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Harriet and Cohen's
However, the opening of Harriet Cohen's private papers and the research into them by scholars, such as the Norwegian musicologist Thomas Elnaes, indicates that such a link is at best speculative.
Harriet Cohen's love affair with Arnold Bax lasted for over forty years until he died in 1953.
H. G. Wells was part of Harriet Cohen's circle of male admirers from the 1920s.
D. H. Lawrence became a close friend of Harriet Cohen's.
* Harriet Cohen's Biography Website by British Local History

Harriet and recently
A president may also withdraw a nominee's name before the actual confirmation vote occurs, typically because it is clear that the Senate will reject them, most recently Harriet Miers in 2006.
These are just two quotes from the recently published love letters between Sir Arnold Bax and Harriet Cohen.
Harriet Monroe, a fellow resident of Chicago, had recently founded the magazine Poetry at around this time.
Some people believed positive neighborhood changes would benefit all residents of the area, bringing with it improved neighborhood safety and creating a demand for improved retail services along the major commercial strips, such as Fulton Street ( recently co-named Harriet Tubman Avenue ), Nostrand Avenue, Tompkins Avenue, Greene Avenue, Lewis Avenue, Flushing Avenue, Park Avenue, Myrtle Avenue, Dekalb Avenue, Putnam Avenue, Bedford Avenue, Marcy Avenue, Malcolm X Boulevard, Gates Avenue, Madison Street and Jefferson Avenue.
Among the many other awards he has received are an Honorary Doctor of Music from the University of Sydney, Fellow of the Royal College of Music, Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, the George Peabody Medal for Outstanding Contributions to Music in America, the Andrew White Medal from Loyola College, the Harriet Cohen Memorial Award, the J. C. Williamson Award, and most recently, the Sir Bernard Heinze Award for outstanding contribution to music in Australia.

Harriet and published
Several editions featuring Newton's first three stanzas and the verse previously included by Harriet Beecher Stowe in Uncle Tom's Cabin were published by Excell between 1900 and 1910, and his version of " Amazing Grace " became the standard form of the song in American churches.
Within a year the book had sold some 200, 000 copies and by the end of the 19th Century it had sold more copies than any other book published in America outside of Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe.
The best-selling anti-slavery novel from the 19th century is Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe, published in 1852.
In Thrones, Dominations, the last, unfinished novel by Sayers, completed by Jill Paton Walsh, the Author's Note states that Harriet Vane published a monograph on Sheridan Le Fanu in 1946, drawing on this research.
According to his nephew's Memoir the first edition was prepared by Bowdler's sister, Harriet, but both were published under Thomas Bowdler's name, probably because a woman could not then publicly admit that she understood Shakespeare's racy passages.
* March 20 – Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe is published.
In 1954, Harriet Adams created the Tom Swift, Jr., series, which was published under the name " Victor Appleton II ".
Harriet the Spy is a children's novel by Louise Fitzhugh published in 1964.
For the Tom Swift Jr. series the books were outlined mostly by Harriet ( Stratemeyer ) Adams, head of the Stratemeyer Syndicate, attributed to the pseudonymous Victor Appleton II, and published in hardcover by Grosset & Dunlap.
Concerned about the plight of Native Americans in southern California and elsewhere, and inspired by her friend Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin, Helen Hunt Jackson's novel Ramona was published in November 1884.
* Harriet Jacobs ( 1813 – 1897 ), American abolitionist and author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, which was published in 1861 under the nom de plume of " Linda Brent.
This paper had a considerable circulation, and in it, in 1851 — 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin was first published.
Sayers had charted the developing relationship between Lord Peter Wimsey and Harriet Vane over four published novels, culminating in Busman's Honeymoon, the action of which takes place immediately following the couple's marriage.
Notable Beat Generation women who have been published include Joyce Johnson ; Carolyn Cassady ; Hettie Jones ; Joanne Kyger ; Harriet Sohmers Zwerling ; Diane DiPrima ; and Ruth Weiss, who also made films.
On his return, Harriet Monroe published in Poetry magazine first his poem " General William Booth Enters into Heaven " in 1913 and then " The Congo " in 1914.
* Harriet Beecher Stowe ’ s Uncle Tom ’ s Cabin: an Electronic Edition of the National Era Version — Edited by textual scholar Wesley Raabe, this is the first edition of the novel to be based on the original text published in the National Era
*" How To Live on Christ " a pamphlet by Harriet Beecher Stowe, taken from her Introduction to Chistopher Dean's " Religion As It Should Be or The Remarkable Experience and Triumphant Death of Ann Thane Peck " published in 1847 Hudson Taylor sent a pamphlet using the words of this preface out to all the missionaries of the China Inland Mission in 1869.
Harriet Beecher Stowe's moving description of the treatment of slaves in Uncle Tom's Cabin, published in 1852, led her wide international readership to recognize — in some instances for the first time, the cruelty and oppression of slavery.
In 1852 Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Books and pamphlets supporting her claims included Harriet von Rathlef-Keilmann's book Anastasia, ein Frauenschicksal als Spiegel der Weltkatastrophe ( Anastasia, A Woman's Fate as a Mirror of the World Catastrophe ), which was published in Germany and Switzerland in 1928, though it was serialized by the tabloid newspaper Berliner Nachtausgabe in 1927.
Composed mainly between February 1910 and July or August 1911, the poem was first published in Chicago in the June 1915 issue of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse, after Ezra Pound, the magazine's foreign editor, persuaded Harriet Monroe, its founder, that Eliot was unique: " He has actually trained himself AND modernized himself ON HIS OWN.
* Uncle Tom's Cabin, a novel by Harriet Beecher Stowe published in 1852, described Eliza and her son Harry as quadroons.
It was also the home of Harriet E. Wilson, who published the semi-autobiographical novel Our Nig: Or, Sketches in the Life of a Free Black in 1859, making it the first novel by an African-American published in the country.

Harriet and letters
Harriet, herself a victim of poison-pen letters ever since her trial, reluctantly agrees to help, and spends much of the next few months resident at the college, ostensibly to do research on Sheridan Le Fanu and assist a don with her book.
* A translation of the letters of Gerbert ( 982 – 987 ) with introduction and notes, Harriet Pratt Lattin, tr., Columbus, OH, H. L. Hedrick, 1932.
He knew that Harriet had children and was living in Maryland, but she and Beverly stopped responding to his letters and they lost touch.
In May 2007, Harriet Swift, an anti-logging activist from New South Wales was convicted and reprimanded for contempt of Parliament, after she wrote fictitious press releases and letters purporting to be Federal MP Gary Nairn as an April Fools ' Day prank.
Another friend, Harriet Winslow Sewall, arranged Child's letters for publication after her death.
Harriet Cohen is highly likely to have been one of these, as various letters from her private collection and interviews suggest.
Friends comfortably furnished his cell, and he received letters and several hundred visitors including both Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman.
When the Dorchester County sheriff searched Green's house, he found the letters from Samuel Jr. naming Jackson and Bailey, two slaves who had escaped to Canada with Harriet Tubman.
) Martineau, Harriet: selected letters ( 1990 )

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