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The eighth head of the family was Colonel Thomas Henry Bund (1774-1852), of the Worcester Militia and formerly the 13th Light Dragoons, son of Thomas Bund, High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 1784, by his wife Susanna, daughter of Benjamin Johnson, mayor of Worcester and High Sheriff of Worcestershire in 1763; [9] his issue (by his wife Ann ...
Death knell upon the decease of the woman: Just as the master entrusts his cast to the earth, so the peasant entrusts his seedlings to the earth, and so the dead are put into the ground, so that they can rise from the dead in the hereafter. The bell now has an earnest purpose and tolls in accompaniment to a funeral.
David Einhorn (Yiddish: דוד אײנהאָרן, romanized: Dovid Eynhorn, 1886 – 2 March 1973) was a Russian Jewish poet, journalist, and essayist.. Born in the Russian Empire, to a Jewish family he became a poet at a young age and participated within the General Jewish Labour Bund.
The origin of this poem is alluded to by Burns in one of his letters to Frances Dunlop: "I had an old grand-uncle with whom my mother lived in her girlish years: the good old man was long blind ere he died, during which time his highest enjoyment was to sit and cry, while my mother would sing the simple old song of 'The Life and Age of Man'". [1] "
She was born in 1902 to a German nationalist family. She never completed gymnasium , [ 2 ] and joined the German nationalist youth movement by the 1920s, [ 3 ] becoming a Bund Deutscher Mädel leader. [ 4 ]
John William Bund Willis-Bund CBE JP FSA (8 August 1843 – 7 June 1928) was a British lawyer, legal writer and professor of constitutional law and history at King's College London, a historian who wrote on the Welsh church and other subjects, and a local Worcestershire politician.
Arkadi Kremer (Yiddish: אַרקאַדי קרעמער; Russian: Арка́дий Кре́мер; born Aron Iosifovich Kremer, also known as Aleksandr Kremer, Solomon Kremer, and most frequently referred to as Arkady, his nickname; 1865–1935) was a Russian socialist leader known as the 'Father of the Bund' (the General Jewish Workers' Union in Lithuania, Poland and Russia).
In one of his last poems, "Drdunchk" (Grievance), Tourian laments that he will be unable to fulfill his desire to enjoy life and rails against God. [18] In a subsequent poem, he calmly asks for forgiveness. [16] Tourian's patriotic poems were mainly written in the same period during which he was composing his historical tragedies (1867–1870 ...