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John Brown (5 November 1715 – 23 September 1766) was an English Anglican priest, playwright and essayist. ... Brown expanded the Essay on Satire, to an Essay ...
John Brown 23 Rutland Street, Edinburgh The grave of Dr John Brown, New Calton Cemetery, Edinburgh. John Brown FRSE FRCPE (22 September 1810 – 11 May 1882) was a Scottish physician and essayist known for his three-volume Horae Subsecivae (Leisure Hours, 1858), containing essays and papers on art, medical history and biography.
"A Plea for Captain John Brown" is an essay by Henry David Thoreau, based on a speech he first delivered to an audience at Concord, Massachusetts, on October 30, 1859, two weeks after John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, and repeated several times before Brown's execution on December 2, 1859.
John Brown (physician, born 1810) (1810–1882), Scottish physician and essayist John Ronald Brown (1922–2010), unlicensed United States sex-change operation surgeon John Campbell Brown (1947–2019), Scottish astronomer
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Sir Walter Raleigh is an essay by Henry David Thoreau that has been reconstructed from notes he wrote for an 1843 lecture and drafts of an article he was preparing for The Dial. It was first published in 1950, in a collection of Thoreau's writings edited by Henry Aiken Metcalf.
Pages in category "English essayists" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 232 total. ... John Brown (essayist) Gerald Bullett; Rosina ...
The Last Days of John Brown" is an essay by Henry David Thoreau, written in 1860, that praised the executed abolitionist militia leader John Brown. He read it at the July 4, 1860, memorial service held at Brown's home in North Elba. It was first published in The Liberator of July 27, 1860.