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wrote and metrical
" In a review of H. D. Traill's analysis of Coleridge in the " English Men of Letters ", an anonymous reviewer wrote in 1885 Westminster Review: " Of ' Kubla Khan ,' Mr. Traill writes: ' As to the wild dream-poem ' Kubla Khan ,' it is hardly more than a psychologial curiosity, and only that perhaps in respect of the completeness of its metrical form.
He wrote a Greek grammar, a metrical translation of Pindar, and an account of Greece ( L ' état actuel de la Grece in 1833 ).
He wrote a metrical abridgement, in 18th century Scots, of Blind Harry's poem The Actes and Deidis of the Illustre and Vallyeant Campioun Schir William Wallace on Sir William Wallace, whose 17th century castle remains, though in ruins.
His pupil Solomon Parḥon, who wrote at Salerno in 1160, relates that Judah repented having used the new metrical methods, and had declared he would not again employ them.
While the attribution of the entire play to Peele is no longer accepted, Sir Brian Vickers demonstrated using metrical and other analysis that Peele wrote the first act and the first two scenes in Act II of Titus Andronicus, with Shakespeare responsible for the rest.
i. 191 ) he employed 70 amanuenses and wrote in all 760 metrical homilies, besides expositions, letters and hymns of different sorts.
Nowak also wrote essays examining theoretical aspects of the music of Bruckner and others, such as an essay on the metrical and rhythmical aspects of the symphonies of Beethoven and Bruckner.
A later sophist who wrote one of the only remaining accounts of these great orators in his Lives of the Sophists, Philostratus describes Asianism as a form that “… aims at but never achieves the grand style .” He adds that its style is more, “ flowery, bombastic, full of startling metaphors, too metrical, too dependent on the tricks of rhetoric, too emotional .” This type of rhetoric is also sometimes referred to as “ Ionian ” and “ Ephesian ”, because it came from outside of Athens.
During the period of the English Reformation, many other poets besides Sternhold and Hopkins wrote metrical versions of some of the psalms.
He recalls, " I wrote to her suggesting that she should fill a gap in our Irish Church Hymnal by giving us a metrical version of St. Patrick's ' Lorica ' and I sent her a carefully collated copy of the best prose translations of it.
He wrote metrical translations of the Vedas, and numerous papers on the Vedas and linguistics, many of which were collected in the Oriental and Linguistic Studies series ( 1872 – 74 ).
Bede particularly mentions the metrical art, astronomy, and arithmetic ( which may be considered as representing what we should now call rhetoric and the belles lettres, physical science, and mathematics ); and he adds, that while he wrote ( in the early part of the eighth century ), there still remained some of the pupils of Theodore and Adrian, who spoke the Greek and Latin languages as readily as their native tongue.
Justo Claudio Fojas, an Ilokano secular priest who wrote novenas, prayerbooks, catechism, metrical romances, dramas, biographies, a Spanish grammar and an Iloko-Spanish dictionary, was Leona Florentino's contemporary.
It would seem that his distress could not be due to lack of patrons ; for his metrical Life of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary was written by request of Erard de Valery, who wished to present it to Isabel, queen of Navarre ; and he wrote elegies on the deaths of Anceau de l ' Isle Adam, the third of the name, who died about 1251, Eudes, comte de Nevers ( died 1267 ), Theobald II of Navarre ( died 1270 ), and Alphonse, comte de Poitiers ( d. 1271 ), which were probably paid for by the families of the personages celebrated.

wrote and handbook
The development of this department at the British Museum moved the focus for the development of conservation from Germany to Britain, and in 1956 Plenderleith wrote a significant handbook called The Conservation of Antiquities and Works of Art, it was this book rather than Rathgen's that is commonly seen as the major source for the development of conservation as we know it today.
In 1247 AD Song Ci wrote a book entitled Washing Away of Wrongs as a handbook for coroners.
Chamberlain wrote the preface to the Radical Programme ( July 1885 ), the first campaign handbook of British political history.
Charles Durrett later wrote a handbook on creating senior cohousing.
In 1837 he wrote his well-known handbook of Christian Evidences, which was translated during his lifetime into more than a dozen languages.
Warington Baden-Powell wrote the handbook Sea Scouting and Seamanship for Boys in 1910 with a foreword by Robert Baden-Powell.
A headman of Kanda area in Edo named wrote in his supplementary ukiyoe handbook that Sharaku was a Noh actor named.
In 1930, Kmoch updated the Bilguier openings handbook, and wrote the tournament book for the Carlsbad 1929 event.
Marie-Thérèse Maurette created the framework for what would eventually become the IB Diploma Programme in 1948 when she wrote Is There a Way of Teaching for Peace ?, a handbook for UNESCO.
He wrote in Ancient Greek the grammar handbook " Summarized Questions of the Eight Parts of Word After Their Rules " ().
Sessions, Jr. wrote the first God and Country handbook for the Boy Scouts of America.
He wrote the book Revolution in the Revolution ?, which analysed the tactical and strategic doctrines then prevailing among militant socialist movements in Latin America, and acted as a handbook for guerrilla warfare that supplemented Guevara's own manual on the subject.
Atkinson worked tirelessly to promote and develop science-based British archaeology, and was famous for his practical contributions to archaeological technique and his pragmatic solutions to on-site problems, which were listed in the handbook he wrote called Field Archaeology.
More recently, he wrote Seeing the Sunrise which has been described as " a handbook for overcoming self-doubt, for revelling in success, for aiming high.
In 1910, inspired by the writings of Baden-Powell, Svojsík wrote Základy junáctví (" The Foundations of Scouting "), the first handbook for Scouts already operating in the Czech lands.
British pathologist, Austin Gresham, wrote a handbook, A Colour Atlas of Forensic Pathology, in 1975.
Not content with this, he also wrote a handbook for travellers to the island, and pursued studies in meteorology.
He wrote a handbook for the young prince with the title Praecepta der musicalischen Composition, 1708.
Rose wrote a handbook for local group leaders, The Monitor Papers, currently unpublished, giving instructions on how to create rapport, which in his view is a precursor to Transmission, and he published Energy Transmutation, Between-ness and Transmission in 1975.
Arzani also wrote a handbook of medicine for beginners ( Mizan al-tibb ), a commentary on the Qanunchah by Jaghmini ( a greatly abbreviated version of The Canon of Medicine by Avicenna ); Tibb-i Akbari, composed in 1700CE, which was an expanded version of the Arabic treatise Sharh al-asbab wa-al -‘ alamat by Burhan al-Din Nafis ibn ‘ Iwad al-Kirmani ; a Persian treatise on the illnesses occurring during pregnancy and breast-feeding and the diseases of infants ; and Mujarrabat-i Akbari, a formulary of compound remedies.
He also wrote a short legal handbook ( ο ̉ ροι, or simply Liber Singularis ) containing a glossary of terms and an outline of basic principles.
Gladman, citing the British and Foreign School Society handbook, wrote " Failure occurred, as it always will, when masters were slaves to " the system ," when they were satisfied with mechanical arrangements and routine work, or when they did not study their pupils, and get down to Principles of Education.
As early as 1908, Scouting founder Robert Baden-Powell wrote in the first Scout handbook that, " No man is much good unless he believes in God and obeys His laws.
He wrote a handbook Play like the Stars, about playing classical style on the chromatic harmonica.

wrote and De
Aimoin, who died about 1010, must be distinguished from Aimoin, a monk of Saint-Germain-des-Pres, who wrote De miraculis sancti Germani, and a fragment De Normanorum gestis circa Parisiacam urbem et de divine in eos ultione tempore Caroli calvi.
He wrote " The Princes of the Lost Tribe " and " Ancient Queen of Somawathee " for Menaka De Shabandu and Bridget Halpe's choirs, respectively, based on historical incidents in ancient Sri Lanka.
In about 701 Bede wrote his first works, the De Arte Metrica and De Schematibus et Tropis ; both were intended for use in the classroom.
In addition to these works on astronomical timekeeping, he also wrote De natura rerum, or On the Nature of Things, modelled in part after the work of the same title by Isidore of Seville.
Also from Greece, Pedanius Dioscorides, in the middle of the first century, wrote De Materia Medica, a five-volume encyclopedia about herbal medicine that was widely read for more than 1, 500 years.
Kael wrote in her review of Blow Out, " At forty, Brian De Palma has more than twenty years of moviemaking behind him, and he has been growing better and better.
Gildas, in his 6th century De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, may have been alluding to Boudica when he wrote " A treacherous lioness butchered the governors who had been left to give fuller voice and strength to the endeavours of Roman rule.
The peace following the battle of Mons Badonicus is attested partly by Gildas, a monk, who wrote De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae or On the Ruin and Conquest of Britain during the middle of the sixth century.
Van Doesburg wrote Dada poetry himself in De Stijl, although under a pseudonym, I. K.
As Herbert wrote in De Religione Laici ( 1645 ),
In response, Luther wrote his De servo arbitrio ( On the Bondage of the Will ) ( 1525 ), which attacks the " Diatribe " and Erasmus himself, going so far as to claim that Erasmus was not a Christian.
Poetry and cruelty of life were harmonically combined in the works that Vittorio De Sica wrote and directed together with screenwriter Cesare Zavattini: among them, Shoeshine ( 1946 ), The Bicycle Thief ( 1948 ) and Miracle in Milan ( 1951 ).
Madero wrote to De la Barra, saying that Huerta's actions were unjustified and recommending that Zapata's demands be met.
Al-Kindi wrote De Gradibus, in which he demonstrated the application of mathematics to medicine, particularly in the field of pharmacology.
" Michel De Coster, Professor at the Université de Liège wrote also: " The historians and the economists say that Belgium was the second industrial power of the world, in proportion to its population and its territory (...) But this rank is the one of Wallonia where the coal-mines, the blast furnaces, the iron and zinc factories, the wool industry, the glass industry, the weapons industry ... were concentrated "
The latter then took up the usage according to which one who remained for 44 days under excommunication came under the penalties executed by the State, and wrote his De incarcerandis fedelibus, in which he demanded that it should be legal for the excommunicated to appeal to the king and his council against the excommunication ; in this writing he laid open the entire case and in such a way that it was understood by the laity.
He then wrote a seven-volume account in Greek known to us as the Jewish War ( Latin Bellum Judaicum or De Bello Judaico ).
He also wrote works on sculpture, De Statua.
* Alberti wrote an influential work on architecture, De Re Aedificatoria, which by the 18th century had been translated into Italian, French, Spanish and English.
* Apart from his treatises on the arts, Alberti also wrote: Philodoxus (" Lover of Glory ", 1424 ), De commodis litterarum atque incommodis (" On the Advantages and Disadvantages of Literary Studies ", 1429 ), Intercoenales (" Table Talk ", c. 1429 ), Della famiglia (" On the Family ", begun 1432 ) Vita S. Potiti (" Life of St. Potitus ", 1433 ), De iure ( On Law, 1437 ), Theogenius (" The Origin of the Gods ", c. 1440 ), Profugorium ab aerumna (" Refuge from Mental Anguish ",), Momus ( 1450 ) and De Iciarchia (" On the Prince ", 1468 ). These and other works were translated and printed in Venice by the humanist Cosimo Bartoli in 1586.
The German Renaissance specialist Georgius Agricola wrote works such as De re metallica ( On Metals, 1556 ) and De Natura Fossilium ( On the Nature of Rocks, 1546 ) which begin the scientific approach to the subject.

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