The books I will be quoting by this very popular author and Bible scholar of the past are now collector's items that you can purchase for 26 to 75 dollars. This free copy has a good many spelling errors, but the value is still here for those who want to know its content.
CONTENTS
1. LITTLE TALBOT THE GREAT.
2. ABOUT PEOPLE WHO CANT SAY NO.
3. TOO STRANGE FOR FICTION, NOT TOO
STRANGE TO BE TRUE.
4. ABOUT SLEEPING PARTNERSHIP IN CRIME
5. ABOUT COMING TO BELIEVE ONE'S OWN LIE.
6. AT THE TOWER WINDOW WITH SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
7. ABOUT HAVING THE LAW ON ONE'S SIDE.
8. IMPERFECT CRIMINALS.
9. ABOUT A LITTLE CANDLE'S FAR-THROWN BEAMS.
Why do some words translated English behave differently compared to their usage by native English authors. I take a word invented by Milton in Paradise Lost, and see what happens.
Vol. 2 secular annotations on scripture texts.GLENN PEASE
NOTE; This book is available for 26 to 46 dollars because it is a collector's item, but you can read it here free. It has defects in ways but still conveys the wisdom of this great author of the past.
The books I will be quoting by this very popular author and Bible scholar of the past are now collector's items that you can purchase for 26 to 75 dollars. This free copy has a good many spelling errors, but the value is still here for those who want to know its content.
CONTENTS
1. LITTLE TALBOT THE GREAT.
2. ABOUT PEOPLE WHO CANT SAY NO.
3. TOO STRANGE FOR FICTION, NOT TOO
STRANGE TO BE TRUE.
4. ABOUT SLEEPING PARTNERSHIP IN CRIME
5. ABOUT COMING TO BELIEVE ONE'S OWN LIE.
6. AT THE TOWER WINDOW WITH SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
7. ABOUT HAVING THE LAW ON ONE'S SIDE.
8. IMPERFECT CRIMINALS.
9. ABOUT A LITTLE CANDLE'S FAR-THROWN BEAMS.
Why do some words translated English behave differently compared to their usage by native English authors. I take a word invented by Milton in Paradise Lost, and see what happens.
Vol. 2 secular annotations on scripture texts.GLENN PEASE
NOTE; This book is available for 26 to 46 dollars because it is a collector's item, but you can read it here free. It has defects in ways but still conveys the wisdom of this great author of the past.
Sir Francis Bacon's Cipher Story - Free EbookChuck Thompson
Sir Francis Bacon's Cipher Story. Information about Sir Francis Bacon's ciphers, or encryption messaging systems. An historical view of covert communications. Brought to you from the folks at Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website. Visit us.
(Akhriso) (Epub) Brazen and the Beast (The Bareknuckle Bastards, #2)AndikaHasaniy
-
The Lady?s PlanWhen Lady Henrietta Sedley declares her twenty-ninth year her own, she has plans to inherit her father?s business, to make her own fortune, and to live her own life. But first, she intends to experience a taste of the pleasure she?ll forgo as a confirmed spinster. Everything is going perfectly... until she discovers the most beautiful man she?s ever seen tied up in her carriage and threatening to ruin the Year of Hattie before it?s even begun.The Bastard?s ProposalWhen he wakes in a carriage at Hattie?s feet, Whit, a king of Covent Garden known to all the world as Beast, can?t help but wonder about the strange woman who frees him?especially when he discovers she?s headed for a night of pleasure... on his turf. He is more than happy to offer Hattie all she desires... for a price.An Unexpected PassionSoon, Hattie and Whit find themselves rivals in business and pleasure. She won?t give up her plans; he won?t give up his power... and neither of them sees that if they?re .
Presented July 28, 12-1 Fremont Library
Outlander is much more than a television romance about a World War II nurse and a Jacobite in a fetching kilt. The series has been categorized as a period drama, adventure saga, military history and fantasy epic. Inspired by the Irish legends of Fionn Mac Cumhaill and the prophecies of Brahan Seer, the storyline is also filled with mythology and symbolism from around the world, from the Fair Folk and the Loch Ness monster to wendigos, ghosts, zombies and succubae. The series is also rich with its own symbolism: heather and white roses, the dragonfly in amber, Claire’s blue vase and wedding gown, her wedding rings and pearl necklace. This presentation by Valerie Estelle Frankel (author of five books about the Starz series and novels) untangles the myriad of myths, legends, symbols and literary references found within.
Christopher Marlowe's Edward the Second...A Critical Evaluation, The Way I do..Rituparna Ray Chaudhuri
“Marlowe wrote Edward The Second in 1590. He found a suitable tragic theme in the Holinshed’s account of Edward II’s reign though it was not a promising dramatic material from the chronological point of view as the events were disjointed and uninspiring disastrous. Improper coordinates of the sources has left its mark on Marlowe’s play, nevertheless, this is his most finished and satisfactory of plays…Edward The Second can surely be regarded as Marlowe’s finest technical achievement.” (Edited, Dr. S. Sen…)
NOTE: This rare book by a very popular Bible scholar of the past is now a collectors item that you can purchase for 30 TO 50 dollars. This free copy has many spelling errors, but the value is still here for those who want to know its content.
Sir Francis Bacon's Cipher Story - Free EbookChuck Thompson
Sir Francis Bacon's Cipher Story. Information about Sir Francis Bacon's ciphers, or encryption messaging systems. An historical view of covert communications. Brought to you from the folks at Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website. Visit us.
(Akhriso) (Epub) Brazen and the Beast (The Bareknuckle Bastards, #2)AndikaHasaniy
-
The Lady?s PlanWhen Lady Henrietta Sedley declares her twenty-ninth year her own, she has plans to inherit her father?s business, to make her own fortune, and to live her own life. But first, she intends to experience a taste of the pleasure she?ll forgo as a confirmed spinster. Everything is going perfectly... until she discovers the most beautiful man she?s ever seen tied up in her carriage and threatening to ruin the Year of Hattie before it?s even begun.The Bastard?s ProposalWhen he wakes in a carriage at Hattie?s feet, Whit, a king of Covent Garden known to all the world as Beast, can?t help but wonder about the strange woman who frees him?especially when he discovers she?s headed for a night of pleasure... on his turf. He is more than happy to offer Hattie all she desires... for a price.An Unexpected PassionSoon, Hattie and Whit find themselves rivals in business and pleasure. She won?t give up her plans; he won?t give up his power... and neither of them sees that if they?re .
Presented July 28, 12-1 Fremont Library
Outlander is much more than a television romance about a World War II nurse and a Jacobite in a fetching kilt. The series has been categorized as a period drama, adventure saga, military history and fantasy epic. Inspired by the Irish legends of Fionn Mac Cumhaill and the prophecies of Brahan Seer, the storyline is also filled with mythology and symbolism from around the world, from the Fair Folk and the Loch Ness monster to wendigos, ghosts, zombies and succubae. The series is also rich with its own symbolism: heather and white roses, the dragonfly in amber, Claire’s blue vase and wedding gown, her wedding rings and pearl necklace. This presentation by Valerie Estelle Frankel (author of five books about the Starz series and novels) untangles the myriad of myths, legends, symbols and literary references found within.
Christopher Marlowe's Edward the Second...A Critical Evaluation, The Way I do..Rituparna Ray Chaudhuri
“Marlowe wrote Edward The Second in 1590. He found a suitable tragic theme in the Holinshed’s account of Edward II’s reign though it was not a promising dramatic material from the chronological point of view as the events were disjointed and uninspiring disastrous. Improper coordinates of the sources has left its mark on Marlowe’s play, nevertheless, this is his most finished and satisfactory of plays…Edward The Second can surely be regarded as Marlowe’s finest technical achievement.” (Edited, Dr. S. Sen…)
NOTE: This rare book by a very popular Bible scholar of the past is now a collectors item that you can purchase for 30 TO 50 dollars. This free copy has many spelling errors, but the value is still here for those who want to know its content.
plot as the soul of literature this presentation is as a part of my academic studies . this i presented in my sem 1 presentation how literature is called soul of literature with example with hamlet ........
so, have a look at this ...
thank you
Paper Topics for Humanities 101 Essay Question # 1Pleas.docxherbertwilson5999
Paper Topics for Humanities 101 Essay Question # 1Please write
a 4 page (1250 minimum word count) essay on one of the
following papertopics . You must use evidence from the text to
back up your claims. A style sheet withfurther instructions about
the paper will be posted in the next few days. BE SURE TOREAD
THE STYLE SHEET IN ADDITION TO THE QUESTIONS
BELOW
.1. At the beginning of Book 16 of the Iliad, Patroklos comes in
tears to Achilles and theepic warrior describes his tearful friend in
terms of a young girl crying to her mother.Consider what this
simile says about Achilles’ view of his relationship to Patroklos
andconsider the other ways (metaphorical or not) in which their
relationship is described inthe books of the epic that you have read.
How do the descriptions of this relationshipdiffer from those
evoking Gilgamesh’s relationship to Enkidu? What is the
rhetoricalfunction of these descriptions in both epics? How are
they meant to characterize therelationships?
2. Both the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Iliad demonstrate scenes of
intense mourning andfunereal ritual. Compare the rituals and
mourning for Enkidu’s death either to Achilles’and the Greeks’
response to Patroklos’ death (including Book 23 as well as Book
18) orto the mourning of the Trojans for Hektor (Books 22 and
24). Are there times whenmourning or the rituals of mourning
seem to violate other social expectations orconventions?
3. In many ways, the Iliad is a poem about men, warriors who fight
and die to gain glory.However, women also play an important part
in the poem, often as a contrast or foil tothe world of warfare.
Discuss this dramatic function of women (including
goddesses)and consider the ways that women are necessary to the
full articulation of the Iliad’svision of life and death. Consider at
least two of the following: 1)Hektor's encounterwith Andromache
in Book 6, 2) the mourning of Hecuba and Andromache in Book
22after Hektor's death, 3) Thetis as Achilles' mother, 4) the many
references to newlywedbrides in a hero's 'obituary' or 'epitaph' in
Homeric song. You may also make this acomparative paper and
contrast the dramatic function of women (and goddesses) in
theEpic Gilgamesh to their function in the Iliad.
4. Both the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Iliad represent heroes in
quest of a form ofimmortality, whether as an actual state or
through song, art, and monument. In what waysdo these two epic
poems represent immortality as a desirable goal? Do the texts
questionthis goal?
HUMANITIES 101STYLE SHEET AND SOME TIPS FOR FIRST ESSAY1).2. All
essays should be at least 1250 words in length (basically, around 4 pages), doublespaced,
in Times 12 pt. Font, with 1 inch margins (approximately). Your paper shouldhave a
title and a word count in parentheses. Your name and student I.D. # should be inthe
upper right hand corner.3. Please proof read meticulously for spelling, grammar, and
syntax errors.4. P.
The Picture Of Dorian Gray Essay - PHDessay.com. The Picture of Dorian Gray Essay Sample | Blog. (DOC) Essay Dorian Gray | Биг Бой - Academia.edu. Appearance vs. Reality: The Picture of Dorian Gray: Thesis - What is a .... The picture of_dorian_gray_nt. dorian gray essay help!?. Dorian Gray Essay | The Picture Of Dorian Gray | Philosophical Science. The Picture of Dorian Gray: An Artfully Aesthetic Affair Free Essay Example. (PDF) The Picture of Dorian Gray as a Postmodern Work. Expert Essay Writers - dorian gray essay beauty - 2017/10/07. Dorian Gray AP Literature Essay - YouTube. The Picture of Dorian Gray Essay by Lori Evans - Issuu. English Essay Dorian Gray | PDF | The Picture Of Dorian Gray | Gothic .... The Picture Of Dorian Gray Analytical Essay | English (Extension 1 .... The Picture Of Dorian Gray Essays - topenglishpaperessaylife. Poetry Prompt: The Picture of Dorian Gray | The Found Poetry Review. The Picture of Dorian Gray Essays GradeSaver. The Picture of Dorian Gray Discussion Questions for Chapters 1 - 3 - BM ....
Sample writing assignment: Baudelairean
Irony.
The writing assignments have improved significantly in the past couple of modules: the arguments
are clearer and are, in general, well supported by evidence from the texts. I’m still seeing too many,
however, where the main argument emerges in the final sentence or two. When you find that
happening (i.e. when the final sentence or so makes a very different claim from the opening
sentence), you need to start again, using that last sentence as your new opening sentence. Usually
this happens when your argument develops during the course of writing the piece. This is a good
thing as it shows your ideas are developing, but it does mean that you need to rewrite your
assignment to make sure it supports your new or revised argument. As always, I will be looking for
a clear argument, strong textual evidence, and a well-formatted and written response.
Please be sure to provide a Works Cited. This can be in any form you are most comfortable with
(AP, MLA, Chicago, Oxford, etc.), but should make it clear what is being referred to and where that
item can be found.
Please note: the 250-word limit (plus or minus 10%) applies only to the text of your argument. It
does not include the works cited or the heading information.
Sample question: What attitude does Baudelaire adopt to the poor in “Let’s beat up the poor”?
A. Student
Writing Assignment, Module 4
Although the violence depicted in Charles Baudelaire’s “Let’s beat up the poor” might appear to
reflect a negative attitude toward the poor, the prose poem itself resists articulating a clear
position, choosing instead to highlight the shortcomings in contemporary responses to the poor.
The speaker in fact draws attention early in the piece to the debates about economic and social
policy that took place in France in the period by noting that he had consumed books “dealing with
the art of making nations happy, wise, and rich” (37), but the poem’s multiple ironies mean that the
reader is left uncertain about its attitude toward the poor.
The speaker aligns himself with Socrates through a reference to his “Demon” (37), but rather
than engaging in a philosophical conversation, he decides that the best response to the pleading
gaze of a beggar is to beat him up, presumably to show him who has the power and who doesn’t.
This is not, however, an act of bravery in any way: the speaker carefully checks that there are no
policemen in the area. The beggar is initially beaten down, but then rises up to attack the speaker,
thereby asserting the political power of the proletariat. The speaker claims to be thrilled that the
beggar—the representative of the poor—has learnt that he must take responsibility for his own
future and rise up against the bourgeoisie in order to achieve equality, but the reader is left
wondering whether such lessons are to be taken seriously in any way. The focus, in.
Vol. 4 scripture proverbs, illustrated, annotated, and appliedGLENN PEASE
NOTE: This rare book by a very popular Bible scholar of the past is now a collectors item that you can purchase for 49 dollars. This free copy has a number of spelling errors but it still conveys the full value of why it is so popular.
This is the final section of the amazing book by an amazing author.
Introducing New Government Regulation on Toll Road.pdfAHRP Law Firm
For nearly two decades, Government Regulation Number 15 of 2005 on Toll Roads ("GR No. 15/2005") has served as the cornerstone of toll road legislation. However, with the emergence of various new developments and legal requirements, the Government has enacted Government Regulation Number 23 of 2024 on Toll Roads to replace GR No. 15/2005. This new regulation introduces several provisions impacting toll business entities and toll road users. Find out more out insights about this topic in our Legal Brief publication.
Military Commissions details LtCol Thomas Jasper as Detailed Defense CounselThomas (Tom) Jasper
Military Commissions Trial Judiciary, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Notice of the Chief Defense Counsel's detailing of LtCol Thomas F. Jasper, Jr. USMC, as Detailed Defense Counsel for Abd Al Hadi Al-Iraqi on 6 August 2014 in the case of United States v. Hadi al Iraqi (10026)
NATURE, ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW.pptxanvithaav
These slides helps the student of international law to understand what is the nature of international law? and how international law was originated and developed?.
The slides was well structured along with the highlighted points for better understanding .
A "File Trademark" is a legal term referring to the registration of a unique symbol, logo, or name used to identify and distinguish products or services. This process provides legal protection, granting exclusive rights to the trademark owner, and helps prevent unauthorized use by competitors.
Visit Now: https://www.tumblr.com/trademark-quick/751620857551634432/ensure-legal-protection-file-your-trademark-with?source=share
Car Accident Injury Do I Have a Case....Knowyourright
Every year, thousands of Minnesotans are injured in car accidents. These injuries can be severe – even life-changing. Under Minnesota law, you can pursue compensation through a personal injury lawsuit.
In 2020, the Ministry of Home Affairs established a committee led by Prof. (Dr.) Ranbir Singh, former Vice Chancellor of National Law University (NLU), Delhi. This committee was tasked with reviewing the three codes of criminal law. The primary objective of the committee was to propose comprehensive reforms to the country’s criminal laws in a manner that is both principled and effective.
The committee’s focus was on ensuring the safety and security of individuals, communities, and the nation as a whole. Throughout its deliberations, the committee aimed to uphold constitutional values such as justice, dignity, and the intrinsic value of each individual. Their goal was to recommend amendments to the criminal laws that align with these values and priorities.
Subsequently, in February, the committee successfully submitted its recommendations regarding amendments to the criminal law. These recommendations are intended to serve as a foundation for enhancing the current legal framework, promoting safety and security, and upholding the constitutional principles of justice, dignity, and the inherent worth of every individual.
WINDING UP of COMPANY, Modes of DissolutionKHURRAMWALI
Winding up, also known as liquidation, refers to the legal and financial process of dissolving a company. It involves ceasing operations, selling assets, settling debts, and ultimately removing the company from the official business registry.
Here's a breakdown of the key aspects of winding up:
Reasons for Winding Up:
Insolvency: This is the most common reason, where the company cannot pay its debts. Creditors may initiate a compulsory winding up to recover their dues.
Voluntary Closure: The owners may decide to close the company due to reasons like reaching business goals, facing losses, or merging with another company.
Deadlock: If shareholders or directors cannot agree on how to run the company, a court may order a winding up.
Types of Winding Up:
Voluntary Winding Up: This is initiated by the company's shareholders through a resolution passed by a majority vote. There are two main types:
Members' Voluntary Winding Up: The company is solvent (has enough assets to pay off its debts) and shareholders will receive any remaining assets after debts are settled.
Creditors' Voluntary Winding Up: The company is insolvent and creditors will be prioritized in receiving payment from the sale of assets.
Compulsory Winding Up: This is initiated by a court order, typically at the request of creditors, government agencies, or even by the company itself if it's insolvent.
Process of Winding Up:
Appointment of Liquidator: A qualified professional is appointed to oversee the winding-up process. They are responsible for selling assets, paying off debts, and distributing any remaining funds.
Cease Trading: The company stops its regular business operations.
Notification of Creditors: Creditors are informed about the winding up and invited to submit their claims.
Sale of Assets: The company's assets are sold to generate cash to pay off creditors.
Payment of Debts: Creditors are paid according to a set order of priority, with secured creditors receiving payment before unsecured creditors.
Distribution to Shareholders: If there are any remaining funds after all debts are settled, they are distributed to shareholders according to their ownership stake.
Dissolution: Once all claims are settled and distributions made, the company is officially dissolved and removed from the business register.
Impact of Winding Up:
Employees: Employees will likely lose their jobs during the winding-up process.
Creditors: Creditors may not recover their debts in full, especially if the company is insolvent.
Shareholders: Shareholders may not receive any payout if the company's debts exceed its assets.
Winding up is a complex legal and financial process that can have significant consequences for all parties involved. It's important to seek professional legal and financial advice when considering winding up a company.
RIGHTS OF VICTIM EDITED PRESENTATION(SAIF JAVED).pptxOmGod1
Victims of crime have a range of rights designed to ensure their protection, support, and participation in the justice system. These rights include the right to be treated with dignity and respect, the right to be informed about the progress of their case, and the right to be heard during legal proceedings. Victims are entitled to protection from intimidation and harm, access to support services such as counseling and medical care, and the right to restitution from the offender. Additionally, many jurisdictions provide victims with the right to participate in parole hearings and the right to privacy to protect their personal information from public disclosure. These rights aim to acknowledge the impact of crime on victims and to provide them with the necessary resources and involvement in the judicial process.
How to Obtain Permanent Residency in the NetherlandsBridgeWest.eu
You can rely on our assistance if you are ready to apply for permanent residency. Find out more at: https://immigration-netherlands.com/obtain-a-permanent-residence-permit-in-the-netherlands/.
The Main Procedures for Obtaining Cypriot Citizenship
Sg3
1. גרוס סקיי
VISIBLY DEAD: ON MAKING
BRAIN DEATH BELIEVABLE
Sky Gross, PhD & Shai Lavi, PhD
(Edmond J. Safra Center For Ethics,
Tel-Aviv University, Israel). Email:
skygrossbrain@gmail.com
Submitted: <leave for Editor to date>
Abstract
Please provide an abstract, up to 100 words, encap-
sulating the contents of your paper; include key-
words for indexing purposes.
Please note that all formats for this arti-
cle have been included in the document’s
style sheets. The text of an article should
be set in Times, 9.5 points in size, 11
points of line spacing (this can be set in
the Format menu, under “Paragraph”).
The first paragraph of the article and first
paragraph of each subsection should be
set without an indent, all the rest of the
paragraphs should have their first lines
indented 0.13 inches.
The article title is 12 point Times,
bold in caps and small caps, with 11
points of line spacing. The text that fol-
lows it should provide your name and
contact information and is set in 9.5
Times with 11 points of line spacing, just
like the text. Its first line is not to be
indented, and there should be one full
linespace below it.
You should try to align the bottoms of
the columns on the final (or only) page
as best you are able. You are welcome to
resize the images, but they should be
either one, two, or three columns wide.
They should be grayscale and preferably
at least 300 dpi. If the text does not take
up the entire page, set the bottom wrap
of the image to a relatively high number
and move the image up until the columns
bottom. Check out the picture below for
an example.
Now begins a longish bit of place-
holder text that goes on until the first
subhead. It is a bit of prefatory material
from Ambrose Bierce [1].
This more reverent title had previously
been forced upon him by the religious
scruples of the last newspaper in which a
part of the work had appeared, with the
natural consequence that when it came
out in covers the country already had
been flooded by its imitators with a score
of “cynic” books.
Among them, they brought the word
“cynic” into disfavor so deep that any
book bearing it was discredited in ad-
vance of publication" [2].
Meantime, too, some of the enterpris-
ing humorists of the country had helped
themselves to such parts of the work as
served their needs, and many of its defi-
nitions, anecdotes, phrases and so forth,
had become more or less current in pop-
ular speech. This explanation is made,
not with any pride of priority in trifles,
but in simple denial of possible charges
of plagiarism, which is no trifle. In
merely resuming his own the author
hopes to be held guiltless by those to
whom the work is addressed—
enlightened souls who prefer dry wines
to sweet, sense to sentiment, wit to hu-
mor and clean English to slang [3].
Subhead
You don’t actually have to use any sub-
heads. Only use them if they are applica-
ble to your article. The subhead itself is
11 point Times, bold, single-spaced, with
one linespace before. If you do use sub-
heads, the first paragraph after the head-
er should be set without an indent and all
the rest of the paragraphs should have
their first lines indented.
If your text includes references and/or
notes, please skip to the last section of
the template for reference styling infor-
mation.
The remainder of this article will con-
tain more placeholder text, but as a treat
it’s going to be from George Bernard
Shaw’s Pygmalion.
The rest of the story need not be
shown in action, and indeed, would hard-
ly need telling if our imaginations were
not so enfeebled by their lazy depend-
ence on the ready-mades and reach-me-
downs of the ragshop in which Romance
keeps its stock of "happy endings" to
misfit all stories. Now, the history of
Eliza Doolittle, though called a romance
because of the transfiguration it records
seems exceedingly improbable, is com-
mon enough. Such transfigurations have
been achieved by hundreds of resolutely
ambitious young women since Nell
Gwynne set them the example by play-
ing queens and fascinating kings in the
theatre in which she began by selling
oranges [4]. Nevertheless, people in all
directions have assumed, for no other
reason than that she became the heroine
of a romance, that she must have married
the hero of it. This is unbearable, not
only because her little drama, if acted on
such a thoughtless assumption, must be
spoiled, but because the true sequel is
patent to anyone with a sense of human
nature in general, and of feminine in-
stinct in particular [5].
I wish to boast that Pygmalion has
been an extremely successful play all
over Europe and North America as well
as at home. It is so intensely and deliber-
ately didactic, and its subject is esteemed
so dry, that I delight in throwing it at the
heads of the wiseacres who repeat the
parrot cry that art should never be di-
dactic. It goes to prove my contention
that art should never be anything else
[6].
The rest of the story need not be
shown in action, and indeed, would hard-
ly need telling if our imaginations were
not so enfeebled by their lazy depend-
ence on the ready-mades and reach-me-
downs of the ragshop in which Romance
keeps its stock of "happy endings" to
misfit all stories [7]. Now, the history of
Eliza Doolittle, though called a romance
because of the transfiguration it records
seems exceedingly improbable, is com-
mon enough. Such transfigurations have
been achieved by hundreds of resolutely
ambitious young women since Nell
Gwynne set them the example by play-
ing queens and fascinating kings in the
theatre in which she began by selling
oranges [8]. Nevertheless, people in all
directions have assumed, for no other
reason than that she became the heroine
of a romance, that she must have married
the hero of it. This is unbearable, not
only because her little drama, if acted on
such a thoughtless assumption, must be
spoiled, but because the true sequel is
patent to anyone with a sense of human
nature in general, and of feminine in-
stinct in particular [9].
I wish to boast that Pygmalion has
been an extremely successful play all
over Europe and North America as well
as at home. It is so intensely and deliber-
ately didactic, and its subject is esteemed
so dry, that I delight in throwing it at the
heads of the wiseacres who repeat the
parrot cry that art should never be di-
dactic. It goes to prove my contention
that art should never be anything else
[10].
The rest of the story need not be
shown in action, and indeed, would hard-
ly need telling if our imaginations were
not so enfeebled by their lazy depend-
ence on the ready-mades and reach-me-
downs of the ragshop in which Romance
keeps its stock of "happy endings" to
2. גרוס סקיי
misfit all stories [11]. Now, the history
of Eliza Doolittle, though called a ro-
mance because of the transfiguration it
records seems exceedingly improbable,
is common enough. Such transfigura-
tions have been achieved by hundreds of
resolutely ambitious young women since
Nell Gwynne set them the example by
playing queens and fascinating kings in
the theatre in which she began by selling
oranges. Nevertheless, people in all di-
rections have assumed, for no other rea-
son than that she became the heroine of a
romance, that she must have married the
hero of it. This is unbearable, not only
because her little drama, if acted on such
a thoughtless assumption, must be
spoiled, but because the true sequel is
patent to anyone with a sense of human
nature in general, and of feminine in-
stinct in particular.
I wish to boast that Pygmalion has
been an extremely successful play all
over Europe and North America as well
as at home. It is so intensely and deliber-
ately didactic, and its subject is esteemed
so dry, that I delight in throwing it at the
heads of the wiseacres who repeat the
parrot cry that art should never be di-
dactic. It goes to prove my contention
that art should never be anything else.
How is space-filling going? We could
use another paragraph, just a short one.
Let’s turn to Catullus [12].
Furi et Aureli comites Catulli,sive in
extremos penetrabit Indos, litus ut longe
resonante Eoa tunditur unda, sive in
Hyrcanos Arabesue molles, seu Sagas
sagittiferosue Parthos, sive quae sep-
temgeminus colorat aequora Nilus, sive
trans altas gradietur Alpes, Caesaris
visens monimenta magni, Gallicum
Rhenum horribile aequor ulti-mosque
Britannos, omnia haec, quaecumque
feret voluntas caelitum, temptare simul
paratipauca nuntiate meae puellae non
bona dicta.
Styling of References and Notes
References and Notes are set in 7.5 point
Times with 8 points of linespacing, and
5.5 pts. between paragraphs. The exam-
ples in the reference list below cover the
following types of reference citations:
1. Book
2. Book with translator
3. Book with editor
4. Book with edition number
5. Chapter in book
6. Journal article with page num-
bers גרוס סקיי
7. Journal article with web reference
8. Exhibition catalog
9. Film
10. Web site
11. Second reference to previously
cited work
Reference numbers in the list should
be in boldface type.
References and Notes
1. Peter Manning, Electronic and Computer Music
(Oxford, U.K.: Clarendon Press, 1985).
2. L. Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations,
G.E.M. Anscombe, trans. (Oxford, U.K.: Blackwell,
2001).
3. A. Schoenberg, The Musical Idea and the Logic,
Technique, and Art of Its Presentation, P. Carpenter
and S. Neff, eds. (New York: Columbia Univ.
Press, 1995).
4. D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson, On Growth and
Form, 5th Ed. (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge Univ.
Press, 1942).
5. Jon Ippolito, "Death by Wall Label," in Christi-
ane Paul, ed., Presenting New Media (Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press, 2007).
6. Shigeo Chiba, “Modern Art from a Japanese
Viewpoint,” ArtForum 23, No. 3 (October 1984)
pp. 56-61.
7. Kenshi Hayashi and Nobuo Munakata, "Basically
Musical," Nature 310 (1984) p. 96,
<www.toshima.ne.jp/~edogiku/index.html>,
<www.nature.com/nature/journal/v310/n5973/abs/3
10096a0.html>.
8. A. Webster, ROYGBIV, exh. cat. (Croydon, U.K.:
Parfitt Gallery, 2002).
9. Rob Reiner, This Is Spinal Tap (1984), film.
10. Jodi (1999), <http://oss.jodi.org>, accessed 1
January 2007.
11. Manning [1] pp. 3-7.
12. Sometimes you, the author, may want to add a
comment to the text, which may be included in this
list as a Note styled like a reference.