top of page
Search

Folio Views 472 !FULL! Full 56: Frequently Asked Questions and Answers

  • dyamisliepienis
  • Aug 19, 2023
  • 3 min read


As all of our Admiralty Charts are now Printed On Demand (i.e. when you order them), we can no longer refund the full cost of your order if you wish to return it. We will refund 40% of your order total in order to cover our costs.


Terms: Pay in full on day of auction with PA Check, Cash or Credit Card with a 3% Convenience Fee. This is a taxable consignment auction. If tax exempt, bring exemption # and sign form.




Folio Views 472 !FULL! Full 56




Tree Service Co. Liquidation: Mostly Like new one owner late model Equip. including trucks, trailers, 2 Carlton chippers, Niffy TM 64 man lift, 2 Carlton stump grinders, one on tracks; JD. 3320 E- Hydro tractor w. only 325 hrs., loader, mower and rototiller; Vermeer mini skid loader and mini and reg, skid loader attachments; Also, full line of hand tools including 20 +/- new and used MS 500 to 880 Stihl chain saws and blowers, trimmers and sprayers; Lots of shop tools.


Auctioneers Notes: Motivated sellers! Watch for future ads and check website for full list of personal property. Property can be purchased prior to auction, please see MLS listing PALA2019966.


Among the younger poets whose work Pope admired was Joseph Thurston.[27] After 1738, Pope himself wrote little. He toyed with the idea of composing a patriotic epic in blank verse called Brutus, but only the opening lines survive. His major work in those years was to revise and expand his masterpiece, The Dunciad. Book Four appeared in 1742 and a full revision of the whole poem the following year. Here Pope replaced the "hero" Lewis Theobald with the Poet Laureate, Colley Cibber as "king of dunces". However, the real focus of the revised poem is Walpole and his works. By now Pope's health, which had never been good, was failing. When told by his physician, on the morning of his death, that he was better, Pope replied: "Here am I, dying of a hundred good symptoms."[28][29] He died at his villa surrounded by friends on 30 May 1744, about eleven o'clock at night. On the previous day, 29 May 1744, Pope had called for a priest and received the Last Rites of the Catholic Church. He was buried in the nave of St Mary's Church, Twickenham.


Pope's reputation revived in the 20th century. His work was full of references to the people and places of his time, which aided people's understanding of the past. The post-war period stressed the power of Pope's poetry, recognising that Pope's immersion in Christian and Biblical culture lent depth to his poetry. For example, Maynard Mack, in the late 20th-century, argued that Pope's moral vision demanded as much respect as his technical excellence. Between 1953 and 1967 the definitive Twickenham edition of Pope's poems appeared in ten volumes, including an index volume.[5]


Waldo Lincoln, Resident, 1893, died April 7, 1933, in the fullness of years, in the old Governor Lincoln Mansion at 49 Elm Street, Worcester, where he had spent the greater part of his life. He was another of the leading citizens of Worcester and was well known as an antiquarian and genealogist. After a year at the Lawrence Scientific School in Cambridge, his early years were spent in the metal business. When sixty years of age he retired from business, and thereafter published a genealogy of the Waldo family. He served as president of the American Antiquarian Society, and for ten years he was treasurer of Worcester Polytechnic Institute.


Many years ago, Mr. Horace Everett Ware left a sum of money to the Society for the erection of a suitable memorial to the Governor and Company of Massachusetts Bay. Your Council felt that, now that the tumult and shouting of the Tercentenary had died away, we might properly expend this fund according to the directions of the donor. With the permission of the First Church in Boston, it was decided to erect in their meeting-house a memorial arch and tablet, balancing the Hutchinson memorial doorway which the Society had erected in the same meeting-house fifteen years ago. The archway, beautifully designed by our associate R. Clipston Sturgis, in perpendicular Gothic style, and carved out in American walnut wood, has worked into it characteristic fruits and flora of New England, together with the arms of Winthrop, Johnson, Dudley, Humphrey, Pynchon, and Saltonstall. The arch encloses a tablet, on which is the inscription: 2ff7e9595c


 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All

Comentários


© 2023 by Mother's Day Greeting Card. Proudly created with wix.com

bottom of page