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Poems and Ballads. With introductory papers by G. Gilfillan and A. Wallace. 1868. Glasgow; Poems, essays, and sketches. 1870. Glasgow A compilation of the best of the 1863 and 1865 poetry books. Pictures in Prose and Verse; or, Personal recollections of the late Janet Hamilton.. together with several hitherto unpublished poetic pieces. 1877 ...
[12] [13] Janet's great-great-grandfather, July "Jack" Gale, was a US Army scout. Family lore held that he was also a Native American medicine man. [14] Janet grew up with two sisters (Rebbie and La Toya) and six brothers (Jackie, Tito, Jermaine, Marlon, Michael and Randy). [12] Another brother, Marlon's twin Brandon, died shortly after birth. [15]
Janet Paterson Frame ONZ CBE (28 August 1924 – 29 January 2004) was a New Zealand author. She is internationally renowned for her work, which includes novels, short stories, poetry, juvenile fiction, and an autobiography, and received numerous awards including being appointed to the Order of New Zealand, [1] New Zealand's highest civil honour.
Note - the archaic 'f' like representations of 'S', in use at Janet's and Burns' time, have been altered here to a simple 'S'. ( ) – The missing personal name from the poem. Janet, as illustrated above, used a solid line to avoid printing the names of people, giving no clue to the number of letters with initials only.
Poems 1924 – 1944 Denver, Alan Swallow, 1950; The Ancient Ones Portola Valley, California: No Dead Lines, 1979; The Indians in the Woods 2nd edition with new preface, Palo-Alto California, Matrix Press, 1980. Poems Old and New 1918 – 1978 Chicago/Athens, Ohio: Swallow Press / Ohio University Press 1981; Late Offerings Florence, Ky, Robert L ...
A Question of Time: J.R.R. Tolkien's Road to Faërie is a 1997 book of literary analysis by Verlyn Flieger of J. R. R. Tolkien's explorations of the nature of time in his Middle-earth writings, interpreted in the light of J. W. Dunne's 1927 theory of time, and Dunne's view that dreams gave access to all dimensions of time.
The title piece was a dramatic fragment in dialect couplets, serving as frame for accompanying lyrics, of which Tannahill (but few others) thought highly. The book had been published by subscription, as was common at the time, but the poet later objected to this as demeaning. It was for this reason that he made unsuccessful attempts to get his ...
The Schooner Jane Slade of Polruan, named in the book as Janet Coombe [1]. Daphne du Maurier wrote her first novel after a chance discovery in Pont Creek of the wrecked schooner Jane Slade, [2] named after Janet Coombe (Slade), which in turn directly led her to researching the Slade family history and story of Jennifer up to 1929, the year the book was written.