Search
Search results
Displaying 361 - 370
Final Statistics
Date AP Rank Opponent Result Aug. 25 #4 TCU (0-0) W, 21-7 Sept. 1 #4 Troy St. (0-0) W, 42-14 Sept. 8 #5 #17 Notre Dame (0-0) W, 27-10 Sept. 20 #4…William Shakespeare: King Lear, Act I, Scene III
Scene IIIThe Duke of Albany's palaceEnter Goneril, and Oswald, her stewardGonerilDid my father strike my gentleman for chiding of his fool?OswaldYes, madam.GonerilBy day and night he wrongs…Walt Whitman: Song of Myself, Part 42
Part 42A call in the midst of the crowd, My own voice, orotund sweeping and final.Come my children, Come my boys and girls, my women, household and intimates, Now the performer launches his…Poems and Songs of Robert Burns: My Father Was A Farmer
by Robert Burns Song-"No Churchman Am I"John Barleycorn: A BalladMy Father Was A Farmer Tune-"The weaver and his shuttle, O." My father was a farmer upon the Carrick border, O…Brewer's: Bonzes
(sing. Bonze). Indian priests. In China they are the priests of the Fohists; their number is 50,000, and they are represented as idle and dissolute. In Japan they are men of rank and…Brewer's: St. Lundi
(La). St. Monday. Monday spent by workmen in idleness. One of the rules enjoined by the Sheffield unionists was that no work should be permitted to be done on a Monday by any of their…Brewer's: Ripaille
I am living at Ripaille- in idleness and pleasure. (French, faire Ripaille.) Amadeus VIII., Duke of Savoy, retired to Ripaille, near Geneva, where he threw off all the cares of state, and…Brewer's: Lumpkin
(Tony), in She Stoops to Conquer, by Goldsmith. A sheepish, mischievous, idle, cunning lout, “with the vices of a man and the follies of a boy;” fond of low company, but giving himself the…Brewer's: Sleeveless Errand
A fruitless errand. It should be written sleaveless, as it comes from sleave, ravelled thread, or the raw-edge of silk. In Troilus and Cressida, Thersi'tës the railer calls Patroclus an “…Brewer's: Archontics
Heretics of the second century, who held a number of idle stories about creation, which they attributed to a number of agents called “archons.” (Greek, archon , a prince or ruler.)…