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         Mitford Miss:     more books (44)
  1. Our Village - First Edition by Miss Mitford, 1865
  2. Stories By English Authors: The Orient (1896) by Rudyard Kipling, Miss Mitford, et all 2008-10-27
  3. The Birth-Day Gift, and Friendship's Offering: A Christmas and New Year's Present. With Steel Engravings. by Miss ; Macaulay, Thomas Babington ; Pringle, Thomas et al Mitford, 1950-01-01
  4. Elizabeth Barrett to Miss Mitford: the Unpublished Letters of Elizabeth Barett to Mary Russel Mitford by Betty Miller, 1954
  5. Miss Mitfords und Bulwers englische Rienzibearbeitungen im verhältnis zu ihren quellen und zu einander (German Edition) by Albert Warncke, 1904-01-01
  6. Elizabeth Barrett to Miss Mitford - the Unpublished Letters of Elizabeth to Mary Mitford
  7. Remarks on Miss Mitford's Tragedy of Rienzi. By the Editor of Cumberland's British Theatre. [Signed: D-G., I.E. George Daniel.] by Author Unknown, 2010-05-03
  8. Miss Mitford and Mr. Harness: Records of Friendship by Caroline Mary Duncan-Jones, 1955
  9. Our Village Country Pictures and Tales by Mitford Miss, 1885
  10. Stories by English Authors: Orient (Dodo Press) by Rudyard Kipling, Miss Mitford, et all 2009-03-13
  11. Our Village by Miss Mitford, 1893
  12. FINDENS' TABLEAUX OF NATIONAL CHARACTER, BEAUTY, AND COSTUME. by Miss, and others MITFORD, 1843
  13. Stories By English Authors: The Orient (1896) by Rudyard Kipling, Miss Mitford, et all 2010-09-10
  14. Stories By English Authors: The Orient (1896) by Rudyard Kipling, Miss Mitford, et all 2010-09-10

1. Centre D' Tudes Du 19e Si Cle Fran Ais Joseph Sabl .
Accueil Banques de donn es Femmes Auteures Mitford Femmes. MITFORD, MISS MARIE RUSSELL Mitford, Miss.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

2. Miss Mitford
Miss Mitford. Titles in Short Stories category. Tajima Copyright ©2001, 2005Blackdog Media Link to ClassicReader.com!
http://www.classicreader.com/author.php/aut.303/

3. Benson, E. F. (Foreword By Nancy Mitford.) MISS MAPP Part III
Benson, E. F. (Foreword by Nancy Mitford.) MISS MAPP Part III, Make Way for Lucia.New York Harper Row, 1987. at bookfever.com
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

4. The Tableaux. A Series Of Graphic Scenes, Illustrative Of National
Ask a question or Order this book Browse our books Search our books Book dealer info MITFORD, MISS MARY, EDITOR, The Tableaux.
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5. Miss Austen And Miss Mitford; A Review Of Memorial Volumes Of The
Miss Austen and Miss Mitford; a review of memorial volumes of the two writers. . An article extracted from the Quarterly Review, 1870.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

6. Chambers' Edinburgh Journal. No.101, Jan. 4, 1834. FEATURING The
Attributed to William Leggatt, and abridged from the series of American tales, edited by Miss Mitford.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

7. Miss Mitford Mr Harness Records Of A Friendship, - DUNCAN-JONES
Miss Mitford Mr Harness Records of a Friendship ; DUNCANJONES (CAROLINE M.). Offered by Hobgoblin Books
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8. Elizabeth Barrett To Miss Mitford Letters Of Elizabeth Barrett
Elizabeth Barrett to Miss Mitford Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning to Mary Russell Mitford; MILLER (BETTY) EDITOR. Offered by Hobgoblin Books
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. Elizabeth Barrett To Miss Mitford.
Complete Stock List. MILLER, Betty (Ed.). Elizabeth Barrett to Miss Mitford. London Murray, 1954. xxii, 284pp. Illustrated.
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10. Elizabeth Barrett To Miss Mitford Letters Of Elizabeth Barrett
Elizabeth Barrett to Miss Mitford Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning to Mary Russell Mitford Miller, Betty London, England John Murray, Albemarle
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

11. Miss Mitford Tajima
Tajima by Miss Mitford
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

12. Commentary Magazine - The Trial Of Dr. Spock, By Jessica Mitford
Miss MITFORD, furthermore, sees the particular difficulties of the Spock trial Miss Mitford comments At the Spock trial, the government s message came
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/Summaries/V48I6P100-1.htm
var AID="04806100_1";
The Trial of Dr. Spock, by Jessica Mitford
Friedman, Leon
In retrospectafter, that is, the Chicago explosion of 1968, after campus upheavals and ghetto convulsionsthe acts which led to the trial and conviction of Dr. Benjamin Spock by a Boston Federal District Court appear rather tame. ...CERTIFIED KOSHER JaCK FROST SUGAR 100/COMMENTARY DECEMBER 1969 the Justice Department prosecutors, General Hershey, and three of the jurors who heard the case... ...On July 11, 1969 the Federal Court of Appeals in Boston reversed the convictions of Dr... ...How to explain this shabby episode... ...all about... ...Although Professor Packer has addressed his book to the 'Common Reader,' he has written a most uncommon book... ...The Spock trial does not belong to that variety of cases (Sacco-Vanzetti, Alger Hiss, the Rosenbergs) where defendants are accused of non-political crimes and convicted because of the political climate of the times... ...And it really is a book for him... ...Spock's geniality, Rev... ...Because, as they say, Jack Frost Sugar tastes sweeter...

13. The Nation, 11/23/1882 - The Friendships Of Mary Russell Mitford
Miss Mitford calls her a lively, brilliant woman of the world, Bygone thetimes of Miss Mitford and her circle already are ; for in the last
http://www.nationarchive.com/Summaries/v035i0908_11.htm
The Friendships of Mary Russell Mitford From The Nation - America's Longest Running Weekly Magazine. The Friendships of Mary Russell Mitford Open the article in The Nation Digital Archive Abstract: This article focuses on the book "The Friendship of Mary Russell Mitford," edited by A.G. L'Strange. There is not much that is in itself very important in this collection of letters. The book will be chiefly interesting to those who, remembering the people and places, are carried back as they read to bygone times. The members of those coteries were people who spent all their days in the same places seldom going even to the sea side, knew each other well, were known to the whole town, met evening after evening for their rubbers and negus at each other's houses, and lived at once an extremely quiet and an extremely social life. Selections from Full Text: ...Miss Mitford calls her " a lively, brilliant woman of the world, with a warm, blunt, cordial manner and many accomplishments... ...Among all these Liberals he is described as a Tory, and he evidently had the root of all Toryism in him in the highest perfection...

14. Short Stories Miss Mitford
Feedback. Resources. Link To Us. Members. User. User. Tools. Printerfriendly. Miss Mitford. Read = Title marked as read. Tajima Click Here
http://www.classicreader.com/toc.php/sid.6/aut.303/

15. Paw Prints Anecdotes: Evelyn Waugh
particular rudeness to a young French intellectual at a dinner party in Parisat the home of Nancy Mitford, Miss Mitford, angry at his social brutality,
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/9910/waugh.html
Select an Anecdote A-B -Acheson, Dean -Adams, John -Adams, Ansel -Alcott, Louisa May -Aquinas, Saint Thomas -Asimov, Isaac -Astaire, Fred -Barton, Clara -Beecham, Sir Thomas -Beecher, Henry Ward -Begin, Menachem -Belloc, Hilaire -Benchley, Robert -Bernhardt, Sarah -Boone, Daniel -Booth, Junius Brutus -Brahms, Johannes -Brandt, Willy -Browning, Robert -Buber, Martin -Butler, Samuel
C -Cadbury, George -Cagney, James -Callas, Maria -Capone, Al -Cardozo, Benjamin -Carnegie, Andrew -Caruso, Enrico -Cato the Censor -Cecil, William -Chaplin, Charlie -Chesterton, G.K. -Christie, Dame Agatha -Churchill, Sir Winston -Cleveland, Frances Folsom -Cleveland, Grover -Cohan, George M. -Coleridge, Samuel Taylor -Columbus, Christopher -Coolidge, Calvin -Copeland, Charles Townsend -Corrigan, Douglas [Wrong-Way] -Croesus -Cyrus II (Cyrus the Great)
D-E -Dali, Salvador -Darrow, Clarence -Davis, Bette -DeMille, Cecil B. -Dempsey, Jack -Dewey, Mrs. Thomas E. -Dickens, Charles -Diogenes -Disraeli, Benjamin -Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan -Dumas, Alexandre -Edison, Thomas -Einstein, Albert -Eisenhower, Dwight

16. TROOPER SILAS TOMKYN COMBERBACKE
At this point Miss Mitford, authoress of Our Village, takes up the thread.Captain Ogle¹s father and Miss Mitford¹s father were friends.
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Exhibit/6747/trooper.html
Trooper Silas Tomkyn Comberbacke
This article was contributed by john.burke@mindspring.com . It was transcribed from a copy of Abinger Harvest (Meridian Books, New York, 1955).
Trooper Silas Tomkyn Comberbacke The workhouse at Henley-on-Thames has, or rather had, a garden attached to it, in the midst of which stood a solitary hut, reserved for inmates who were suffering from infectious diseases. At the moment our eyes rest upon this hutthat is to say at a moment during the February of 1794it was occupied by two troopers of the King¹s Light Dragoons. One of them was sick of the confluent smallpox; he raved in delirium, and the other, who held him down, was covered with ominous spots. The unfortunate men had been left behind by their regiment to look after themselves as best they could, and their situation was appalling, for the weather was bitter, the hut possessed four windows and little else, and though the paupers in the main building were sympathetic they approached with circumspection. We do not know the name of the trooper who had the smallpox, but the one covered with spots was called Comberbacke.
"Whose rusty gun is this?"the inspecting officer would ask.

17. Mitford
Penny Radovic of Winter Garden, FL, writes to say The Mitford Eight of usdressed up, I was Miss Sadie, Jo was Winnie (complete with apron and
http://www.mitfordbooks.com/newsletters/winter02_2.htm
Winter 2002
PAGE 2
"You have no idea, Jan, how your Mitfordians have touched the hearts of our racing folk. Given the intensity and demands of their lifestyle, it is wonderful to see how your tales help them focus on things of real, and eternal, value."
Hunter Floyd, Chaplain to C.A.R.T. "Here's hoping that we all have a Father Tim in our lives, and if we don't, perhaps we can study up and try to do the job for him. With Christ's help, of course."
Ginny French, mitford@onelist.com "I am 86 years old, and write to thank you for your Mitford books. Bad memory has enabled me to enjoy them again and again; I've read all of them at least three times! You can't imagine what they have meant to me."
Jo Ivers, Southbury, CT Your writings let me see the miracles in my life."
amysue, mitford@egroups.com "I find myself salivating over the food mentioned in the Mitford books. Puny's cornbread, Emma's Little Debbies, and of course Esther Bolick's orange marmalade cake are a few things that come to mind. I think I'm gaining weight just from the descriptions!"
Kerry Jepson, mitford@egroups.com

18. Mitford
Melba wrote to thank me for the Mitford books and sent one of her own, Miss Rose was sitting in her chair by the refrigerator, peeling potatoes with a
http://www.mitfordbooks.com/newsletters/fall 2000_2.htm
Fall 2000
PAGE 2
A New Song
was recently chosen by Christian booksellers for The Christy Award for Contemporary/ General Fiction and The Gold Medallion Book Award for Fiction. Thanks to booksellers across the country who enthusiastically support the Mitford series.
Honoris Causa In May, the distinguished Nashotah House Seminary of Nashotah, Wisconsin, presented me with an honorary degree, Doctor of Humane Letters. This marvelous recognition is for the spirit and intention of the Mitford series. I am humbled, grateful, and still shaking my head in wonder and disbelief. Warmest appreciation and regards to all who labor and learn at Nashotah, the great missionary seminary founded in the Wisconsin wilderness. Nashotah House is standing firm in the faith.
Stick Around “I’m 85 and take good care of myself because I don’t want to miss a Mitford book!” writes Helen Green of Seattle.
Lots of my readers say, Write faster! I’m so old I might not be around for the next Mitford book! Poshtosh! Don’t even think about leaving us before my next book comes out. If you absolutely, positively must, however, I’ll try to get one up to the library in heaven. That is where you’re going, isn’t it? If you’re not sure, please turn to page 166 of

19. Berkshire History: Biographies: Mary Russell Mitford (1787-1865)
At this period, Miss Mitford paid frequent visits to London and stayed at the Miss Mitford also wrote Mary Queen of Scots, a scene in English verse
http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/mrmitford.html

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Mary Russell Mitford
Born: 16th December 1787 at Alresford, Hampshire
Died: 10th January 1855 at Swallowfield, Berkshire
Mary Russell Mitford was the only child of George Mitford, a descendant of an ancient Northumberland family, and of Mary Russell, an heiress, the only surviving child of Dr. Richard Russell, a richly beneficed clergyman, who held the livings of Overton and Ashe, both in Hampshire, for more than sixty years. George Mitford, who was ten years his wife's junior, had been educated for the medical profession and was a graduate of Edinburgh University. He was clever, selfish, unprincipled and extravagant, with an unhappy love of speculation, and an equally unfortunate skill at whist. He squandered altogether in his lifetime about £70,000 and, finally, became entirely dependent upon his daughter's literary earnings. William Harness, who knew the family well, and was Miss Mitford's lifelong friend, heartily disliked him and called him "a detestable old humbug" but his many failings never succeeded in alienating the affections of his wife and daughter. Mary was a very precocious child who could read before she was three years old. In 1797, she drew a prize in the Irish Lottery worth £20,000. The child herself insisted on choosing the number, 2224, because its digits made up the sum of her age. On the strength of this, Dr. Mitford built a fashionable town house on the London Road in

20. Berkshire History: Biographies: George Spencer-Churchill, Duke Of Marlborough (1
Miss Mitford referred to him as that notable fool ; Miss Mitford recallsthat the newly succeeded Duke of Marlborough lost everything except by an
http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/gschurchill_5dofm.html

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George
Spencer-Churchill,
Duke of Marlborough
Born: 6th March 1766
at Marlborough House, Westminster, Middlesex 5th Duke of Marlborough Died: 5 March 1840 at Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire
As the eldest son of George Spencer, the 4th Duke of Marlborough, and Caroline the daughter of John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford, George Junior was given the title of Marquis of Blandford from birth. He grew up, largely isolated from society, at the family home of Blenheim Palace and was educated privately before attending Eton College and then Christ Church, Oxford, where his extravagant nature began to show. He graduated with an honourary M.A. in 1786 and D.C.L. on 20th June 1792. In 1790, the Marquis had already became M.P. for Oxfordshire, a post in which he served for seven years. The following year, he married Susan, second daughter of John Stewart, 7th Earl of Galloway, and together they had four sons and two daughters. The family was brought up in the Royal County of Berkshire, renting properties, first at Culham Court in Wargrave and then Bill Hill in Hurst . In 1798 though, they moved to the handsome Italianate mansion on the 80-acre

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