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It's swim up north, tha know
NORTHERN Rock? It was more like Northern Dock up 'ere yesterday. There was enough water outside my house to float a dinghy.
We'd...
Daily Mirror, The; London (UK), 01/22/08 by PAUL ROUTLEDGE battles the floods · More from publication -
It's swim up north, tha know
NORTHERN Rock? It was more like Northern Dock 'ere yesterday. There was enough water outside my house to float a dinghy.
We'd been...
Daily Mirror, The; London (UK), 01/22/08 by PAUL ROUTLEDGE battles the floods · More from publication -
In folly ripe, in reason rotten: The Flower and the Leaf and the 'purgatory of cruel beauties'
Readers of the Middle English The Flower and the Leaf have long been fascinated by the poem's fusion of courtly and moral-didactic elements. The...
Medium Aevum, 09/22/03 by Paul Battles · More from publication -
Computers and young children: social benefit or social problem? *.

Using time-diary data from a national sample of young school-age children, we examine the correlates of time spent at home on computing for...
Social Forces, 09/01/03 by Attewell, Paul; Battle, Juan; Suazo-Garcia, Belkis · More from publication -
"The Mark of the Beast": Rudyard Kipling's apocalyptic vision of empire
Rudyard Kipling was more a critic of than apologist for imperialism, as shown by his short story "The Mark of the Beast." The Indian deity Hanuman...
Studies in Short Fiction, 06/22/96 by Paul Battles · More from publication -
Of graves, caves, and subterranean dwellings: 'Eoroscraef' and 'Eorosele' in the 'Wife's Lament.'
The 'eor scroef' or 'eor sele' that the narrator of the 'Wife's Lament' inhabits is probably a souterrain, a constructed underground chamber. Such...
Philological Quarterly, 06/22/94 by Paul Battles · More from publication


