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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.
* Edmond Malone, Irish Shakespearean scholar and editor of the works of William Shakespeare
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 noted
The three apparitions from 1531 to 1682 were noted by Edmond Halley, enabling him to predict its 1759 return.
From his second marriage to Maria-Charlotte, Jules de Polignac had fathered seven children, including the noted mathematician Prince Alphonse de Polignac, inventor of the theory of twin primes ; Prince Ludovic de Polignac, a lieutenant-colonel in the French Army who participated in the colonization of Algeria ; Prince Camille Armand Jules Marie, Prince de Polignac, a major-general in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War and Prince Edmond de Polignac, a composer, musical theorist and proponent of the octatonic scale.
In the late 1980s, Thompson got word that several of his players, including Alonzo Mourning, were associating with noted DC drug lord ( and avid Hoya fan ) Rayful Edmond III ,< ref >
After her mother's death, she and her siblings were largely raised by their aunt Winnaretta Singer, Princess Edmond de Polignac, a noted patron of the arts, particularly music.
* Maurice Rostand ( 1891 21 February 1968 ) was a French playwright, the son of the noted poet and dramatist Edmond Rostand and the poet Rosemonde Gérard, and brother of the biologist Jean Rostand.

Edmond and different
Edmond Halley had suggested the idea, but it required careful measurements from different places on earth, and the project was launched with more than a hundred observers dispatched to different parts of the globe, for observing the transit coming up in 1761.
Other writers who have been labeled naturalists include: Alphonse Daudet, Jules Vallès, Joris-Karl Huysmans ( later a leading " decadent " and rebel against naturalism ), Edmond de Goncourt and his brother Jules de Goncourt, and ( in a very different vein ) Paul Bourget.

Edmond and marriage
In 1893, at the age of 29, she stepped companionably into an equally chaste marriage with the 59-year-old Prince Edmond de Polignac ( 1834-1901 ), a gay amateur composer.
By this marriage, Johnson had two stepsons, Edmond Keenan ( Ned ) and Tracy Keenan Wynn.
Lily and Edmond Safra dated for some time, but she married a businessman named Samuel Bendahan in 1972, then divorced him after about a year of marriage.

Edmond and which
Haeckel advanced a version of the earlier " recapitulation theory ", previously set out by Étienne Serres in the 1820s and supported by followers of Geoffroy including Robert Edmond Grant, which proposed a link between ontogeny ( development of form ) and phylogeny ( evolutionary descent ), summed up by Haeckel in the phrase " ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny ".
This method of designating stars first appeared in a preliminary version of John Flamsteed's Historia Coelestis Britannica which was published by Edmond Halley and Isaac Newton in 1712 without Flamsteed's approval.
The collection is organized into three sections: the core Cabinet du Roi, 14, 000 royal copper printing-plates, and the donations of Edmond de Rothschild, which include 40, 000 prints, 3, 000 drawings, and 5, 000 illustrated books.
He also gives starting at Lemma 4 and Proposition 40 ) the theory of the motions of comets ( for which much data came from John Flamsteed and from Edmond Halley ), and accounts for the tides, attempting quantitative estimates of the contributions of the Sun and Moon to the tidal motions ; and offers the first theory of the precession of the equinoxes.
And that the inhumanity of these men may the better appear, I ( Edmond Ludlow ) must not omit, that the executioner in an ugly dress, with a halter in his hand, was placed near the Major-General, and continued there during the whole time of his trial, which action I doubt whether it was ever equaled by the most barbarous nations.
Edmond Ludlow also provided an account of the execution at Charing Cross, " the sentence which had been pronounced in consequence of the verdict was executed upon Major-General Harrison at the place where Charing Cross formerly stood, that the King might have the pleasure of the spectacle, and inure himself to blood.
There have been a number of other memorials to Yu, such as The Edmond Yu House, which claims to be " a low-stress, high support, and non-medical organization for psychiatric survivors of the Mental Health System who also experience homelessness and would be considered ' hard to house ' people ," and The Edmond Yu Project.
It was widely supported in the Edinburgh and London schools of higher anatomy around 1830, notably by Robert Edmond Grant, but was opposed by Karl Ernst von Baer's embryology of divergence in which embryonic parallels only applied to early stages where the embryo took a general form, after which more specialised forms diverged from this shared unity in a branching pattern.
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.
The Paris Opéra finally staged the opera on 23 November 1892 in a performance under the supervision of Saint-Saëns conducted by Édouard Colonne with Blanche Deschamps-Jéhin as Dalila and Edmond Vergnet as Samson, a performance which was lauded by critics and the audience.
Two major highways connect Edmond to downtown Oklahoma City: U. S. Route 77 ( the Broadway Extension ), which runs through the center of Edmond, and Interstate 35, which runs along the eastern side.
Edmond was the site of the post office massacre on August 20, 1986, in which fourteen people were killed and six wounded by Patrick Sherrill, an ex-postman who then committed suicide.
" The band ’ s sound had crystallised into the intense, hypnotic, overloaded psychedelia which characterised their early output, and which would serve as a template for their live act throughout their existence " ( Ian Edmond, Record Collector ).
After this he appeared at the Adelphi Theatre ( 1868 ) as Obenreizer in No Thoroughfare, by Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins, as Edmond Dantes in The Count of Monte Cristo, and as Count de Leyrac in Black and White, a play in which the actor himself collaborated with Wilkie Collins.
In particular, the protagonist of the novel, Edmond Dantès, finds on Monte Cristo the legendary treasure of the Spada family, which allows him to take his formidable revenge.
Edmond S. Meany proposed that the exposition be held on the then largely forested campus of the University of Washington, which in 1905 had exactly three buildings and little deliberate landscaping.
In the République française he waged a steady war against General Boulanger, which resulted in three duels, one with Edmond Magnier and two with Paul Déroulède.

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