifetime.
* Edmond Malone, Irish literary scholar
* April 25 – Edmond Malone, Irish scholar ( b. 1741 )
* October 4 – Edmond Malone, Irish scholar ( d. 1812 )
Pope added the Sly framework to The Shrew, and this practice remained the norm amongst editors until Edmond Malone removed all extracts from A Shrew and returned to the strict 1623 text in his edition of the plays in 1792.
Originated by Edmond Malone in 1790 as an alternate to Johnson's memorial report theory.
Samuel Johnson put forth this theory in 1765, but was challenged by Edmond Malone in 1790, who suggested that The Contention could be an early draft of 2 Henry VI.
Edmond Malone exposes them in his An Inquiry into the Authenticity of Certain Miscellaneous Papers and Legal Instruments on 31 March, and the forged ' Shakespearean ' play, Vortigern and Rowena, is able to sustain just a single performance at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, on 2 April.
Among his avowed antagonists in literary warfare the most distinguished were Edmond Malone and George Steevens, the Shakespeare edition ; Mathias, the author of the Pursuits of Literature ; Dr John Jamieson, the Scottish lexicographer ; Pinkerton, the historian ; Dr Irving, the biographer of the Scottish poets ; and Dr Currie of Liverpool.
After the 1921 – 22 NHL season, they hired Art Ross as their new coach and made many player changes, including trading superstar Malone to the Montreal Canadiens for Bert Corbeau and Edmond Bouchard.
The papers first came to critical attention in 1780, when Edmond Malone requested them from the Dulwich library ; the papers had been misplaced and were not found until 1790.
The subsequent catalogue of plays which Munday wrote, either alone or in conjunction with others, is derived from the materials supplied by Edmond Malone.
It was seen and described by the scholar Edmond Malone.
This theory was first suggested by Edmond Malone in 1778, at which time the dominant theory was that the Henry VI trilogy had been Shakespeare's first work.
Shakespearean scholars, beginning with Edmond Malone in 1790, have attempted to reconstruct the plays ' relative chronology by various means, primarily using external evidence ( references by contemporary commentators and in private documents, allusions in other plays, entries in the Stationers ' Register, and records of performance and publication ), and internal evidence ( allusions to contemporary events, composition and publication dates of sources used by Shakespeare, the development of his style and diction over time, and the plays ' context in the contemporary theatrical and literary milieu ).
On 31 March 1796, Shakespearean scholar Edmond Malone published his own exhaustive study, An Inquiry into the Authenticity of Certain Miscellaneous Papers and Legal Instruments, about the supposed papers.
Edmund Burke included the piece in The Annual Register for that year, and when Edmond Malone in 1776 worked on a biographical memoir for Poems and Plays by Oliver Goldsmith ( 1777 ) he based it on Glover's Anecdotes as well as first-hand information from Dr. Thomas Wilson, Senior Fellow at Trinity College, Dublin.
Edmond Malone ( 4 October 1741 – 25 April 1812 ) was an Irish Shakespearean scholar and editor of the works of William Shakespeare.
Edmond Malone was born 4 October 1741 in Dublin to Edmond Malone Sr .— MP of the Irish House of Commons and judge of the Court of Common Pleas in Ireland — and Catherine Collier, the niece of Robert Knight, 1st Earl of Catherlough.

Edmond and Irish
As a result of substantial contributions made to St Mary ’ s Cathedral, Edmond became great friends with Irish liberal Daniel O ’ Connell, who later became godfather to one of his sons.
Two of his speeches in the Irish House of Commons, and some other miscellaneous works — including previously unpublished notes on the Corn Laws by Samuel Johnson — were published by Edmond Malone after his death under the title Parliamentary Logick.
Edmond Bourke, an Irish soldier who led the escort duty, and a cousin of Lord Mayo, then directed his men to begin killing their settler charges.

Edmond and Shakespearean
The first Shakespearean scholars to make a connection between Dover and Shakespeare were Samuel Johnson, George Steevens, Thomas Warton, and Edmond Malone ; historian Jean Wilson has commented that it required " quite imaginative leaps such as a hill referred to by Bolingbroke Henry IV of England being the hill on which the games were held ".

Edmond and scholar
The first president of the college, Dr. Edmond Volpe, an American literature scholar, retired in 1994, after having successfully handled the merger of the two colleges and the unification of the two campuses.
The French Germanic scholar Edmond Vermeil considered Chamberlain's ideas " essentially shoddy ," but the anti-Nazi German author Konrad Heiden, despite objections to Chamberlain's racial ideas, described him as " one of the most astonishing talents in the history of the German mind, a mine of knowledge and profound ideas.
* Edmond La Beaume Cherbonnier, professor and scholar of religious studies

Edmond and editor
Ultimately, it was Newton's friend, editor and publisher, Edmond Halley who, in his 1705 Synopsis of the Astronomy of Comets, used Newton's new laws to calculate the gravitational effects of Jupiter and Saturn on cometary orbits.
Although sometimes mistakenly attributed to science fiction writer Edmond Hamilton, who indeed authored most of Captain Future stories, the character was created by Better Publications editor Mort Weisinger during the 1939 World Science Fiction Convention.
Tregoweth Edmond " Treg " Brown ( November 4, 1899 – April 28, 1984 ) was a motion picture sound editor who was responsible for the sound effects in Warner Bros .' Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons starting in 1940.
Edmond Malone and Thomas Park, the editor of Walpole, attributed the book on the grounds of Gilbert's age to William, a brother.

Edmond and works
Museum expansion slowed after World War I, and the collection did not acquire many significant new works ; exceptions were Georges de La Tour's Saint Thomas and Baron Edmond de Rothschild's ( 1845 – 1934 ) 1935 donation of 4, 000 engravings, 3, 000 drawings, and 500 illustrated books.
He is now best remembered for the works of fiction which have been woven, often very loosely, around his life story, most notably the 1897 play by Edmond Rostand.
Jerrod Fields, a U. S. Army World Class Athlete Program Paralympic sprinter hopeful, works out at the U. S. Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, Calif. A below-the-knee amputee, Fields won a gold medal in the 100 meters with a time of 12. 15 seconds at the Endeavor Games in Edmond, Okla., on June 13, 2009
The influence of Edmond de Pressensé, a pastor and large-minded theologian, and of Madame de Pressensé, a woman of superior intellect and refined feeling, who devoted her life to educational works and charity, made a great impression on him.
His earliest works, from 1900 to 1904, appear to have been influenced by the Neo-Impressionism of Georges Seurat and Henri Edmond Cross.
The Walters Art Museum. Gérôme's reputation was greatly enhanced at the Salon of 1857 by a collection of works of a more popular kind: the Duel: after the Masked Ball ( Musée Condé, Chantilly ), Egyptian Recruits crossing the Desert, Memnon and Sesostris and Camels Watering, the drawing of which was criticized by Edmond About.
Category: Adaptations of works by Edmond Rostand
Edmond Hoyle ( 1672 – August 29, 1769 ) was a writer best known for his works on the rules and play of card games.
Category: Adaptations of works by Edmond Rostand
The Edmond and Lily Safra Fine Arts Wing reflects the wide-ranging, interdisciplinary nature of the Museum ’ s collections, encompassing works of art from across the ages in Western and non-Western cultures.
He received the Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research and the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize in 1989 together with Alfred Gilman winner of Nobel Prize in medicine in 1994 and, together with his collaborator Edmond H. Fischer, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1992 for describing how reversible phosphorylation works as a switch to activate proteins and regulate various cellular processes.
* La Vie de Léon Cladel ( Paris, 1905 ), by his daughter Judith Cladel, containing also an article on Cladel by Edmond Picard, a complete list of his works, and of the critical articles on his work.
When he was 21, he went to work in Brussels for Edmond Deman, a publisher of the works of symbolist writers, which Spilliaert was to illustrate.

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