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footnote and poem
The poem consists of three parts, with an additional footnote.
In a footnote attached to the poem, he declared, " More people have been imprisoned for Liberty, humiliated and tortured for Equality, and slaughtered for Fraternity in this century, than for any less hypocritical motives, during the Middle Ages.
The main story and the poem summarized in the footnote share a parallel theme.
The church's spiritual importance is celebrated in the poem The Waste Land by T. S. Eliot, who adds in a footnote that " the interior of St. Magnus Martyr is to my mind one of the finest among Wren's interiors ".
From time to time, a footnote refers to a further poem containing its own depths of brackets.
Scottish historical novelist Sir Walter Scott scornfully described the last method in a footnote to his influential poem Lady of the Lake.

footnote and titled
A somewhat interesting footnote is that " Joan of Arc " and " Maid of Orleans " were originally both titled " Joan of Arc "; the name of the latter single was changed at the insistence of the publishers and to avoid confusion.
In the ensuing years, Linder was relegated to little more than a footnote in film history until 1963 when a Max Linder compilation film titled Laugh with Max Linder premiered at the Venice Film Festival and was theatrically released.
There is also a recent English transliteration of Drukpa Kargyud Ngondro written by HH Shakya Rinchen, the 9th Jey Khenpo of Bhutan, titled " The Chariot of Liberation to the Vajra Abode " with detailed footnote and important commentaries by HH Jey Tenzin Dondup, the 69th Supreme Lord Abbot of Bhutan.

footnote and Western
Catharsis before the sixth-century rise of tragedy is, for the Western World, essentially a historical footnote to the Aristotelian conception.
To suggest that all of Western literature is no more than a footnote to the writings of ancient Greece is an exaggeration, but it is nevertheless true that the Greek world of thought was so far-ranging that there is scarcely an idea discussed today not already debated by the ancient writers.
" Gross & Walzer concur, indicating that, just as Alfred North Whitehead considered all Western philosophy a footnote to Plato, " all subsequent rhetorical theory is but a series of responses to issues raised " by Aristotle's Rhetoric.

footnote and published
The exact nature of the " re-discovery " has been somewhat debated: De Vries published first on the subject, mentioning Mendel in a footnote, while Correns pointed out Mendel's priority after having read De Vries's paper and realizing that he himself did not have priority.
In a footnote, which was published as a correction in the next issue of the journal, he justified his suggestion to call organs of unicellular organisms " organella " since they are only differently formed parts of one cell, in contrast to multicellular organs of multicellular organisms.
While this quote was published by Abel Clarin de la Rive in his Woman and Child in Universal Freemasonry, and does not appear in Taxil's writings proper, it is sourced in a footnote to Diana Vaughan, Taxil's creation.
( Philologist and Rector of the Leipzig Thomasschule, Johann Matthias Gesner, for whom Bach composed a cantata in 1729, published a substantial Quintilian edition with a long footnote in Bach's honor.
As a footnote it is interesting to note that George S. Myers had previously been one of the degree supervisors for Porfirio Manacop, whose ground-breaking Master's work ( in 1941, later published 1953 ) on a Sicyopterus species overturned the prevailing notion that it was catadromous.
Philologist and Rector of the Leipzig Thomasschule, Johann Matthias Gesner, for whom Bach composed a cantata in 1729, published a substantial Quintilian edition with a long footnote in Bach's honor.
A page footnote in some editions says that soon after the book was published, the difference between 6-day taxicab licences ( not allowed to trade on Sundays ) and 7-day taxicab licences ( allowed to trade on Sundays ) was abolished and the taxicab licence fee was much reduced.
The speech is also found in a footnote to notes about a speech Hitler held in Obersalzberg on 22 August 1939 that were published in the German Foreign Policy documents
In addition to her autobiography, China Eggs, and three dramatic sketches ( the latter published in 2011 by the Gallery of Surrealism, New York, in the book called Kay Sage: the Biographical Chronology and Four Surrealist One-Act Plays-see footnote no 1. below ), Sage wrote several books of poetry, all but one in French.
But in 1864 Brasseur published his French translation of Diego de Landa's recently recovered 1556 ethnographic manuscript, which decisively rejected the notion of Mayan circumcision, and in a footnote he acknowledged there had probably been a " mistake ", an admission that never found its way into the English-language literature although modern ethnography has long since understood the nature of these rituals.
30, was published without a title but was known as the " War Sonata " among Medtner's friends ; a footnote " during the war 1914-1917 " appeared in the 1959 Collected Edition.
Ritter appeared to disavow part of his original work of 1940 by the addition of a footnote to the third edition of Machstaat und Utopie published in 1943.
The footnote appeared in the book when it was published, and a copy was circulated to every British Member of Parliament ; when Churchill was alerted, he instructed his solicitors to issue a writ for libel.
In Duncan's Masonic Ritual and Monitor, published in the mid-19th century, Malcolm Duncan uses the word as a recognition password in his rendition of the Royal Arch degree, and in a footnote states that the word is a combination of sacred names.
A report published in 1902, but which includes observations made earlier has this to say of Santa Maria: " a pueblo on coast highway in Ilocos Sur, Luzon ; several cart roads lead to interior ; a city, well built and, by way, of a historical footnote, adds that on " December 3, 1900.
In a footnote to his essay Pop Art the words, he goes on to say: " The first published appearance of the terms that I know is: Lawrence Alloway, " The Arts and the Mass Media ," Architectural Design, February, 1958, London.

footnote and British
In the original Kerr Wyllie and Currie paper, British Journal of Cancer, 1972 Aug ; 26 ( 4 ): 239-57, there is a footnote regarding the pronunciation:
( In a footnote, Ernest A. Vizetelly, the first British translator of L ' argent, draws a distinction between Zola's depiction of this aspect of Saccard's character and Zola's personal pro-Jewish beliefs as manifested in the later Dreyfus affair.
In a letter to Lord Salisbury, the British Foreign Secretary, Phillips requested approval to invade Benin and depose the Oba, adding the following footnote: " I would add that I have reason to hope that sufficient ivory would be found in the King's house to pay the expenses incurred in removing the King from his stool.
Also that year he included a painting into the Saatchi Gallery which included the words " British Painting Still Rocks " as reaction to Charles Saatchi's comments that the YBA artists would be nothing more than a footnote in the history of art.
As a footnote, the Senior Research Officer for the committee that drew up the report was Richard Layard, who was to become a well-known British economist.
* Short biography ", St Andrew's Church ", British History Online ( see footnote 33 )

footnote and at
Topp and Martin Hamilton of Kew Gardens compiled the most recent checklist of vegetation in 2009, which can be found at this footnote.
As a footnote, Lord Peter Wimsey has also been included by the science fiction writer Philip José Farmer as a member of the Wold Newton family ; and Laurie R. King's detective character Mary Russell meets up with Lord Peter at a party in the novel A Letter of Mary.
In a footnote Gingerich mentions that an eclipse ( of the sun by the moon ) could not have happened at that time because Passover is a full moon event, and solar eclipses always happen at new moon.
This manuscript, in the Vatican Library, bears the relevant passage inserted as a footnote at the bottom of a page.
Because of its " graphic " nature, this tale has at times been translated incompletely, as in John Payne's translation, where Alibech's sexual awakening is left untranslated and is accompanied with this footnote: " The translators regret that the disuse into which magic has fallen, makes it impossible to render the technicalities of that mysterious art into tolerable English ; they have therefore found it necessary to insert several passages in the original Italian.
This footnote has led many scholars to assume that Point du Sable had settled in Chicago by 1779, however letters written by traders in the late 1770s suggest that Point du Sable was at this time settled at the mouth of Trail Creek ( Rivière du Chemin ) at what is now Michigan City, Indiana.
According to Thomas J. Johnson, a professor of journalism at Southern Illinois University, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger predicted during Nixon's final days that history would remember Nixon as a great president and that Watergate would be relegated to a " minor footnote.
As a coincidental footnote in history, Bishop Haven's gingerbread cottage was located in Oak Bluffs at 10 Clinton Avenue.
While the term " spontaneous human combustion " was not yet created, Brown includes a footnote at the end of chapter 2 that suggests the phenomenon and its existence in 18th century medical studies.
" While not explained in the book, a footnote of the original radio scripts explains that " just before arriving ( on Earth ) he registered his new name officially at the Galactic Nomenclaturoid Office, where they had the technology to unpick his old name from the fabric of space / time and thread the new one in its place, so that to all intents and purposes his name had always been and would always be Ford Prefect.
The note, located either at the foot of the page ( footnote ) or at the end of the paper ( endnote ) would look like this:
A footnote to the Curse of the Bambino claims that Babe Ruth's piano rests at the bottom of Willis Pond in western Sudbury near what was once his home.
This work is cited by William James in his lecture on Neurology and Religion at the beginning of The Varieties of Religious Experience ( footnote 4 ).
1825 became a historical footnote when President Lincoln's assassin John Wilkes Booth arrived at her house after crossing the Potomac River on his escape route.
Lamb also contributed a footnote to Shakespearean studies at this time with his essay " On the Tragedies of Shakespeare ," in which he argues that Shakespeare should be read rather than performed in order to gain the proper effect of his dramatic genius.
He can quote rules and supplements down to page and paragraph / footnote numbers, and bend and abuse this knowledge to his advantage, at times at the expense of other players.
Curiously, the event itself is rarely studied as anything other than a footnote to the larger political debate around conscription at the time.
In Arabic texts, a specific Arabic footnote marker (< span lang =" ar " dir =" rtl " style =" unicode-bidi: embed ">؂</ span >), encoded at code point U + 0602 in Unicode, is also used.

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