Mary Fielding Smith: Her Ox Goes Marching On
April 19, 2018[…] feeding the dog some kind of acid. It came to me that I should feed him 500 mg. of vitamin C (ascorbic acid) every day. So I bought chewables and did just that. Three […]
[…] feeding the dog some kind of acid. It came to me that I should feed him 500 mg. of vitamin C (ascorbic acid) every day. So I bought chewables and did just that. Three […]
[…] As the first film concludes, the dancers are clustered in a group with quietness and “strength, h overing near the floor, coiling and recoiling. I wanted to pay tribute to my feelings about the […]
[…] here go into the history of women’s publication, but suffice it to say that even when women overcame the enormous barriers and put good material in the hands of a publisher, if that material […]
[…] Tanner’s political and ecclesiastical loyalty transcended the “my country-right-or-wrong” mentality. Though he always sat on the G overnment side of the House, he assumed the integrity and acknowledged the value of Her Majesty’s loyal […]
[…] of subject and form. She published her collected poetry under the title Musings and Memories in 189 6, its popularity requiring a second edition in 1915. Though her poems and stories were typical of […]
[…] collapsed and buried my brother in-law under tons of grain. At his funeral, a speaker offered com fort by saying that God “had need of Leon on the other side.” One of Leon’s young […]
[…] . . with a view to pre pare the way for the ultimate triumph of truth” (9: 369); “all the great discoveries and appliances in the arts and sciences are expressly designed by the […]
[…] the set of fanatics called Mormons.” A letter written by a gentile in Kirtland, Ohio, in 183 6 admits grudgingly that Mormons “are by no means, as a class, men of weak minds. Perhaps […]
[…] to convey an authentic picture of the entire translation. This essay condenses and comments on the 2 67-page set of notes resulting from my study. The following six sections present findings and examples from […]
[…] include any behavior with a decidedly political aim. Which brings me to the Irish. Naturally dramatic and overwhelmingly political, they seem to invite a study of theater as politics and politics as theater. Is […]