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Mosiah Lyman Hancock (April 9, 1834 – January 14, 1907) was an early member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and was son of Levi Ward Hancock and Clarissa Reed Hancock. Mosiah is known for his vision of the pre-earth life and of his firsthand account of a prophecy of Joseph Smith .
The Kidder Fight (or Kidder Massacre), of July 2, 1867 refers to a skirmish near what is now Goodland, Kansas involving a detachment of ten enlisted men and an Indian scout of the United States 2nd Cavalry under the command of Second Lieutenant Lyman S. Kidder who were attacked and wiped out by a mixed Lakota and Cheyenne force.
Henry Lyman is an American poet, editor, translator, and former host and producer of WFCR's Poems to a Listener, a nationally distributed series of readings and conversations with poets which ran from 1976 to 1994. [1] [2]
Henry Lyman; William Whittingham Lyman Jr (a.k.a. Jack Lyman) (1885–1983) Thomas Lynch (born 1948) M ... Carl Hancock Rux; Abram Joseph Ryan (1838–1886) Kay Ryan ...
Lyman mentions the car, hoping that those memories will help Henry. Lyman takes a hammer to the car in the hope that his brother will notice it and want to repair it. When Henry sees the run-down convertible, he works on restoring the car for a month. Meanwhile, Lyman still hopes that the car returns his brother to who he was before.
"Choucoune" is a 19th-century Haitian song composed by Michel Mauléart Monton with lyrics from a poem by Oswald Durand. It was rewritten with English lyrics in the 20th century as "Yellow Bird". Exotica musician Arthur Lyman made the song a hit in 1961.
Grounds contain one-room schoolhouse associated with the poem Mary Had a Little Lamb. Waltham. Gore Place – brick country estate; built 1806; Lyman Estate – country estate; built 1793; Robert Treat Paine Estate – country estate, collaboration of Henry Hobson Richardson and Frederick Law Olmsted; built 1866 and 1884; Watertown
"They flee from me" is a poem written by Thomas Wyatt. [1] It is written in rhyme royal and was included in Arthur Quiller-Couch's edition of the Oxford Book of English Verse. [2] The poem has been described as possibly autobiographical, and referring to any one of Wyatt's affairs with high-born women of the court of Henry VIII, perhaps with ...