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Samuel and Wells
Orson, together with associates Samuel Wells and Nelson Sizer, ran the phrenological business and publishing house Fowlers & Wells in New York City.
On his return journey to Chicago he visited Kentucky where he married Rebekah Wells, the daughter of Samuel Wells, and they traveled together to Chicago in June 1811.
He also illustrated more than 50 works by other authors, including Samuel Beckett, Edward Lear, John Bellairs, H. G. Wells, Alain-Fournier, Charles Dickens, T. S. Eliot, Hilaire Belloc, Muriel Spark, Florence Parry Heide, John Updike, John Ciardi and Felicia Lamport.
According to The History of Ontario County New York, some of the earliest pioneers included " Daniel Gates, Daniel Warner, Ezra Platt, Samuel Day, George Chapin, Israel Chapin, Jr., Frederick Follett, Thomas Sawyer, Benjamin Wells and Mr. Sweet, all of whom were from Massachusetts, while William Wyckoff who was another pioneer, was from Pennsylvania.
Samuel Wells Williams gave an account of them in his book " The Middle kingdom: a survey of the ... Chinese empire and its inhabitants ":
The son of Samuel Hood, vicar of Butleigh in Somerset, and prebendary of Wells and Mary Hoskins, daughter of Richard Hoskins, Esquire, of Beaminster, Dorset.
Bowie supported duellist Samuel Levi Wells III, while Wright supported Wells's opponent, Dr. Thomas Harris Maddox.
It vanished from the stage for nearly two centuries, until Samuel Phelps staged a production at Sadler's Wells Theatre in Clerkenwell in 1854.
Other nineteenth century performances include Charles Kean's in 1848 at the Haymarket Theatre, Samuel Phelps ' in 1857 at the Sadler's Wells Theatre and William Poel's in 1892 and 1896.
Further adaptations followed in 1786 ( Thomas Hull's at Covent Garden ) and 1816 ( George Lamb's at Drury Lane ), ending with an 1851 production reinstating Shakespeare's original text by Samuel Phelps at Sadler's Wells.
Various other adaptations were performed down to 1855, when Samuel Phelps revived the Shakespearean original at Sadler's Wells Theatre.
Porges read the works of such authors as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Saki, O. Henry, Thomas Henry Huxley, Samuel Johnson, G. K. Chesterton, Rudyard Kipling, Jack London, H. G. Wells, Isaac Asimov, Robert Louis Stevenson, Charles Dickens and Edgar Wallace.
" Animals, even the most intelligent of them ,", wrote Samuel R. Wells in 1942, " can hardly be said to have any forehead at all, and in natural total idiots it is very diminished ".
* Wells, Jr., Samuel F. " Sounding the Tocsin: NSC 68 and the Soviet Threat " International Security, Vol.
* BHL A companion to Mr. Bullock's London Museum and Pantherion: containing a brief description of upwards of fifteen thousand natural and foreign curiosities, antiquities, and productions of the fine arts, collected during seventeen years of arduous research .....( Bullock, William, Howitt, Samuel and Wells, John West First Printed for the proprietor, 1812.
Just as Sadler's Wells seemed at its lowest ebb, an unexpected champion arrived in the shape of the actor-manager Samuel Phelps.
Ira Tracy and Samuel Wells Williams ( 1812 – 1884 ), followed in 1833, settling at Singapore and Macau.
His first play, Calaynos, went into two editions during 1848, and the following year was played by Samuel Phelps at Sadler's Wells Theatre, London, May 10.
He was born, 25 March 1634, in the parish of St. Cuthbert, Wells, and educated in the grammar school at Wells, and then at Blundell's School in Tiverton under Samuel Butler.
The School Committee establishing English High School was chaired by Samuel Adams Wells, the grandson of Governor Samuel Adams.
In 1850, after a generation of critical interest and theatrical neglect, the play was staged by Samuel Phelps at Sadler's Wells, with Isabella Glyn in the title role.

Samuel and Williams
A teenage girl, Abigail Williams, is being sharply questioned by her minister uncle, the Reverend Samuel Parris, about a wild night affair in the woods in which she and some other girls had seemed to have had contact with these evil beings.
Vermont historian Samuel Williams called it " an act which for its savage barbarity is probably without parallel in the legislation of any civilized country ".
Theodore Samuel " Ted " Williams ( August 30, 1918 – July 5, 2002 ) was an American professional baseball player and manager.
Ted Williams was born in San Diego as Teddy Samuel Williams, named after his father, Samuel Stuart Williams, and former President, Teddy Roosevelt, although Williams claimed that his middle name stemmed from one of his mother's brothers ( in truth, her dead brother was Daniel Venzor ) who had been killed in World War I.
Roger Williams and Samuel Gorton both opposed slavery, and the law passed in 1652 was the attempt to stop slavery from coming to Rhode Island.
In order to create a more favourable critical climate, a group of Joyce's supporters ( including Samuel Beckett, William Carlos Williams, Rebecca West and others ) put together a collection of critical essays on the new work.
* Samuel Beckett ; William Carlos Williams ; et al.
* In 1854, Jesse M Mercer and others organized a colony near the future settlement of Newburg in Comanche County on lands earlier granted by Mexico to Stephen F. Austin and Samuel May Williams.
The characters of Zack Morris, Samuel " Screech " Powers, Lisa Turtle, and Mr. Richard Belding all originated on the series ; other main characters, including other classmates Nikki Coleman ( Heather Hopper ), Mikey Gonzalez ( Max Battimo ), and maintenance supervisor Mylo Williams ( T. K. Carter ), were discontinued when the show changed direction.
Georg Kaiser ( 1878 ); Ernst Toller ( 1893-1939 ); Reinhard Sorge ( 1892-1916 ); Bertolt Brecht ( 1898-1956 ); Seán O ' Casey ( 1880-1964 ); Eugene O ' Neill ( 1885-1953 ); Elmer Rice ( 1892-1967 ); Tennessee Williams ( 1911-83 ); Arthur Miller ( 1915-2005 ); Samuel Beckett ( 1906-89 ).
Three of the earliest English men to settle in the area now known as Seekonk and Providence were William Blackstone, Roger Williams and Samuel Newman.
Samuel Williams was another pioneer in this section of the county.
Williams returned to the land in the fall of 1833 with his son, Samuel, son-in-law, Gary Briggs and Briggs ' wife.
Members of the Township Council are Council President John A. Spiech ( R, 2014 ), Vice President Harry Williams ( R, 2014 ), Samuel A. Alderisio ( R, 2012 ), H. Lisa DiGiulio ( R, 2012 ), Charles J. Jandris ( R, 2012 ), Roy B. Larson ( R, 2014 ) and John Roth ( R, 2012 ).
Other notable nocturnes from the 20th century include those from Michael Glenn Williams, Samuel Barber and Robert Helps.
Located within the town are a number of properties listed on the National Register of Historic Places including: Peter Bitley House, Thomas Bitley House, Samuel Botsford House, Esperanza, Hampstead, Uriah Hanford House, George Hays House, Ezikial Perry House, St. Luke's Episcopal Church, Sill Tenant House, Abraham Wagener House, H. Allen Wagener House, Jemima Wilkinson House, and Sherman Williams House and Fruit Barn.
Charter Members are Mr & Mrs Samuel Hall, Mr & Mrs Moses Williams, Sarah Crawfis, Louisa Guisinger, G. W. Montgomery, and Samuel McDonald.

Samuel and translator
In his introduction to The Portable Cervantes, Samuel Putnam, a noted translator of Cervantes ' novel, calls Avellaneda's version " one of the most disgraceful performances in history ".
What future translator Samuel Putnam called " the prevailing slapstick quality of this work, especially where Sancho Panza is involved, the obtrusion of the obscene where it is found in the original, and the slurring of difficulties through omissions or expanding upon the text " all made the Motteux version irresponsible.
Samuel Lee, the editor ( 1842 ) and translator ( 1843 ) of the Syriac Theophania thought that the work must have been written " after the general peace restored to the Church by Constantine, and before either the ' Praeparatio ,' or the ' Demonstratio Evengelica ,' was written.
Anatoli was the son-in-law ( and possibly also the brother-in-law ) of Samuel ibn Tibbon, the well known translator of Maimonides.
* Samuel Worcester, ( 19 January 1798 – 20 April 1859 ), was a missionary to the Cherokee, translator of the Bible, printer and defender of Cherokee sovereignty.
Historically notable psilanthropists have included figures such as the translator of the first Bible in Byelorussian, Symon Budny ( who was excommunicated by the Polish Unitarians ), and Joseph Priestley and Samuel Taylor Coleridge in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Subsequently the translator identified himself as Moses Samuel of Liverpool ( 1795 – 1860 ), who obtained a copy of the 1625 Hebrew edition and became convinced that the core of this work truly was the self-same Book of the Upright referenced in Hebrew scriptures.
He was the son-in-law of Samuel ibn Tibbon, translator of Maimonides.
* December 23-Sara Coleridge, poet and translator, daughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge ( died 1852 )
Two nephews, orphaned young and for whom he assumed responsibility, were Samuel Sharpe, the Egyptologist and translator of the Bible, and his younger brother Daniel, the early geologist.
Reunited with his longtime friend Samuel Worcester, Boudinot returned to his vocation as a translator of the Gospel.
He executed many translations from the French language, and a version ( 1687 ) of Don Quixote, which has been called by Quixote translator Samuel Putnam the worst English translation ever made of the famous novel.
Samuel Johnson, who included him in his Lives of the Poets, called him a very licentious translator, and remarked that he did not recompense his neglect of the author by beauties of his own.
Samuel Sorbière ( 1615 – 1670 ) was a French physician and man of letters, a philosopher and translator, who is best known for his promotion of the works of Thomas Hobbes and Pierre Gassendi, in whose view of physics he placed his support, though unable to refute René Descartes, but who developed a reputation in his own day for a truculent and disputatious nature.
Fawkes was considered by his contemporaries the best translator since the days of Alexander Pope, and Samuel Johnson approved of his translation of Anacreon.
John Hoole ( December 1727 – 2 August 1803 ) was an English translator, the son of watch-maker and inventor, Samuel Hoole and Sarah Drury.
* Samuel ben Judah ibn Tibbon, 12th-13th century French Maimonidean philosopher and translator
* A Distant Voice: An Autobiography of Samuel Lewin, translator
It gives insight into the soul of the man and his relation to his son, also a scholar and translator, Samuel.
Nahum Sokolow ( Nahum ben Joseph Samuel Sokolow, Nachum ben Yoseph Shmuel Soqolov,, < span dir = " ltr "> 1859-1936 </ span >) was a Zionist leader, author, translator, and a pioneer of Hebrew journalism.

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