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Miscellany and is
He is also remembered for his book of reminiscences, A Mathematician's Miscellany ( new edition published in 1986 ).
There is a story ( related in the Miscellany ) that at a conference Littlewood met a German mathematician who said he was most interested to discover that Littlewood really existed, as he had always assumed that Littlewood was a name used by Hardy for lesser work which he did not want to put out under his own name ; Littlewood apparently roared with laughter.
The articles against Whittingham are printed from the domestic state papers in the ‘ Camden Miscellany ’; the charge that ‘ he is defamed of adulterie ’ is entered as ‘ partly proved ’ and that of drunkenness as ‘ proved ;’ but the real allegation against Whittingham was the invalidity of his ordination.
* The Miscellany News, founded in 1866, is the oldest publication of Vassar College, and one of the oldest college weekly newspapers in the United States.
The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic narrative poem written by Alexander Pope, first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellany in May 1712 in two cantos ( 334 lines ), but then revised, expanded and reissued under Pope's name on March 2, 1714, in a much-expanded 5-canto version ( 794 lines ).
The Carleton Miscellany reviewed the book saying, " In the animal poems there is a bravery in the face of our limitations, a warmth for our absurdities, a way of life to be gleaned from our failings and ineptitudes ... a self-critique that turns our freakishness into an ironic source of fulfillment and transcendence.
He writes sometimes simply enough, as in the lines on his own childhood addressed to his mother, but in general his style is more artificial, and his metaphors more studied than is the case with the other contributors to the Miscellany.
This was the Descensus Astraeae ( printed in the Harleian Miscellany, 1808 ), in which Queen Elizabeth is honoured as Astraea.
A Moorish skull-cap, " coated with varnish and set in silver " and bearing the inscription " First adventure of Captain John Benbow, and gift to Richard Ridley, 1687 " is referred to in 1844 by Charles Dickens in Bentley's Miscellany where he speaks of Shrewsbury's history, and the 1885 Dictionary of National Biography also relates the story.
He contributed three pieces to the collection of Poems to the Memory of Edmund Waller ( 1688 ), afterwards reprinted in Dryden's Miscellany Poems, and is said to have written the Latin inscription on Waller's monument in Beaconsfield churchyard.
Lady Margaret Lee is commemorated in Songs and Sonnets, also known as Tottel's Miscellany, a poetry anthology published by the law printer Richard Tottel in 1557.
It is the birthplace of the Munster poet Tadhg Gaelach Ó Súilleabháín ( Timothy O ' Sullivan ) ( 1715-1795 ), author of The Pius Miscellany, and who is buried in Ballylaneen Co. Waterford.
In 1837, Bentley's Miscellany was launched, with Charles Dickens as editor, and Maginn wrote the prologue and contributed over the next several years a series of " Shakespeare Papers " that examined characters in counter-intuitive fashion ( e. g., the key to Falstaff is his melancholy ).
In the Miscellany the quote is
Sudeley is also author of a satire on Greek mythology ( published in John Pudney's Pick of Today's Short Stories ) and a quantity of politically incorrect short stories mostly published in London Miscellany.
Other volumes followed in 1685, 1693, 1694, 1703, and 1708, and the collection, which was several times reprinted, is known as both as Dryden's Miscellany and Tonson's Miscellany.
His album with John Forster entitled Broadsides: A Miscellany of Musical Opinion is a collection of socially-conscious songs written for Morning Edition.
It was published earlier than the Jeeves books ( in 1912, according to ' Gutenberg ', can be found in what Gutenberg calls a ' Wodehouse Miscellany '), but Florence is years older.
The Catholic Miscellany, successor to the U. S. Catholic Miscellany, the first Catholic newspaper in the United States, is the official newspaper of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston.

Miscellany and first
In January, 1960, the first issue of The Carleton Miscellany, a quarterly literary magazine, was published by the College.
George Shaw, who produced the first description of the animal in the Naturalist's Miscellany in 1799, stated that it was impossible not to entertain doubts as to its genuine nature, and Robert Knox believed it might have been produced by some Asian taxidermist.
The Oxford English Dictionary dates the first appearance of the word vampire in English from 1734, in a travelogue titled Travels of Three English Gentlemen published in the Harleian Miscellany in 1745.
Wyatt's sonnets first appeared in Tottel's Miscellany in 1557.
In 1826 Barham first contributed to Blackwood's Magazine ; and in 1837 he began to furnish to a recently-initiated magazine, Bentley's Miscellany, the series of tales ( most of them metrical, some in prose ) known as The Ingoldsby Legends.
George Shaw, who produced the first description of the animal in the Naturalist's Miscellany in 1799, even took a pair of scissors to the dried skin to check for stitches.
Together the first three books have sold over two million copies, and Schott's Original Miscellany has been translated into more than 13 languages ( including Japanese ).
The Miser's Daughter was published first, starting with the creation of the Ainsworth's Magazine, an independent project that Ainsworth started after leaving Bentley's Miscellany.
In 1729 Dodsley published his first work, Servitude: a Poem written by a Footman, with a preface and postscript ascribed to Daniel Defoe ; and a collection of short poems, A Muse in Livery, or the Footman's Miscellany, was published by subscription in 1732, Dodsley's patrons comprising many persons of high rank.
He was one of the early contributors to Punch and was also a regular contributor to Richard Bentley's Miscellany, in whose pages his first and best book, the novel The Adventures of Mr Ledbury, appeared in 1842.
In 1826, she began the publication of the Juvenile Miscellany, the first monthly periodical for children issued in the United States, and supervised it for eight years.
* George Shaw of the British Museum publishes the first scientific description of the platypus ( Ornithorhynchus anatinus Shaw ) in his magazine The Naturalists ' Miscellany.
He was among the first scientists to examine a platypus and published the first scientific description of it in The Naturalist's Miscellany in 1799.
Her poetry was first published when she was fourteen in a bimonthly periodical of children's poetry called Juvenile Miscellany by editor Lydia Maria Child.
During this period Sparks founded the Unitarian Miscellany and Christian Monitor ( 1821 ), a monthly, and edited its first three volumes ; he was chaplain of the United States House of Representatives from 1821 to 1823 ; and he contributed to the National Intelligencer and other periodicals.
... After the first six months, the Journal was renamed Bradshaw ’ s Journal: A Miscellany of Literature, Science and Art, and the place of publication moved to London, where the title was taken on by William Strange ", but the journal survived only until 1843.
Songes and Sonettes, usually called Tottel's Miscellany, was the first printed anthology of English poetry.
Surrey and Wyatt's inclusion in Tottel's Miscellany would mark the first time either poet's work was printed.
The first edition of Tottel's Miscellany ( 1557 ) featured forty poems by Surrey, ninety-six poems by Wyatt, forty poems by Grimald, and ninety-five poems written by unknown authors.
Before Dickens, the courtyard was best known for its appearance in R. H. Barham's The Ingoldsby Legends, a collection of poems and stories first published in Bentley's Miscellany beginning in 1837.

Miscellany and .
* Christian Miscellany 1 ( 1792 ): 209 – 212.
* C. I. Hamilton, " Selections from the Phinn Committee of Inquiry of October – November 1853 into the State of the Office of Secretary to the Admiralty, in The Naval Miscellany, volume V, edited by N. A. M. Rodger, ( London: Navy Records Society, London, 1984 ).
Two English translations of the Various History, by Fleming ( 1576 ) and Stanley ( 1665 ) made Aelian's miscellany available to English readers, but after 1665 no English translation appeared, until three English translations appeared almost simultaneously: James G. DeVoto, Claudius Aelianus: Ποιϰίλης Ἱοτορίας (" Varia Historia ") Chicago, 1995 ; Diane Ostrom Johnson, An English Translation of Claudius Aelianus ' " Varia Historia ", 1997 ; and N. G. Wilson, Aelian: Historical Miscellany in the Loeb Classical Library.
* Aelian, Historical Miscellany.
* Moorcock's Miscellany ( formerly Tanelorn, Multiverse. org & Moorcock's Weekly Miscellany )
The Shakespeare Miscellany.
Claudius Aelianus wrote in Miscellany () that Plato called Sappho wise.
The follow-up book, Look, I Made a Hat: Collected Lyrics ( 1981 – 2011 ) with Attendant Comments, Amplifications, Dogmas, Harangues, Digressions, Anecdotes and Miscellany was released on November 22, 2011.
A Miscellany by Edna St. Vincent Millay
His books of poetry include Poems 1913 and 1914 ( 1914 ); Poems Translated from the French ( 1914 ); Three Poems ( 1916 ); The Barn ( 1916 ); The Silver Bird of Herndyke Mill ; Stane Street ; The Gods of the World Beneath, ( 1916 ); The Harbingers ( 1916 ); Pastorals ( 1916 ); The Waggoner and Other Poems ( 1920 ); The Shepherd, and Other Poems of Peace and War ( 1922 ); Old Homes ( 1922 ); To Nature: New Poems ( 1923 ); Dead Letters ( 1923 ); Masks of Time: A New Collection of Poems Principally Meditative ( 1925 ); Japanese Garland ( 1928 ); Retreat ( 1928 ); Winter Nights: A Reminiscence ( 1928 ); Near and Far: New Poems ( 1929 ); A Summer's Fancy ( 1930 ); To Themis: Poems on Famous Trials ( 1931 ); Constantia and Francis: An Autumn Evening, ( 1931 ); Halfway House: A Miscellany of New Poems, ( 1932 ); Choice or Chance: New Poems ( 1934 ); Verses: To H. R. H. The Duke of Windsor, ( 1936 ); An Elegy and Other Poems ( 1937 ); On Several Occasions ( 1938 ); Poems, 1930-1940 ( 1940 ); Shells by a Stream ( 1944 ); After the Bombing, and Other Short Poems ( 1949 ); Eastward: A Selection of Verses Original and Translated ( 1950 ); Records of Friendship ( 1950 ); A Hong Kong House ( 1959 ); Poems on Japan ( 1967 ).
* Accounts of the Comptroller, Sir Duncan Forestar, 1495 – 1499, Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, vol.
* Moorcock's Miscellany ( formerly Tanelorn, Multiverse. org & Moorcock's Weekly Miscellany )

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