5,841 research outputs found

    Lydia H. Hart Diary

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    Diary, 1823-1830, 1875 and loose papers 1813, 1831, and undated of Lydia H. Hart of Richmond, Virginia and later Walden, Orange County, New York. The Diary was started by Lydia H. Hart, the wife of Reverend William H. Hart, who was the rector of St. John’s Church in Richmond, VA and later St. Andrews Church in Walden, New York. Diary entries include day-to-day activities and meetings with local neighbors and church patron’s. These neighbors included Elizabeth Van Lew and her parents, which Lydia Hart writes about several times. Most dated entries also include discussion of specific bible verses or Rev. Hart’s sermons. Notable entries include a description of the funeral service for Rev. John Buchanan, former rector of St. John’s Church from 1795 to 1822. Diary entries are chronological and more frequent for 1823 and become less frequent in 1823. In 1828, Lydia Hart moved to New York and eventually to Walden, New York in May 1830.At the end of the diary entries is an entry form another author, possibly by Mary. W. Hart dated 1875. Lydia Hart died in 1831 and could not have made the entry.At the back of the diary and upside down to the diary entries are transcriptions of letters and poems of Lydia Hart’s to various newspapers and and personnel correspondence. Entries include a plea for support to the city of Richmond to take care of its ‘destitute children’, letters to the editor of local newspapers, and poems for the birth of a child or death of a patron.Loose papers include a letter dated Jan 8th 1813, a bequeath request from William H. Hart for the placement of a Tombstone for Lydia Hart, a table of contents for various letters or sermons, a letter from William Hart to a friend from Richmond, and 2 loose undated papers of unknown authorship. The letter from William Hart speaks of the events of Lydia’s death, and inquiries about events taking place in Richmond

    Jonathan Rice's MM Saxophone Recital 2

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    Have You Met Miss Jones (1937) by Lorenz Hart & Richard Rodgers Corcovado (1960) by Antonio Carlos Jobirn Cherokee (1938) by Ray Noble Kind Folk (1997) by Kenny Wheeler Infant Eyes (1966) by Wayne Shorter Dolphin Dance (1965) by Herbie Hancock But Beautiful (1947) by Jimmy Van HeusenRelated performance for this degree -- Jonathan Rice's MM Saxophone Recital 1: https://hdl.handle.net/2346/82062Recital recordings are archival copies for educational purposes only. Members of the TTU community may request to listen/view them for educational purposes via the PDF link to the left

    Indenture between Joseph Hamilton to Jonathan Hart and Thomas Hart

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    Indenture between Joseph Hamilton of late of Queenston by his attorney Samuel Street to Jonathan Hart and Thomas Hart of Queenston for the sale of land in the township of Saltfleet, Lot no. 8 in the 6th Concession. There are holes in the document and the back is stained, but this does not affect the text, November 9, 1829

    Bernard Hart (1879–1966) and his influence on British psychiatry

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    Bernard Hart was among the most eminent 20th-century British psychiatrists. Following medical qualification at University College Hospital, London, he trained in psychiatry, which included two years studying in Paris and Zurich. He was appointed as the first psychiatric consultant at University College Hospital, then spent some time in Liverpool, where he specialized in treating war neurosis. Early in his career, Hart was one of the first to introduce the ideas of Freud and Janet, and the importance of unconscious processes, to the British public. After the First World War, Hart returned to University College Hospital, where he remained until 1947, building up a flourishing department. Hart was appointed to numerous senior offices and directed the psychiatric section of the British Emergency Medical Services in the Second World War. Hart is believed to be the last psychiatrist to certify someone (John Amery) as being of sufficiently sound mind to die for treason

    Releyendo a Hart

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    The author examines the central ideas in The Concept of Law by H. L. A. Hart to assess and discuss their originality and soundness. The hartian notions of social rule, internal and external point of view, obligation, primary and secondary rules and rule of recognition are under discussion as well as Hart’s theory on legal interpretation and his criticism against realism.El autor repasa las ideas centrales de The Concept of Law de H. Hart tratando de evaluar su originalidad y novedad y de discutir su corrección. De esta manera, se discuten las nociones hartianas de regla social, punto de vista interno y externo, obligación, reglas primarias y secundarias y regla de reconocimiento, así como la teoría de Hart de la interpretación jurídica y su crítica al realismo

    Writers Talk Featuring Jack Hart

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    Guest interviewer OSU student Jenny Patton talks to Jack Hart, author of Storycraft, about his recommendations for structuring narrative nonfiction. Also, OSU student Derek Palacio reviews Miroslav Penkov's literary debut East of the West: A Country in Stories.The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/cstw11/Hart_Jack.mp3Ohio State University. Center for the Study and Teaching of Writin

    Oral history interview with Kate Hart

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    Kate Hart, author and artist, talks her youth and how she became interested in writing young adult literature. She discusses her book, After the Fall, explaining the circumstances that led her to write the book. Hart comments on the creativity side as well as her process of writing and briefly talks about some of her other work.The Deep Roots: Oklahoma Authors Collection is a series of interviews with authors who discuss their lives, work, and creative processes

    Unforgetting Private Charles Smith

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    Private Charles Smith had been dead for close to a century when Jonathan Hart discovered the soldier’s small diary in the Baldwin Collection at the Toronto Public Library. The diary’s first entry was marked 28 June 1915. After some research, Hart discovered that Charles Smith was an Anglo-Canadian, born in Kent, and that this diary was almost all that remained of this forgotten man, who like so many soldiers from ordinary families had lost his life in the First World War. In reading the diary, Hart discovered a voice full of life, and the presence of a rhythm, a cadence that urged him to bring forth the poetry in Smith’s words. Unforgetting Private Charles Smith is the poetic setting of the words in Smith’s diary, work undertaken by Hart with the intention of remembering Smith’s life rather than commemorating his death.Publishe

    Musing

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    Musing is a book of sonnets. Working within the framework of a classic poetic form, Jonathan Locke Hart embarks on an extended meditation on our rootedness in landscape and in the past. As sonnets, the poems are a mixture of tradition and innovation. Throughout, Hart deftly interweaves European culture with North American settings and experience. The collection opens with a foreword by noted literary scholar Gordon Teskey, who reflects on the themes that have marked the evolution of Hart's poetry. Of Musing, Teskey writes: "These deeply thoughtful poems bring layered historical consciousness into the sonnet. They also touch and stir the heart through all its levels.

    Musing

    No full text
    Musing is a book of sonnets. Working within the framework of a classic poetic form, Jonathan Locke Hart embarks on an extended meditation on our rootedness in landscape and in the past. As sonnets, the poems are a mixture of tradition and innovation. Throughout, Hart deftly interweaves European culture with North American settings and experience. The collection opens with a foreword by noted literary scholar Gordon Teskey, who reflects on the themes that have marked the evolution of Hart's poetry. Of Musing, Teskey writes: "These deeply thoughtful poems bring layered historical consciousness into the sonnet. They also touch and stir the heart through all its levels.
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