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Page "The Arm of the Starfish" ¶ 10
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Canon and Tallis
Performances in recent years have included a program of little-known works by Franco-Flemish composers Johannes Ghiselin, Jacquet of Berchem, Gaspar van Weebeke, Andreas de Silva, Nicolas Payen and Josquin des Prez, a quincentennial celebration of Thomas Tallis, the first Australian performance of Arvo Pärt's ' Canon of Repentance ' ( composed in 1998 ), works by Jean Richafort and his parodists, a program of works originally written for Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor a concert of settings of the text ' Media vita ' ( In the midst of life ) including a performance of Gombert's own ' Missa de media vita ', German Baroque masterpieces by Johann Hermann Schein, Michael Praetorius, Heinrich Schütz and Johann Sebastian Bach, Alessandro Scarlatti's ' Stabat mater ', and an annual concert entitled ' Christmas to Candlemas ' that presents works written for the numerous Christian feast-days in the forty-day Church season that begins on Christmas Day.
She warns Adam against yet another passenger, Canon Tallis.
Her unusual first name was bestowed on her by Canon Tallis, after which the O ' Keefes did not allow him to name their other children.
Canon Tallis is a bald clergyman with no eyebrows, said to have lost his hair due to withstanding torture in Korea.
Canon Tallis reappears in the Austin family novel The Young Unicorns, where he is attached to the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City, the same cathedral where Madeleine L ' Engle was writer in residence for many years.
Tallis is nicknamed " Tom " or " Father Tom " because of the historical composer Thomas Tallis, who wrote the Tallis Canon.
Canon Tallis meets the Austins in The Young Unicorns, which takes place a few months after Starfish.

Canon and is
Indeed, it is even surprising in the Canon of Christ Church and Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History, who fathered this most peculiar view, and in the brilliant Professor of Medieval and Renaissance English at Cambridge, who inherited it and is now its most eminent proponent.
Polykleitos in his Canon wrote that beauty consists in the proportion not of the elements ( materials ), but of the parts, that is the interrelation of parts with one another and with the whole.
The Anglican Communion Office is headed by its Secretary General, the Reverend Canon Kenneth Kearon.
In contrast to most of the figures depicted in the Pāli Canon, Ananda is presented as an imperfect, if sympathetic, figure.
He does not, however, exercise any direct authority in the provinces outside England, except in certain minor roles dictated by Canon in those provinces ( for example, he is the judge in the event of an ecclesiastical prosecution against the Archbishop of Wales ).
Canon law permits its administration to any Catholic who has reached the age of reason and is beginning to be put in danger by illness or old age, unless the person in question obstinately persists in a manifestly grave sin.
Non-violence is an over-riding concern of the Pali Canon.
He is also celebrated by many Protestants, who label him " Father of The Canon ".
Catholic Christians, following the Canon of Trent, describe these books as deuterocanonical, meaning of " the second canon ," while Greek Orthodox Christians, following the Synod of Jerusalem ( 1672 ), use the traditional name of anagignoskomena, meaning " that which is to be read.
In the Roman Catholic Church according to the norms of the Code of Canon Law 1983 a Benedictine abbey is a " religious institute ", and its professed members are therefore members of the " Consecrated Life ", commonly referred to as " Religious ".
Printer steganography is a type of steganography produced by color printers, including Brother, Canon, Dell, Epson, HP, IBM, Konica Minolta, Kyocera, Lanier, Lexmark, Ricoh, Toshiba and Xerox brand color laser printers, where tiny yellow dots are added to each page.
This tension is best exhibited in the Cakkavatti Sihanada Sutta ( Digha Nikaya 26 of the Sutta Pitaka of the Pāli Canon ), the story of humanity's decline from a golden age in the past.
* Canon ( fiction ), material that is considered to be genuine by a fan base
The first Conciliar document on celibacy of the Western Christian Church ( Canon 33 of the Synod of Elvira, c. AD 305 ) states that the discipline of celibacy is to refrain from the use of marriage, i. e. refrain from having carnal contact with your spouse.
Canon law is the body of laws and regulations made or adopted by ecclesiastical authority, for the government of the Christian organization and its members.
Canon 28 grants equal privileges () to Constantinople as of Rome because Constantinople is the New Rome as renewed by canon 36 of the Quinisext Council.
The Council of Constantinople in 381 modified the situation somewhat by placing Constantinople second in honor, above Alexandria and Antioch, stating in Canon III, that "" the bishop of Constantinople ... shall have the prerogative of honor after the bishop of Rome ; because Constantinople is New Rome ".
*** The Erya is a dictionary explaining the meaning and interpretation of words in the context of the Confucian Canon.
A similar declaration was issued with regard to Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo's conferring of episcopal ordination on four men-all of whom, by virtue of previous Independent Catholic consecrations, claimed already to be bishops-on 24 September 2006: the Holy See, as well as stating that, in accordance with Canon 1382 of the Code of Canon Law, all five men involved incurred automatic (" latae sententiae ") excommunication through their actions, declared that " the Church does not recognise and does not intend in the future to recognise these ordinations or any ordinations derived from them, and she holds that the canonical state of the four alleged bishops is the same as it was prior to the ordination.
The 19th Canon of 1571 asserted the authority of the Councils in this manner: " let preachers take care that they never teach anything ... except what is agreeable to the doctrine of the Old and New Testament, and what the Catholic Fathers and ancient Bishops have collected from the same doctrine.
A modern version of this appeal to catholic consensus is found in the Canon Law of the Church of England and also in the liturgy published in Common Worship:
The historical background of Philippians is traditionally gathered from two main primary New Testament sources: ( 1 ) informative internal data from the letter itself and ( 2 ) related information garnered from the rest of the New Testament Canon.
According to the third Canon of the second ecumenical council: " Because it is new Rome, the bishop of Constantinople is to enjoy the privileges of honor after the bishop of Rome.

Canon and named
This rendering was used for an earlier spelling of the well-known camera manufacturer Canon, which was named for Guanyin.
It formed part of one of ten manors, most likely Chamberlayne Wood Manor, named after Canon Richard de Camera ( of the Chambers ).
It was named after Canon Carver, first Master of the reconstituted College, but it did not last long in this form.
It was not until the sixteenth century, when the Protestant Reformation challenged the seven sacraments, including Matrimony, that the Church officially named the sacraments for the first time in Canon Law at the Council of Trent in 1547.
The Yellow Emperor's Inner Canon, which presents the doctrinal basis of traditional Chinese medicine, was also named after him.
In 1871 he launched his own gardening journal, simply named The Garden, which over the years included contributions from notables such as John Ruskin, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Gertrude Jekyll, William Morris, Dean Hole, Canon Ellacombe, and James Britten.
His father, Canon William Edward Varah, a strict Tractarian, named him after St Chad, who, according to Bede, had founded the seventh century monastery ' ad Bearum ', ' at Barrow ', which may have occupied an Anglo-Saxon enclosure next to Barton Vicarage.
Jerusalem received special recognition in Canon VII of Nicaea in 325, without yet becoming a metropolitan see, and was later named as one of the Pentarchy, but the later was never accepted by the Church of Rome.
leisure activities, named after Canon Félix Kir, a former mayor
Some of the Canon cameras can shoot as DNG using additional free software named CHDK.
The software package is named " DSLR Remote Pro v1. 5 " and enables support for the Canon EOS 40D and 1D Mark III.
* Daunt Lectures: named for the Revd Canon Nelson Daunt, a former headmaster, the annual Daunt Lectures in Church and Society explore the religious dimensions of contemporary moral, social and public issues.
In 1086 he was named Canon of Kraków, where he studied under the tutelage of his paternal grandmother, the Dowager Duchess Maria Dobroniega.
He was likely the last Egyptian Pharaoh of the Fourth dynasty if he was not succeeded by a certain unknown ruler named Djedefptah as recorded in some Egyptian literature and, indirectly, by the Turin Canon.
* The Decretum Gratiani is a collection of Canon law compiled in the twelfth century by a jurist named Gratian.
Although Dom is a German cognate for ' dome ', it can also mean ' cathedral ' and the mountain is named after Canon Berchtold of Sitten cathedral, the first person to survey the vicinity.
Canon Dr. Jane Shaw was named the eighth dean of Grace Cathedral.
The ancient Greek historian Manetho named him " Miebîdós " and credited him with a reign of 26 years, whilst the Royal Canon of Turin credited him with an implausible reign of 74 years.
Manetho named Semerkhet Semêmpsés and credited him with a reign of 18 years, whilst the Royal Canon of Turin credited him with an implausibly long reign of 72 years.

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