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| | Amy Hellam on Byron's Fare Thee Well |
 | | Byron said " The world will believe me, and it will not believe you, (Stowe 243). |  | | She responds with a list of qualities including the comment "I would not enter into a family where there is a strong tendency to Insanity" (Grosskurth 169). |  | | Harriet Beecher Stowe grew up under the impression that Byron had been ill treated by his wife. |
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http://www.clayfox.com/ashessparks/reports/amy.html
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| | George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Mavrokordatos and Byron planned to attack the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto, at the mouth of the Gulf of Corinth. |  | | But before the expedition could sail, on February 15, 1824, he fell ill, and the usual remedy of bleeding weakened him further. |  | | The re-founding of the Byron Society [2] in 1971 reflects the fascination that many people have for Byron and his work. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_Byron
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| | On the Death of a Young Lady |
 | | From 1813-1819 Byron published such excellent works as The Giaour, The Corsair, Lara, Hebrew Melodies, Siege of Corinth, Parisina, The Prisoner of Chillon, Manfred, Beppo, Mazeppa, and the first two cantos of Don Juan ("Byron, a chronology..."). |  | | This credential is even more significant considering Byron grew up in a political climate of revolution and change. |  | | In 1823, having just published Don Juan cantos VI-XIV, Byron set sail for Greece to help them in their struggle for independence from Turkey ("Byron, a chronology..."). |
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http://vm.uconn.edu/~GPM98001/byron.html
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| | Lord BYRON |
 | | www.findarticles.com Search findarticles.com, which publishes free, full-text articles from repubable publishers, for reviews of scholarly books on Byron. |  | | http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/~aezacweb/rombib.htm A succinct, scholarly bibliography by Adriana Craciun lists some of the most significant (print) critical works for Byron and other romantics. |  | | review of two recent Byron publications: Andrew Elfenbein's |
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http://www.literaryhistory.com/19thC/BYRON.htm
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| | 1814-1816: The Byron Chronology - Scholarly Resources, Romantic Circles |
 | | Romantic Circles / Scholarly Resources / The Byron Chronology / 1814-1816 |  | | 1814-1816: The Byron Chronology - Scholarly Resources, Romantic Circles |  | | Byron learns from Hobhouse the state of Parisian politics. |
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http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/chronologies/byronchronology/1814.html
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| | Encyclopedia: Lord Byron (chronology) |
 | | People who viewed "Lord Byron (chronology)" also viewed: |  | | Updated 279 days 6 hours 47 minutes ago. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Lord-Byron-(chronology)
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| | Chronology of Lord Byron |
 | | Byron gravely ill on April 9; incompetent doctors insist on repeated bleedings; dies on April 19. |  | | Mourned by the Greeks as national hero; regarded through- out Europe as the Trumpet "Voice of Liberty," Lord Byron is buried July 16 in Hucknall Torkard Church near Newstead. |  | | Outbreak of Greek war for independence interests Byron. |
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http://www.geocities.com/Paris/LeftBank/3040/chrono.htm
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| | biographies: Lord Byron |
 | | The Critical and other reviews were "very indulgent," but the Edinburgh Review for January 1808 contained an article, not, as Byron believed, by Jeffrey, but by Brougham, which put, or tried to put the author and "his poesy" to open shame. |  | | Byron was old enough to know what had befallen him. |  | | Byron at once offered money and advice, and after some hesitation on the score of health, determined "to go to Greece." The revolutionary Greeks were split up into parties, not to say factions, and there were several leaders. |
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http://histclo.hispeed.com/bio/a/bio-byron.html
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| | TheCriticalPoet - Featured Poet - Lord Byron |
 | | Also in 1809 he began two years of travel in Portugal, Spain, Malta, Albania, Greece, and Turkey, involving himself in self-consciously romantic adventures. |  | | Rumors about his incestuous relationship with his half-sister Augusta Leigh, which produced a daughter, Medora, and doubts about his sanity led to his being ostracized by society. |  | | Lord Byron: a comprehensive study of his life and work. |
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http://thecriticalpoet.tripod.com/byron.htm
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| | Selected Poetry of George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824) |
 | | Lord Byron Page - includes a bibliography, chronology, links to Byron's works on the web, and more. |  | | Prepared by members of the Department of English at the University of Toronto from 1912 to the present and published by the University of Toronto Press from 1912 to 1967 |  | | Lord Byron - poetical works on-line, bibliography and a chronology of the poet's life. |
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http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/dbanach/byron.htm
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| | Romanticism links |
 | | Lord Byron Web Ring: Ring of sites relating to Byron. |  | | Byron Society: Home page of the International Byron Society. |  | | Byron Journal: The International Byron Society's annual journal. |
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http://people.bu.edu/jwvail/romlinks.html
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| | The Literary Gothic Lord Byron |
 | | By John W. Leys, this site includes a chronology and select bibliography. |  | | Byron: a comprehensive study of his life and works |  | | One of the major figures of British Romantic-era poetry, perhaps better known for his life than his poetry, both in his own day and, certainly, in ours. |
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http://www.litgothic.com/Authors/byron.html
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| | Lord Byron: A Chronology of His Life and Work |
 | | Lord Byron: A Chronology of His Life and Work |  | | Augusta's daughter, Elizabeth Medora, is born and later claims Byron is her father. |  | | His memoirs, which he intended for publication after his death, are burned by a group of his friends. |
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http://www.englishhistory.net/byron/chronol.html
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| | Newstead Abbey: Information From Answers.com |
 | | This would be a preoccupation for many years and was certainly not resolved when Byron left for his Mediterranean travels in 1809. |  | | Upon his return to England in 1811, Byron stayed in London, not returning to see his mother who had been living in Newstead. |  | | He also needed his son to marry well in order to escape the debt that had been incurred in the Byron name. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/newstead-abbey
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| | Poetry: George Gordon, Lord Byron |
 | | Among his scandalous affairs, the one he was rumored to have had with his half-sister forced him into European exile in 1816. |  | | His political life was equally flamboyant: he began his career in the House of Lords with a speech defending the working classes and he met his death in Greece as the result of a fever he contracted while fighting for Greek independence. |  | | This site presents a biography of Byron; a chronology of his life and work; images of the poet; the text of letters, journal entries, quotations, and selected poetry; and contemporary and critical opinion of his work. |
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http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/poetry/gordon.htm
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| | Kalaidjian, Understanding Poetry- Biographies, Links, and Secondary Sources |
 | | Following the Countess to Ravenna, Byron was inducted by her father into the revolutionary secret society of the Carbonari. |  | | This link connects you to The Byron Society home page. |  | | By 1818 Byron was composing his great work Don Juan, inspired, in part, by his affairs with a Venetian draper's wife Marianna Segati, then Margarita Cogni, and finally Countess Teresa Guicciolo. |
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http://college.hmco.com/english/kalaidjian/understanding_poetry/1e/students/poetry/byron.html
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| | Amazon.co.uk: Byron: Life and Legend: Books |
 | | As the Byron legend grew to unprecendented proportions after his death, the problem for the biographer has been to sift the truth from the sentimental, the self-serving and the spurious. |  | | Byron was a celebrity in his lifetime, a "superstar" after the publication of "Childe Harold" in 1812. |  | | This biography of Byron (by Byron's own publisher John Murray) attempts to reinterpret Byron's life and poetry for a new generation. |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/071955621X
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| | Lord Byron |
 | | Lord Byron (1788-1824) eorge Gordon Byron was born with a lame foot, and his sensitivity to it haunted his life and his works. |  | | Provides a biography of Lord Byron and a list of his works. |  | | Lord Byron (chronology) Bridge of Sighs.....of quotations by or about: Lord... |
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http://www.virtualbyron.com/lord-byron.php
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| | Lord Byron |
 | | The motto of Byrons was "Crede Byron" - "Believe in Byron", and is had become Europe's motto for almost a century. |  | | Lord Byron was struck by a convulsion on 15 Februari 1824. |  | | In addition there is a selection from Byron's inimitable letters, extracts from his journals and conversations, as well as more formal writings. |
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http://www.queertheory.com/histories/b/byron_lord.htm
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| | Lord Byron (chronology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Oct – Proposal of marriage to Annabella Milbanke rejected; Wrote The Waltz. |  | | 10 March – Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage Cantos I and II published, which made Byron famous overnight. |  | | 19 December – After further visit to Cambridge left for Newstead, where Byron had an affair with Welsh maid, Susan Vaughan. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_Byron_(chronology)
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| | BIOGRAPHY |
 | | Byron and mother spent most of his first years in Scotland, where he inherited his title of Lord Byron at the age of ten after his great-uncle had died. |  | | -After several poor reviews on his first publication attempts, Byron writes English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. |  | | Byron then returned to London where he attended the Harrow School and Cambridge University and recieved his B.A. in 1809. |
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http://www.class.uidaho.edu/eng258_1/Lord_Byron/BIO.htm
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| | Lord Byron -- Britannica Student Encyclopedia |
 | | Lord Byron: A Comprehensive Study of His Life and Work |  | | One of the most talked-of men of his day was George Gordon, Lord Byron. |  | | British admiral, whose account (1768) of a shipwreck in South America was to some extent used by his grandson, the poet Lord Byron, in Don Juan. |
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http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-9273427?tocId=9273427
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| | Lord Byron Links |
 | | This is a wonderful site that includes excerpts from Byron's poems (and not just his major works), images, journals and letters, contemporary and critical opinions. |  | | Lord Byron: a Comprehensive Study of His Life and Work |  | | Also includes a chronology, a great works page, a web board, Byron chat, and links. |
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http://www.suite101.com/links.cfm/Lord_Byron
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| | Lord Byron |
 | | Byron joins an Italian revolutionary society called the Carbonari. |  | | Lady Byron leaves to live with her parents. |  | | Son of Captain John "Mad Jack" Byron and his second wife, Catherine Gordon, a Scottish heiress. |
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http://www.britainunlimited.com/Biogs/Byron.htm
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| | Internet resources for Lord Byron and the Romantic Age |
 | | The Byron Journal is an international publication published annually by The Byron Society. |  | | It publishes scholarly articles and notes on all aspects of Byron's writings and life, and on related topics |  | | The Byron Society is based in London and runs an extensive series of lectures and social events |
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http://www.harrys-stuff.com/byron/byron-onweb.php
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| | The Messolonghi Byron Society |
 | | Becomes the sixth Lord Byron when his great-uncle dies. |  | | Leading a force of Suliote troops paid entirely out of his pocket, Byron |  | | Delivers his first speech in the House of Lords known as the Frame Breakers bill. |
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http://ebbs.english.vt.edu/byron/byron.htm
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| | [Byron, George Gordon, sixth baron] The Byron Chronology |
 | | Byron travelled frequently both in England and on the continent, and detailed records of his movements might be of value to scholars using this chronology." |  | | This chronology draws almost exclusively from Leslie Marchand's standard three-volume biography of Byron's life, with some additions from the material in Marchand's edition of Byron's Letters and Journals. |  | | "The Byron Chronology is a searchable hypertext chronology of important dates in the life of George Gordon, Lord Byron. |
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http://www.anglistikguide.de/cgi-bin/ssgfi/anzeige.pl?db=lit&nr=001567
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| | Reviews |
 | | Bernard Beatty (“Byron and the eighteenth century”) proceeds to decipher what the eighteenth century meant both to Byron and to the critical response to his character and poems. |  | | As a whole, European Byronism seems to have been two-fold: Byron’s character and works were either hailed for their revolutionary impact or recoiled from in horror for the very same reason, namely their subversive power. |  | | The book contains a chronology of Byron’s life and times, a select biography, a “further reading” section, and an index. |
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http://www.cercles.com/review/r22/bone.htm
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| | 'Nicole Piette's Romanticism Course Home Page |
 | | This site was different then any of the other Byron sites that I looked at. |  | | This site had a ton of Byron info and it was displayed in a great way. |  | | This site contained a story of Lord Byron. |
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http://www.assumption.edu/users/ady/HHRomanticism/Rshpg/npiette
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| | LORD BYRON: Table of Contents |
 | | Lady Byron Vindicated: A History of The Byron Controversy, From Its Beginning in 1816 to the Present Time by Harriet Beecher Stowe, 1870 |  | | includes Primary Sources: original writings by and about Byron; and additional websites |  | | My other website, dedicated to Byron's Romantic contemporary. |
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http://englishhistory.net/byron/contents.html
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| | Thomas Moore (1779-1852) |
 | | Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, with Notices of His Life (London). |  | | Moore was questioned but refused to testify against his friends; permitted to remain in college. |  | | Emmet, who had left college in April, was wounded but survived; Hudson was imprisoned and exiled; Wolfe Tone died in prison, allegedly a suicide; Lord Edward Fitzgerald died of wounds. |
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http://lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/Moore.html
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| | W. W. Norton College Books : English : NCE : Byron’s Poetry |
 | | A special section, "Images of Byron," presents 26 views of Byron as artist and as the epitome of the Romantic hero, ranging from the perspectives of his contemporaries to those of such modern writers as James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, T. Eliot, and Albert Camus. |  | | The critical essays offer an integrated view of Byron’s achievement as well as analyses of its different facets. |  | | A Chronology sets forth the main events of Byron’s life, and a Selected Bibliography lists sources for further study. |
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http://www.wwnorton.com/college/titles/english/nce/byron
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| | Lord Byron Poet |
 | | Lord Byron (chronology) Bridge of Sighs.....Asteroid 3306 Byron, named... |  | | Lord George Gordon Byron - Biography and Works |  | | The Life and Work of Lord Byron (1788-1824)... |
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http://www.virtualbyron.com/lord-byron-poet.php
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| | Special Collections: Lord Byron |
 | | The Byron collection, with nearly 300 titles, includes various editions of Lord Byron's works, as well as bibliographies, criticism, and "Byroniana." We continue to add materials to this collection. |  | | Life, letters, and journals of Lord Byron : complete in one volume [with notices of his life by Thomas Moore]. |  | | Highlights include multiple editions of Don Juan, Childe Harold, his Poems, and his Works. |
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http://www.niulib.niu.edu/RBSC/byron.htm
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| | Amazon.ca: Books: Lord Byron |
 | | Unique editorial features that help Everyman Paperback Classics stand out from the crowd include: a leading scholar or literary critic's introduction to the text, a biography of the author, a chronology of her or his life and times, a historical selection of criticism, and a concise plot summary. |  | | The editor, Peter Porter, argues that much of the longer poetry of Lord Byron is actually his best. |  | | This attractive, little book can serve not only as an introduction to Lord Byron's poetry, but also an inducement for the reader to become more familiar with English Romantic Poetry. |
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http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0460878107
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| | Harvard University Press/Byron's Letters and Journals/Contents |
 | | Byron's Letters and Journals: Volume VII, 'Between two worlds', 1820 |  | | Byron's Letters and Journals: Volume XI, 'For freedom's battle', 1823-1824 |  | | Byron's Letters and Journals: Volume II, 'Famous in my time', 1810-1812 |
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http://www.hup.harvard.edu/contents/BYRL10_toc.html
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| | NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: LO: LOR |
 | | Lord of the Rings: Battle For Middle Earth |  | | Lor is a commune of the Aisne département, in northern France. |  | | Lord of the Rings the Motion Picture Trilogy the Exhibition |
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http://pedia.nodeworks.com/L/LO/LOR
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| | Keats Shelley House |
 | | The exterior of the House is exactly as it was when John Keats travelled to Rome and spent what were to be the last few months of his life in a vain attempt to stave off the inevitable effects of consumption. |  | | Tobias Smollett, George Eliot, Goethe, Coleridge, Shelley, Byron, the Brownings, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Oscar Wilde and Joyce were just a few of the many who were attracted and inspired by the celebrated 'centro storico'. |  | | For generations Piazza di Spagna has been visited by architects, painters, musicians and poets who all lodged here. |
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http://www.keats-shelley-house.org
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| | EMC/Paradigm: Electronic Resource Centers |
 | | This site contains Byron’s Preface to the First and Second Cantos of Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage. |  | | The Lord Byron Chronology at the Lord Bryon Home Page |  | | Selected Poetry of George Gordon, Lord Byron at the University of Toronto Library |
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http://www.emcp.com/electronic_resource_centers/listonline.php?GroupID=3325
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| | Find in a Library: Lord Byron |
 | | Subjects: Byron, George Gordon Byron, -- Baron, -- 1788-1824 -- Criticism and interpretation. |  | | To find a library, type in a postal code, state, province, or country. |  | | WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries. |
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http://worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/c7a0123788b0351aa19afeb4da09e526.html
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| | February 3, The Daily Bleed: A Calendar Better Than Boiled Coffee! A People's History: Social, Cultural, Labor, Arts & ... |
 | | Timeline, Chronology, Almanac of Radicalism, Arts, Literature, Authors, Poets, Anarchists... |  | | I've known rivers ancient as the world & older than the |  | | A People's History: Social, Cultural, Labor, Arts & other events Mom & Pop forgot to tell you about! |
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http://www.eskimo.com/~recall/bleed/0203.htm
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