38,092 research outputs found
Letter from Henry Peter Gray to Charles T. Gray, 1864
Correspondence from Henry Peter Gray to Charles T. Gray, 1864
Captain Simon Peter Gray papers, MSS.0586
Abstract: Photocopies of newspaper and magazine articles and photographs about steamboats collected by this Mobile, Alabama, researcher.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains photocopies of newspaper and magazine articles and photographs collected by Simon Peter Gray, as well as photocopies of his correspondence.Biographical/Historical Note: Simon Peter Gray of Mobile, Alabama, was a researcher of river and steamboat history in the middle part of the twentieth century
Loring, Ellis Gray, letter, Boston, July 7, 1854, to Peter Still
Ellis Gray Loring notes the receipt of 300 dollars from Amos Townsend, which has been credited to the letter’s recipient, Peter Still
Loring, Ellis Gray, letter, Boston, November 16, 1853, to Peter Still
Ellis Gray Loring notes the receipt of 250 dollars from Mr. S.S. Wardwell of Providence, which has been credited to the letter’s recipient, Peter Still
Loring, Ellis Gray (per F.L?S.), letter, Boston, August 30, 1854, to Peter Still, with postscript signed by Frederic L? Seymour
Ellis Gray Loring acknowledges the receipt of a letter from the Rev. A.L. Brooks enclosing 300 dollars that has been credited to Peter Still’s account
Postscript: Starter questions for a Postscript posed by Peter Cleave and answered by Merenia Gray, Jenny Stevenson and Tanemahuta Gray
Postscript: Starter questions for a Postscript posed by Peter Cleave and answered by Merenia Gray, Jenny Stevenson and Tanemahuta Gra</jats:p
Creature Features
This large-format (8½ x 11) paperback book presents fourteen creatures through rhyming couplets and line-drawings. The rhymes sometimes groan, but the word-plays can be fun. Here is a good example from The Gnu and the Gnat: When the gnat gnaws, the gnu gnarls and gnashes its teeth./Then the gnat flies away to gnaw on a new gnu./So, if we don't use the 'g' sound what good does it do?/Neither the gnat nor the gnu knew. Towards the end of the book there are two accounts Based on a fable by Aesop: first, a good version of LM (31-33) and then a composite fable, The Wolves, the Tiger, and the Rabbit. The tiger takes the rabbit from the quarreling wolves, but then moves through water and has the problem usually associated with DS. I was lucky to find this fable needle in Second Story's warehouse haystack of books!Peter Gra
Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /
Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia
An innocent at home: Scott Pilgrim and his Canadian multicultural contexts
book chapterThe chapter, "An innocent at home: Scott Pilgrim and his Canadian multicultural contexts" was written by the listed authors Brenna Clarke Gray and Peter Wilkins (Douglas College Faculty). Part of the Routledge research in cultural and media studies series.Published
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