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Peter Davidson (1837-1915) was a Scottish musician and violin
maker, homeopath, herbalist and publisher of The Morning Star, who
was associated with the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor. The HBL was
founded in 1884 by Max Theon (1848-1927), perhaps born
Louis-Maximilian Bimstein, a Polish Jewish Kabbalist and Occultist
who established the "Cosmic Philosophy" based on occultist material
"received" or channeled by Theon's wife Alma (Mary Chrystine
Woodroffe Ware, 1843-1908).
First published in 1814 and expanded in 1821 – long before the
era of colour photography or print – Syme’s edition of
Werner’s Nomenclature of Colours attempted to establish a
universal colour reference system to help identify, classify and
represent species from the natural world. Werner’s set of 54
colour standards was enhanced by Patrick Syme with the addition of
colour swatches and further references from nature, taking the
total number of hues classified to 110. The resulting resource
proved invaluable not only to artists but also to zoologists,
botanists, mineralogists and anatomists. In Nature’s Palette this
technicolour trove has, for the first time, been enhanced with the
addition of illustrations of the animals, vegetables and minerals
Werner referenced alongside each colour swatch and accompanied by
expert text explaining the uses and development of colour standards
in relation to zoology, botany, minerology and anatomy. This fully
realized colour catalogue includes elegant contemporary
illustrations of every animal, plant or mineral that Syme cited.
Readers can see for themselves Tile Red in the Cock Bullfinch’s
breast, Shrubby Pimpernel and Porcelain Jasper; or admire the
Berlin Blue that Syme identified on the wing feathers of a Jay, in
the Hepatica flower and in Blue Sapphire. Displays of contemporary
collector’s cabinets of birds, butterflies, eggs, flowers and
minerals are interspersed at intervals throughout the compendium,
with individual specimens colour matched to colour swatches. Still
a much-loved reference among artists, naturalists and everyone
fascinated by colour today, Werner’s Nomenclature of Colours
finds its fullest expression in this beautiful and comprehensive
colour reference system. With 1000 illustrations in colour
Homecoming, haunting, nostalgia, desire: these are some of the
themes evoked by the beguiling motif of the lighted window in
literature and art. In this innovative combination of
place-writing, memoir and cultural study, Peter Davidson takes us
on atmospheric walks through nocturnal cities in Britain, Europe
and North America, and revisits the field paths of rural England.
Surveying a wide range of material, the book extends,
chronologically, from early romantic painting to contemporary
fiction, and geographically, from the Low Countries to Japan. It
features familiar lighted windows in English literature (in the
works of poets such as Thomas Hardy and Matthew Arnold and in the
novels of Virginia Woolf, Arthur Conan Doyle and Kenneth Grahame)
and examines the painted nocturnes of James Whistler, John Atkinson
Grimshaw and the ruralist Samuel Palmer. It also considers Japanese
prints of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; German
romanticism in painting, poetry and music; Proust and the painters
of the French belle epoque; Rene Magritte's 'L'Empire des
Lumieres'; and North American painters such as Edward Hopper and
Linden Frederick. By interpreting the interactions of art,
literature and geography around this evocative motif, Peter
Davidson shows how it has inspired an extraordinary variety of
moods and ideas, from the romantic period to the present day.
A paperback edition of a classic of 17th-century English writing
about food and drink. There is perhaps none more frequently quoted
than this, no title more familiar. Its reappearance, therefore,
will be very welcome to both the academic market, and the general
reader. Digby was a European figure of some renown in scientific,
philosophical and mathematical circles (besides being a military
man, a pirate and a womaniser). This recipe collection made by him
(in line with similar collections made by male enthusiasts and
intellectuals of the time, for example the diarist John Evelyn) was
published after his death by his former assistant George Hartman.
It is perhaps the most literate of such cookery books. Digby was a
natural writer, as entertaining as instructive. Many of the recipes
are for drinks, particularly of meads or metheglins, but the
culinary material provides a remarkable conspectus of accepted
practice among court circles in Restoration England, with extra
details supplied from Digby's European travels. The editors also
include the inventory of Digby's own kitchen in his London house,
discovered amongst papers now deposited in the British Library, and
they have provided a few modern interpretations of Digby's recipes.
The work was last printed in 1910, in a sound edition that is no
longer easily available. This new version has several improvements.
The editors discuss the role of George Hartman in the compilation
of the book, and relate its contents to the work that appeared in
1682 under Hartman's own name, The True Preserver and Restorer of
Health . There is a full glossary and the reader will be helped by
the extensive biographical notes about people named in the text as
the source of recipes. Sir Kenelm Digby (1611-1665) was born of
gentry stock, but his family's adherence to Roman Catholicism
coloured his career. His father, Sir Everard, was executed in 1606
for his part in the Gunpowder Plot. Digby went to Gloucester Hall,
Oxford, in 1618. He spent three years in Europe between 1620 and
1623. Around 1625, he married Venetia Stanley. He had also become a
member of the Privy Council. In 1628, Digby became a privateer,
with some success, particularly in the Mediterranean. He returned
to become a naval administrator and later Governor of Trinity
House. His wife died suddenly in 1633. Digby, stricken with grief
and the object of enough suspicion that the Crown had ordered an
autopsy (rare at the time) on Venetia's body, secluded himself in
Gresham College and attempted to forget his personal woes through
scientific experimentation. Digby received the regional monopoly of
sealing wax in Wales and the Welsh Borders and monopolies of trade
with the Gulf of Guinea and with Canada. In the Civil War he went
into exile in Paris, where he spent most of his time until 1660. He
became Chancellor to Queen Henrietta Maria. Digby was regarded as
an eccentric by contemporaries, partly because of his effusive
personality, and partly because of his interests in scientific
matters. Notable among his pursuits was the concept of the Powder
of Sympathy. This was a kind of sympathetic magic to cure injuries.
His book on this salve went through 29 editions. He was a founding
member of the Royal Society. His correspondence with Fermat
contains the only extant mathematical proof by Fermat. His
Discourse Concerning the Vegetation of Plants (1661) proved
controversial. He is credited with being the first person to note
the importance of "vital air," or oxygen, to the sustenance of
plants. Digby is also considered the father of the modern wine
bottle. During the 1630s, Digby owned a glassworks and manufactured
wine bottles which were globular in shape with a high, tapered
neck, a collar, and a punt.
'The nation-state is the enemy of the baroque.' This is the point
of departure of this radical, even revolutionary, re-examination of
the cultural history of the early-modern world. Drawing on sources
in six languages, many of them hitherto unavailable to the
English-speaking reader, and touching on the visual arts,
architecture, music and literature, this study frees the word
'baroque' from being a term of periodisation into being the
descriptor for a network of circulation of ideas, words, plants,
arts and energies which encompassed the totality of the
early-modern world. This challenging book also forces a
reconsideration of many of the prejudices of the Anglophone
perception of cultural history and in doing so opens to the reader
a world of wonders: the allegorical dramas of Ireland and Belgrade;
the arquebusier angels of Cuzco painting; the operas and festival
music of Bolivia; the vertiginous architectural fantasies of the
Jacobite exiles. -- .
As with the compass needle, so people have always been most
powerfully attracted northwards; everyone carries within them their
own concept of north. "The Idea of North" is a study, ranging
widely in time and place, of some of the ways in which these ideas
have found expression. Peter Davidson explores the topography of
north as represented in images and literature, taking in
Netherlandic winter paintings of the Renaissance, German Romantic
landscapes, Scandinavian Biedermeyer and twentieth-century
topographical painting and printmaking. He examines a bewildering
diversity of mythologies and imaginings of north, including The
Snow Queen; Scandinavian Sagas; ghost-stories; Moomintrolls, Arctic
exploration; the fictitious snowy kingdoms of Zembla and Naboland;
Nabokov's nostalgias; Baltic midsummer; rooms in winter light;
compasses and star-stones; hoar-frost; and, ice and glass. The book
also traces a northward journey, describing northern rural England,
industrial sites, and the long emptiness of the borders, Scotland
and the Highlands. He looks at the region far north of Scotland,
then moves to the Northern Netherlands and Scandinavia to explore
their identifiable northernness.The last visited place is Iceland,
identified by W. H. Auden and Louis McNeice in 1936 as furthest,
most remote, most distant, most northerly'. An engaging meditation
on solitude, absence and stillness, "The Idea of North" shows north
to be a goal rather than a destination, a place of revelation that
is always somewhere ultimate and austere.
This collection of original articles provides language teachers
with a theoretical background of key issues associated with
language testing as well as practical advice on how to improve the
effectiveness of the tests they develop and implement. Written by
internationally prominent researchers and educators, the chapters
are organized into five sections: key issues in the field,
assessment purposes and approaches, assessment of second language
skills, technology in assessment, and administrative issues.
Chapters assume no particular background knowledge and are written
in an accessible style.
This volume completes the first edition of the collected works of
the early modern poet and translator Sir Richard Fanshawe, and
contains Fanshawe's translation of The Lusiad of Camoes, the single
work which affirms his importance in the history of translation.
The translation of the Baroque play Querer por solo Querer from the
court of Philip IV of Spain is also given, as is Fanshawe's Latin
rendering of parts of The Lusiad, discovered by the present editor
and here printed for the first time. As in Volume I, copy texts for
The Lusiads and Querer por solo Querer are manually-corrected
printed texts with provenances in Fanshawe's family and immediate
circle, thus representing the works in a form which is as close as
possible to Fanshawe's final intentions. The Specimen rerum a
Lusitanis is taken from a presentation manuscript compiled under
Fanshawe's direction. This volume also features an an expert essay
on the translation of Camoes, contributed by Professor Roger
Walker.
Poetry and Revolution is a radical re-examination of the canon of
mid-seventeenth-century verse. The author questions and discards
the old description of the period as 'Cavalier Poetry' and advances
instead a tumultuous, pluralistic canon rich in radical writing and
poetry by those marginalized until recently in historical and
literary accounts of the period. As well as a substantial quantity
of women's verse, much of it previously unpublished, Poetry and
Revolution contains Irish, Scots, Scots Gaelic, and Welsh verse.
This is in sympathy with the current debate about the Civil Wars
which challenges the old exclusive focus on England and sees the
events of the mid century in a wider context. The book has very
full historical and bibliographical information, explication of all
allusions, translations of all verse not in English, old spelling
texts derived in every case from primary sources, and a wide
ranging introduction covering such subjects as canon-formation,
historical fiction, and the revision of the literary history of the
period.
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Old Mortality (Paperback)
Walter Scott; Edited by Jane Stevenson, Peter Davidson
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R427
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Old Mortality (1816), which many consider the finest of Scott's
Waverley novels, is a swift-moving historical romance that places
an anachronistically liberal hero against the forces of fanaticism
in seventeenth-century Scotland, in the period infamous as the
killing time'. Its central character, Henry Morton, joins the
rebels in order to fight Scotland's royalist oppressors, little as
he shares the Covenanters' extreme religious beliefs. He is torn
between his love for a royalist's granddaughter and his loyalty to
his downtrodden countrymen.
As well as being a tale of divided loyalties, the novel is a
crucial document in the cultural history of modern Scotland. Scott,
himself a supporter of the union between Scotland and England, was
trying to exorcise the violent past of a country uncomfortably
coming to terms with its status as part of a modern United Kingdom.
This novel is in itself a significant political document, in which
Scott can be seen to be attempting to create a new centralist
Scottish historiography, which is not the political consensus of
his own time, the seventeenth century, or today.
About the Series: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has
made available the broadest spectrum of literature from around the
globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to
scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of
other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading
authorities, voluminous notes to clarify the text, up-to-date
bibliographies for further study, and much more.
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Doctor Who Main Range 209 - Aquitaine (CD)
Simon Barnard, Paul Morris; Directed by Ken Bentley; Andy Hardwick; Performed by Peter Davidson, …
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Peter Davison, Janet Fielding and Sarah Sutton reprise their roles
as The Doctor, Tegan and Nyssa, in a run of stories following on
from 1983's adventure The Arc of Infinity: Today should be much
like every other day for Hargreaves, the computer consciousness
that co-ordinates daily life aboard the spaceship Aquitaine,
stationed on the outer fringes of a black hole. Water the plants,
run the diagnostics, cook the Captain's breakfast; then tidy the
plates away, rotate the ship, clean the windows of the observation
deck. When at last the day's work is done, Hargreaves will dim the
lights in the sleeping quarters. But no-one will sleep aboard the
Aquitaine tonight. Because the Aquitaine's crew is missing. But
today will be different. Today, a space/time ship called the TARDIS
will materialise in the botanical section, bringing the Doctor,
Nyssa and Tegan aboard the Aquitaine. Together, they'll seek to
discover the truth of what happened to Hargreaves' crew...if only
the ghosts will let them. Forever kept busy, Peter Davison's most
recently been seen on the London stage in the critically acclaimed
The Vertical Hour, and in the musical Gypsy opposite Imelda
Staunton. The Doctor, Nyssa and Tegan team first met in 1981's
Doctor Who adventure Logopolis, where Tegan and Nyssa were on hand
to help the Doctor (Tom Baker) regenerate into his fifth
incarnation (Peter Davison). One of Big Finish's last outings with
The Fifth Doctor, Tegan and Nyssa was in Doctor Who - The Fifth
Doctor Boxed Set, one story from which (Iterations of I) won the
Scribe Award at the 2015 San Diego Comic Con. CAST: Peter Davison
(The Doctor), Janet Fielding (Tegan), Sarah Sutton (Nyssa), Matthew
Cottle (Hargreaves), Harry Myers (Dr Sergei Akunin), Nina Sosanya
(Captain Anna Maynard), Gerald Kyd (Lt Maurizio Savinio), Danusia
Samal (Lt Freya Jennings).
This is a complete reexamination of early modern women's verse based on primary research in many archives and libraries. Forty per cent of the material included has never been printed before, but the book also includes lavish selections from the early modern women poets currently studied, such as Aphra Behn. It offers a very thorough, and very complete, conspectus of women's verse production at all social levels, from 1520 to 1700.
This is the first full collected edition of the works of the
seventeenth-century poet and translator Sir Richard Fanshawe, an
exceptionally gifted linguist, recognized in his won life-time as a
fine Latinist and renowned for his verse translations from Latin,
Italian, Spanish, and Portugese, as well as from English into
Latin. The vitality of Fanshawe's translations evokes a sense of
genuine passion felt by the translator and communicated through his
re-working of the texts, in addition to providing more mechanical
evidence of his linguistic and poetic competence. This volume
contains a thorough commentary, containing a significant amount of
new information and providing and acute and sympathetic critical
assessment of Fanshawe's work. Much of the material in this edition
appears in print for the first time and is base on a completely new
corpus of authoritative printed material in Britain, America, and
Portugal. In many cases, the text is drawn from printed texts
marked up by Fanshawe or his immediate family, or from manuscripts
originating close to the poet himself, thus representing his works
in the form in which they were known in Fanshawe's family and
immediate circle. Original spelling and punctuation are, similarly,
closely adhered to throughout. Davidson also provides a full and
detailed commentary on Fanshaw's less-familiar original poems and
incorporates a chronology of Fanshawe's life and works, thus
setting his translations in the context of the political realities
and quotidian existence of seventeenth-century England.
This is an advanced textbook on the subject of turbulence, and is
suitable for engineers, physical scientists and applied
mathematicians. The aim of the book is to bridge the gap between
the elementary accounts of turbulence found in undergraduate texts,
and the more rigorous monographs on the subject. Throughout, the
book combines the maximum of physical insight with the minimum of
mathematical detail. Chapters 1 to 5 may be appropriate as
background material for an advanced undergraduate or introductory
postgraduate course on turbulence, while chapters 6 to 10 may be
suitable as background material for an advanced postgraduate course
on turbulence, or act as a reference source for professional
researchers. This second edition covers a decade of advancement in
the field, streamlining the original content while updating the
sections where the subject has moved on. The expanded content
includes large-scale dynamics, stratified & rotating
turbulence, the increased power of direct numerical simulation,
two-dimensional turbulence, Magnetohydrodynamics, and turbulence in
the core of the Earth
This ambitious account of the arts of the evening, now available in
paperback, deftly combines prose-poetry, memoir, philosophy and art
history. Intertwining personal, cultural and artistic histories, it
is a richly rewarding book written in a unique voice.
This is a mighty book of Norths: northern geographies, histories,
lights; a place of definition, frost and cold. There is an
unfaltering Recusant spirit about these poems, a survival through
defeat and a sense of underlying permanences. Each poem has an
occasion: some of the occasions are personal meetings,
conversations, which unlock shared scenes and themes; some are
historical in origin, their past often one of early Christian faith
or religious conflict. The poems abound in art, in specific lived
detail, particulars of landscape, and in a harsh weather which is
not unlike time itself in its effect on the living and ageing
imagination. Each poem requires a different metre, a different
pace; each form is carefully attuned to its occasion.
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