867 resultados para Arabic poetry--19th century
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Signatures: pi² A-C⁴.
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Colophon: Engraved and printed by Edmund Evans Ltd., at the Racquet Court Press, London.
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Thompson: "1857 reappeared as The Rose of sharon for all seasons, Boston, Tompkins, 1858...Longest lived of American literary annuals. Best known contributors are J.G. Adams, Henry Bacon, Alice and Phoebe Cary, Margaret Fuller (1846), Horace Greeley, and TB. Read...Oliver Pelton engraved most of the plates..."
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"Componimenti poetici": p. [1]-[30] at end.
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Poems in English and Arabic
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Poems in English and Arabic.
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"A southern library. A statement read before the New England historical and genealogical society ... Oct. 5, 1859" (4 p., bound at end of copy 1) relates to the present library.
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Includes "Michael--a pastoral" (p. 347-368) by Wordsworth.
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Arabic and English.
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06
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The modern understanding of the pathogenesis of migraine, based on the concept that it is a neurovascular disorder, is often thought to have emerged from the work of Harold Wolff in the period 1932-1962. However, over the preceding 300 years, from William Harvey onwards, various hypotheses of the pathogenesis of migraine had been proposed, a few bearing reasonably strong resemblances to Wolff's ideas, though based on less adequate evidence. Many of these earlier hypotheses regarded migraine either primarily as a vascular (e.g., Willis, Wepfer, Latham) or as a neural disorder (e.g., Harvey, Lieving and his 'nerve storms'). There were also variations around these two major themes and in the 19th Century a number of neurovascufar type hypotheses emerged assigning a major role in migraine pathogenesis to the autonomic nervous system. In addition, during the three centuries there were a number of other hypotheses based on different postulated pathogenic mechanisms, some quite ingenious, which had relatively brief vogues. No hypothesis has yet proved capable of explaining all the features of migraine satisfactorily. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.