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1874 Deaths (X)

       
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Links and Factoids

By: Sam Vaknin

...ters away); Cincinnati, Ohio (600 km. away); Canada; Gulf Coast. Side effects: 1874 aftershocks; The tremor affected 100,000 square kilometers.... ... Bulimia Nervosa are indeed more common among adolescents. But close to 80% of all deaths from anorexia nervosa are among people older than 45. Act... ...cording to British intelligence documents declassified in 1998, Winston Churchill (1874-1965), acting without informing the cabinet, sent agents to... ...d sulfuric acid. During the autumn of 1909, there were more than 1,000 “smoke-fog” deaths in Glasgow and Edinburgh. In 1952 smog killed more than 4... ... have been more than 250 sightings of these behemoths, mostly stranded or dead. In 1874, Rev. Moses Harvey of Newfoundland displayed a dead giant s... ...urran of the National Weather Service. In the United States alone there were 3,239 deaths and 9,818 injuries from lightning strikes between 1959 an...

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The Path of Splitness

By: Indrek Pringi

... and Hitting Pg 1867 Possession by the undead and the Origin of all evil Pg 1874 Postscript The Path of Split... ... power of national banks, moneyed capitalists…money: filthy lucre, capitalist deathsheads: the Jewish Rothschild family intermarrying with English, A... ...Harbor was going to be bombed and letting Americans die so he could use their deaths as an excuse to declare war. Just like Bush Jr. used the pre-kn... ...first would-be skinners lost their own skins in the process and died horrible deaths. They were literally skinned alive by their own evils… they di... ...oing it? No. Even with horrible signs and catastrophes, and sufferings, and deaths… these unwanted scum were forced back again and again, so the i... ...Why wasn’t Fort Comfort just 35 miles away beset with the same afflictions and deaths and starvation and disease, and rebellion and intrigue and pois...

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The First Part of Henry the Sixth. Edited by Louise Pound

By: William Shakespeare

...neuer shall reuiue: 27 Vpon a Woodden Coffin we attend; 28 And Deaths dishonourable Victorie, 29 We with our stately presence glorif... ...urable Lord. 1873 Glo. Confirme it so? Confounded be your strife, 1874 And perish ye with your audacious prate, 1875 Presumptuous vass... ...ne day. 2209 In thee thy Mother dyes, our Households Name, 2210 My Deaths Reuenge, thy Youth, and Englands Fame: 2211 All these, and more,...

... Hand, but conquered. Exe. We mourne in black, why mourn we not in blood? Henry is dead, and never shall revive: Upon a Woodden Coffin we attend; And Deaths dishonourable Victorie, We with our stately presence glorifie, Like Captives bound to a Triumphant Carre. What? shall we curse the Planets of Mishap, That plotted thus our Glories overthrow? Or shall we thinke the subt...

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The Life and Death of King Richard the Second

By: William Shakespeare

...t; 656 Though Richard my liues counsell would not heare, 657 My deaths sad tale, may yet vndeafe his eare. 658 Yor. No, it is stop... ...hands, here in the view of men, 1319 I will vnfold some causes of your deaths. 1320 You haue mis- led a Prince, a Royall King, 1321 A happ... ..., and not with Hands: those whom you curse 1498 Haue felt the worst of Deaths destroying hand, 1499 And lye full low, grau’d in the hollow gro... ... it confound it selfe? 1873 Had he done so, to great and growing men, 1874 They might haue liu’d to beare, and he to taste 1875 Their frui... ...s Death in this rude assalt? 2777 Villaine, thine owne hand yeelds thy deaths instrument, 2778 Go thou and fill another roome in hell. 2779 ...

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The First Part of Henry the Fourth. Edited by Frederic W. Moorman

By: William Shakespeare

...l the Debt he owes vnto you, 509 Euen with the bloody Payment of your deaths: 510 Therefore I say— 511 Wor. Peace Cousin, say no mo... ...ns from their mouthes, 1873 Euen in the presence of the Crowned King. 1874 Thus I did keepe my Person fresh and new, 1875 My Presence like... ...end of Life cancells all Bands, 1978 And I will dye a hundred thousand Deaths, 1979 Ere breake the smallest parcell of this Vow. 1980 ... ...of Henry the Fourth Shakespeare: First Folio 2033 many a man doth of a Deaths- Head, or a Memento Mori. 2034 I neuer see thy Face, but I thin... ...71 Dow. Talke not of dying, I am out of feare 2372 Of death, or deaths hand, for this one halfe yeare. 2373 Exeunt Omnes. [f3 S... ...e and stiffe 2936 Vnder the hooues of vaunting enemies, 2937 Whose deaths are vnreueng’d. Prethy lend me thy sword 2938 Fal. O Hal, I...

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The Second Part of Henry the Sixth

By: William Shakespeare

...Tis that they seeke; and they, in seeking that, 1042 Shall finde their deaths, if Yorke can prophecie. 1043 Salisb. My Lord, breake we of... ... Card. Did he not, contrary to forme of Law, 1353 Deuise strange deaths, for small offences done? 1354 Yorke. And did he not, in his... ... full of blood: 1873 His eye- balles further out, than when he liued, 1874 Staring full gastly, like a strangled man: 1875 His hayre vprea... ...But that the guilt of Murther bucklers thee, 1922 And I should rob the Deaths- man of his Fee, 1923 Quitting thee thereby of ten thousand sham... ...ercy, whil’st ’tis offered you, 2789 Or let a rabble leade you to your deaths. 2790 Who loues the King, and will imbrace his pardon, 2791 ...

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The Merry Wiues of Windsor

By: William Shakespeare

...nds of Moneyes, 52 and Gold, and Siluer, is her Grand- sire vpon his deaths-bed, 53 (Got deliuer to a ioyfull resurrections) giue, when 5... ...e sequell (Master Broome) I suffered the pangs 1775 of three seuerall deaths: First, an intollerable fright, 1776 to be detected with a ieali... ... Peace. 1873 Eua. What is your Genitiue case plurall (William?) 1874 Will. Genitiue case? 1875 Eua. I. 1876 Will. ...

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The Tragedie of Julius C‘Sar

By: William Shakespeare

...he death of Princes 1020 Caes. Cowards dye many times before their deaths, 1021 The valiant neuer taste of death but once: 1022 Of all... ...nke: 1374 If I my selfe, there is no houre so fit 1375 As Caesars deaths houre; nor no Instrument 1376 Of halfe that worth, as those your... ...scription. 1873 Ant. Octauius, I haue seene more dayes then you, 1874 And though we lay these Honours on this man, 1875 To ease our s...

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The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus

By: William Shakespeare

...ooke Competitors in loue? 637 I tell you Lords, you doe but plot your deaths, 638 By this deuise. 639 Chi. Aaron, a thousand death... ...s take you to your tooles, 1873 You Cosens shall goe sound the Ocean: 1874 And cast your nets, haply you may find her in the Sea, 1875 Yet...

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The Tragedie of Romeo and Juliet

By: William Shakespeare

...est thou teare thy hayre, 1873 And fall vpon the ground as I doe now, 1874 Taking the measure of an vnmade graue. 1875 Enter Nurse, and kn... ... so deepe an O. 1907 Rom. Nurse. 1908 Nur. Ah sir, ah sir, deaths the end of all. 1909 Rom. Speak’st thou of Iuliet? how is i... ...he hath wedded. I will die, 2620 And leaue him all life liuing, all is deaths. 2621 Pa. Haue I thought long to see this mornings face, 26... ...igne yet 2948 Is Crymson in thy lips, and in thy cheekes, 2949 And Deaths pale flag is not aduanced there. 2950 Tybalt, ly’st thou there i...

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The Tragedy of Richard the Third

By: William Shakespeare

...omething into a slower method. 303 Is not the causer of the timelesse deaths 304 Of these Plantagenets, Henrie and Edward, 305 As bl... ...85 Shall for thy loue, kill a farre truer Loue, 386 To both their deaths shalt thou be accessary. 387 An. I would I knew thy heart. ... ...Lord Stanley. 1873 Come on, come on, where is your Bore- speare man? 1874 Feare you the Bore, and goe so vnprouided? 1875 Stan. My Lo... ...endernesse, and milde compassion, 2712 Wept like to Children, in their deaths sad Story. 2713 O thus (quoth Dighton) lay the gentle Babes: 2...

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The Third Part of Henry the Sixth

By: William Shakespeare

...s that which takes hir heauy leaue? 1325 A deadly grone, like life and deaths departing. 1326 See who it is. 1327 Ed. And now the Batt... ...th tempted iudgement to desire. 1873 Lewis. Then Warwicke, thus: 1874 Our Sister shall be Edwards. 1875 And now forthwith shall Arti... ...from Winters pow’rfull Winde. 2817 These Eyes, that now are dim’d with Deaths black Veyle, 2818 Haue beene as piercing as the Mid- day Sunne, ... ... a Childe, 3046 Looke in his youth to haue him so cut off. 3047 As deathsmen you haue rid this sweet yong Prince. 3048 King. Away with...

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The Winters Tale

By: William Shakespeare

...ent your selfe 1873 That which you are, Mistris o’th’ Feast. Come on, 1874 And bid vs welcome to your sheepe- shearing, 1875 As your good ... ...too soft for him 2661 (say I:) Draw our Throne into a Sheep- Coat? all deaths - 59 - The Winters Tale Shakespeare: First Folio 2662 are too f... ... 2968 Bohemia stops his eares, and threatens them 2969 With diuers deaths, in death. 2970 Perd. Oh my poore Father: 2971 The Heaue...

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Loues Labour's Lost

By: William Shakespeare

...aue the grace to doe it. 1873 Brag. For the rest of the Worthies? 1874 Peda. I will play three my selfe. 1875 Pag. Thrice wort... ...Citterne head. 2564 Dum. The head of a bodkin. 2565 Ber. A deaths face in a ring. 2566 Lon. The face of an old Roman coine, sc...

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The Merchant of Venice

By: William Shakespeare

... 243 sadnesse in his youth.) I had rather to be marri-ed 244 to a deaths head with a bone in his mouth, then to ei-ther 245 of these: Go... ...it Clowne. 1873 Lor. O deare discretion, how his words are suted, 1874 The foole hath planted in his memory 1875 An Armie of good word...

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The Tragedie of Macbeth

By: William Shakespeare

..., and Donalbaine: Malcolme awake, 831 Shake off this Downey sleepe, Deaths counterfeit, - 19 - The Tragedie of Macbeth Shakespeare: First Foli... ...Vice so grafted, 1873 That when they shall be open’d, blacke Macbeth 1874 Will seeme as pure as Snow, and the poore State 1875 Esteeme hi...

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The Tragedie of Cymbeline

By: William Shakespeare

...ou art all the comfort 1873 The Gods will diet me with. Prythee away, 1874 There’s more to be consider’d: but wee’l euen 1875 All that goo... ...e: 2516 Thus smiling, as some Fly had tickled slumber, 2517 Not as deaths dart being laugh’d at: his right Cheeke 2518 Reposing on a Cushi...

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The Second Part of Henry the Fourth

By: William Shakespeare

...oines disguis’d. 1257 Fal. Peace (good Dol) doe not speake like a Deaths-head: 1258 doe not bid me remember mine end. 1259 Dol. S... ... Northumberland: 1873 Their cold intent, tenure, and substance thus. 1874 Here doth hee wish his Person, with such Powers 1875 As might h...

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The Tragedie of Anthonie and Cleopatra

By: William Shakespeare

...par’d. He is already 1873 Traduc’d for Leuity, and ’tis said in Rome, 1874 That Photinus an Eunuch, and your Maides 1875 Mannage this war... ...urposes, and being Royall 3601 Tooke her owne way: the manner of their deaths, 3602 I do not see them bleede. 3603 Dol. Who was last w...

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Droll Stories Volume I : The First Ten Tales

By: Honoré de Balzac

...the first English version ever brought before the public. London, January, 1874 6 Balzac FIRST TEN TALES PROLOGUE This is a book of the highest flavo... ...sword of a husband is a pleasant death for a gallant, if there be pleasant deaths. So may be will finish the merry amours of the constable’s wife. One... ...o play thought- lessly with knives, his good wife utilised so well the two deaths he had caused and threw them so often in his face, that she made him...

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The Volsunga Saga with Excerpts from the Poetic Edda Anonymous Old Norse and Icelandic Mythologies

By: William Morris

...e trade, and the “home-rule” struggle, which met with par- tial success in 1874, and is still being carried on. A colony, Gimli, in far-off Canada, ha... ...pter viii. — DBK. 24 The V olsunga Saga Of the next part of the Saga, the deaths of Sinfjotli and Sigmund, and the journey of Queen Hjordis to the co... ...erein they sit night long. Then the king ponders what longest and worst of deaths he shall mete out to them; and when morning came he let make a great...

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The Iliad of Homer

By: Pope, Alexander, 1688-1744

...use of them. Cover Design: Jim Manis; Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s Prosperine (1874) Copyright © 2004 The Pennsylvania State University The Pennsylvania S... ...ncidents, that no one bears a likeness to another; such different kinds of deaths, that no two heroes are wounded in the same manner, and such a profu... ... Fits the sharp arrow to the well-strung bow. One from a hundred feather’d deaths he chose, Fated to wound, and cause of future woes; Then offers vows... ...d Curetian bands; To guard it those; to conquer, these advance; And mutual deaths were dealt with mutual chance. The silver Cynthia bade contention ri... ... endless night; Æsymnus, Agelaus; all chiefs of name; The rest were vulgar deaths unknown to fame. As when a western whirlwind, charged with storms, D... ...danger calls, and there the combat bleeds; There horse and foot in mingled deaths unite, And groans of slaughter mix with shouts of fight.” Thus havin...

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A Tramp Abroad

By: Mark Twain

...roken sword flew five or ten feet and buried itself in his neck or his heart, and death ensued instantly. The student duels in Germany occasion two or... ...month after month. The tables might as well have been stereotyped, they varied so little. These tables were based upon weekly reports showing the aver... ...little. These tables were based upon weekly reports showing the average of deaths in each 1,000 population for a year. Munich was always present with ... ...e granted that our towns and villages are healthier than our cities. Here is the average of the only American cities reported in the German tables: Ch... ... too eager a spectator of a row.” “F. Graf Bismarck—27-29, II, ’74.” Which means that Count Bismarck, son of the great statesman, was a prisoner two d...

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Sylvie and Bruno

By: Lewis Carroll

... (Watts’), of tracts about converted swearers, godly charwomen, and edifying deaths of sinners saved. “Up with the lark, hymns and portions of Scriptu... .... Gatty, for ‘Aunt Judy’s Magazine,’ which she was then edit ing. It was in 1874, I believe, that the idea first occurred to me of making it the nucl...

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Democracy in America

By: Alexis de Tocqueville

...very parish, in which the results of public deliberations, and the births, deaths, and marriages of the citizens were entered;*** clerks were directed... ...o time for it, and when *This may have been true in 1832, but is not so in 1874, when great cities like Chicago and San Francisco have sprung up in th... ...e laws; the town-clerk records all the town votes, orders, grants, births, deaths, and marriages; the treasurer keeps the funds; the overseer of the p... ...n amendments, is printed at the end of this edition. – T ranslator’s Note, 1874.] 120 Democracy in America law. This condition is essential to the po... ...a striking confirmation of the truth of this remark. – T ranslator’s Note, 1874.] 130 Democracy in America Chapter VIII: The Federal Constitution – P... ... elected until the thirty- sixth time of balloting. *General Grant is now (1874) the eighteenth President of the United States. 155 Tocqueville ants ... ... for their patriotism. They had *The number of States has now risen to 46 (1874), besides the District of Columbia. 175 Tocqueville all been nurtured...

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The Poems of Goethe Translated in the Original Metres

By: Edgar Alfred Bowring

...them- selves to me in my original version of these Poems. E. A. B. London, 1874. The Poems of Goethe. Dedication. The morn arrived; his footstep quick... ...and ne’er; Live still as a Bayadere, And no duty thou need’st share. T o deaths silent realms from life, None but shades attend man’s frame, 196 ...

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Measure, For Measure

By: William Shakespeare

...s habitation where thou keepst 1214 Hourely afflict: Meerely, thou art deaths foole, 1215 For him thou labourst by thy flight to shun, 1216 ... ...at beares the name of life? Yet in this life 1243 Lie hid moe thousand deaths; yet death we feare 1244 That makes these oddes, all euen. 1245... ... partner. 1873 Pro. What hoa, Abhorson: where’s Abhorson there? 1874 Enter Abhorson. 1875 Abh. Doe you call sir? 1876 Pr...

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The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson to His Family and Friends ; Selected and Edited with Notes and Introd. By Sidney Colvin : Volume 1

By: Robert Louis Stevenson

...tter: TO MRS. THOMAS STEVENSON HOTEL MIRABEAU, MENTONE, SUNDAY, JANUARY 4, 1874. MY DEAR MOTHER, – We have here fallen on the very pink of hotels. I d... ...L. Stevenson: V ol. 1 Letter: TO MRS. THOMAS STEVENSON MENTONE, JANUARY 7, 1874. MY DEAR MOTHER, – I received yesterday two most charming letters – th... ...RT LOUIS STEVENSON. Letter: TO MRS. SITWELL MENTONE, TUESDAY, 13TH JANUARY 1874. … I lost a Philipine to little Mary Johnstone last night; so to-day I... ...quite happy after that! R. L. S. Letter: TO MRS. SITWELL [MENTONE, JANUARY 1874.] … Last night I had a quarrel with the American on poli- tics. It is ... ...L. Stevenson: V ol. 1 Letter: TO MRS. THOMAS STEVENSON [MENTONE, MARCH 28, 1874.] MY DEAR MOTHER, – Beautiful weather, perfect weather; sun, pleasant ... ...ountains visitant’ – there goes no angel there but the angel of death. The deaths of last winter are still sore spots to me… . So, you see, I am not v...

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Twelfe Night, Or What You Will

By: William Shakespeare

... will Shakespeare: First Folio 1873 I hate ingratitude more in a man, 1874 Then lying, vainnesse, babling drunkennesse, 1875 Or any taint ... ...nd I most iocund, apt, and willinglie, 2289 To do you rest, a thousand deaths would dye. 2290 Ol. Where goes Cesario? 2291 Vio. A...

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Leaves of Grass

By: Walt Whitman

... breasts of melons. And as to you Life I reckon you are the leavings of many deaths, (No doubt I have died myself ten thousand times before.) I hear y... ...ectric telegraphs of the earth, I see the filaments of the news of the wars, deaths, losses, gains, passions, of my race. Leaves of Grass –Whitman 14... ...he groves of Mona, I see the mistletoe and vervain, I see the temples of the deaths of the bodies of Gods, I see the old signifiers. I see Christ eati... ...the savage taste of blood—to be so devilish! To gloat so over the wounds and deaths of the enemy. O the whaleman’s joys! O I cruise my old cruise agai... ...es that have existed or may exist on this globe, or any globe, All lives and deaths, all of the past, present, future, This vast similitude spans them... ...HT OF S CHOOL (For the Inauguration of a Public School, Camden, New Jersey, 1874 ) An old man’s thought of school, An old man gathering youthful memo...

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