Page # | Item | Description |
107 | Horses: Swille’s Beauvoir sired Lee’s Traveler and Davis’ Tartar | |
107 | Fettering device | fetter means shackle, but in this context is refers to the physical chains or bonds around a person or animals feet. |
107 | The London Times | |
107 | Prime minister puts up “Arthur’s (Swille) house” in article London Times | |
108 | Significance of bridges: London and Brooklyn | |
108 | Gladstone as the Lord of Exchequer | Lord of Exchequer is similar to a chancellor or treasury position, dealing with state finances and budgeting. William Gladstone from 1852-55, again in 1859-66, and once more in 1880-82. Most known was Winston Churchill from 1924-29. |
108 | Gladstone speech pro-confederacy | |
108 | The Southern Planter | |
108 | Henry’s History, 1806 edition, Volume VII | |
108 | Tennysonian poppies (drugs) | see footnote for other chapter |
108 | Epicurean club | |
109 | Bull run | |
109 | Queen Vivian- Swille’s siter | |
109 | Annabel Lee: poem and who based on | |
109-110 | Siesta= drug | |
110 | Bois de Boulogne | |
110 | Ikhnaton | an Egyptian pharaoh credited for bringing many new philosophy and art forms to the people.
Source: White, Leslie A. “Ikhnaton: The Great Man vs. The Culture Process.” Journal of the American Oriental Society, vol. 68, no. 2, 1948, pp. 91–114. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/596342. |