... Graduation thesis After they were dead, their souls flied out their bodies and flied past theancient mariner with the same sound as the arrow he shot at the Albatross: The souls did from their bodies ... a sense, their anger was so great that they still cursed theancient mariner even when they died They cursed the mariner not by words but their opened eyes The way the mariner felt the sailors' ... stand, No bigger than the Moon The Sun, the wind are both images of nature that changed their "attitude" to the crime of theancient mariner: The Sun came upon the left Out of the sea came here And...
... in the expenses of the Post Office The Mayor of Bath proposed the toast of "the Visitors," and said that they had amongst them two representatives of the great men they were honouring Ralph Allen ... the growing Postal staff The work began on the 26th September The cost of the new wing was estimated at £16,000 Beneath the superstructure there were two tiers of ancient cellars, one below the ... of the time spent in carrying the mails on the chief routes throughout the country Although the speed fixed by the Government for the postboys was seven miles an hour in the summer months, the...
... already ancient when the gods within it set their hearts to bring on a deluge, even the great gods as many as there are their father Anu, their king the warrior Bel, their throne-bearer Adar, their ... day, the second day, the mountain of Nizir stopped the ship The third day, the fourth day, the mountain of Nizir stopped the ship The fifth day, the sixth day, the mountain of Nizir stopped the ... (Col III) " (The surface) of the land like (fire?) they wasted; (they destroyed all) life from the face of the land; to battle against men they brought (the waters) Brother saw not his brother; men...
... II THE LIFE OF CHRIST The date of the Birth of Christ, 14 The place of His Birth, ib The visit of the angel to the shepherds, 15 The visit of the Magi the flight into Egypt and the murder of the ... fraction of the territory which Augustus governed: the Atlantic on the west, the Euphrates on the east, the Danube and the Rhine on the north, and the deserts of Africa on the south, were the boundaries ... with the instructions addressed to them, the multitude chose seven of their number "whom they set before the apostles, and, when they had prayed, they laid their hands on them." [54:3] Prior to the...
... wiring from the base of the trunk, anchoring the wire in the soil You may need two wires to hold the trunk in position After securing the base of the trunk, proceed to the main, and then the smaller ... wish to bend down to the wire that goes across the pot Pull down on the wire until the branch is in the position you want, then secure the branch wire to the pot wire As with the previous method, ... around the tree 24 hours a day When the water in the tray is gone, add more water It's a good idea to separate the pot from the water in the tray by adding some pebbles to the bottom of the tray...
... than the throng, grasped each others arms with an eager hand, and struggled for the victory Now with manly vigour the one shook the sinewy frame of the other; now they bended together almost to the ... of the body Their untutored minds delighted themselves in the sly enigma, and the quaint conundrum Much was their laughter at the wild guesses of the thoughtless and the giddy; and great the ... inspired them with gaiety, and the songs they had heard, had raised their thoughts to a sublimer pitch than was usual to them They praised the miracles of the tale of Modred; they sympathised with the...
... themselves at any time with the fortunes of their alien masters One of these was, of course, the Asiatic Greek, the other was theEgyptian people; but the contumacy of the first threatened a danger ... ultimately from the Tigris So, too, worked the smiths who made the Rhodian jewellery, and so, the artists who painted the Milesian ware and the Clazomenae sarcophagi On the other side of the ledger ... of the latter's social ideas Nevertheless, since the Western men, when they went back to their own land, had brought the East into the world known to them into a circle of lands accepted as the...
... and thoughts he instilled in their minds The poem for the most part does as Coleridge intended and gets the reader to atleast understand and believe the tale that the Mariner has to tell ... to understand the Mariner and to be able to relate to him and to understand him He conveyed his point of religion to the reader by making the reader subconsciously fall prey to the images and ... that the reader would be forced to temporarily believe it without even realizing it In a certain sense you could say that through the tale he placed the "fear of God" in people that made them...
... sense of the importance of such things as the size and site of towns, the date of their construction, the development of sea power and the fertility of the soil, neither he nor the other Greek ... that the laws of England must be the best in the world, because they were certainly the most ancient older than those of Rome or Venice—and from the Romans to the Normans the rulers of the land ... in the effort to prove them independent of the will of the king There were thus great dangers to the clarity of historical thought in the multiplication of these constitutional myths; but their...
... that they specialized in treating various parts of the body: Physician of the Eyes, Physician of the Belly, Shepherd of the Anus.1 Of the Egyptians, the Greek historian Herodotus wrote: The practice ... deal about the study and practice of medicine in Ancient Egypt Some of the papyri are quite famous, including the Edwin Smith Papyrus, though of as one the principal record on AncientEgyptian ... the eye, others of the head, others of the stomach, and so on; while others, again, deal with the sort of troubles which cannot be exactly localized.”2 This, however, does not seem to be the case...
... &C THEPYRAMID TEXTS: The Book of Opening the Mouth The Liturgy of Funerary Offerings 16 Hymns to the Sky-goddess and Sun-god 18 The King in Heaven 20 The Hunting and Slaughter of the Gods by the ... among the Egyptians When thePyramidTexts were written men believed that the welfare of souls and spirits in the Other World could be secured by the prayers of the living Hence we find in them ... eyes with the instruments Sebur and An, wherewith the mouths of the gods of the South were opened All the gods bring [16]words of power They recite them for thee They make thee to live by them Thou...
... of the imperfect in the inflection of the perfect, imperative, and infinitives In these same forms the preformative takes the shape hit-, the hi- possibly having arisen under the influence of the ... among many s others In most of these cases, the Hebrew preference seems to have been shared by the other members of the Canaanite family, though the evidence for the lexicons of these languages, ... in the nominative and ∗-¯ ti in the oblique With the loss of final short vowels a a these fell together as ∗-¯ t, the expected antecedent form of -ˆt It is unknown, however, why a o 56 The Ancient...
... between the Classical Latin period and the appearance of the first texts apparently written in the Romance vernacular, when the language of documents often appears neither to be one thing nor the other, ... texts A letter from the Visigothic period (seventh century?) 1.0 The Visigoths moved southwards to the Iberian Peninsula after the encroachment of the Franks on their kingdom of Toulouse at the ... ll.18–19, due(n)no); the first of these is in accordance with Castilian cuente, but the second is neither the Castilian diphthong (the spelling suggests [wa] rather than [we]) nor the eventual Castilian...