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Show 21 Titles and Abstracts So natively African were these pictures that the Belgian gov ernment confiscated them at Liege and summoned me to appear at the office of the Secretary 'of State in Brussels. Atty. Joseph E. Evans of Ogden (then French Mission president of the L. D. S. Church) accompanied me for character and academic references. The-officials believed I had taken pictures of dwellings in Belgian Congo! pictures to be used at the International Phonetic Con which I was a delegate. gress at Ghent, to are built on stilts, contain household articles The ... .... .......... dwellings made of cypress buries, corn grinding utensils of African design, furniture. baby cribs made of swamp grass, bamboo and willow These ar remnants of earliest slave days, Negro life along the is a slight modification of original African mores lower Mississippi and customs. Soeech is a residue of native habits with a pew vocabulary of limited scope. Afro melodies. cadence and grammatic usages still survive in rich abundance. .... lia Henry Fielding's 'Art of Life' "i Lester A. Hubbard University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah - It, l d i ru To teach his readers how to live intelligent and happy lives the avowed purpose of Henry' Fielding in writing many of his novels. He concluded that men, in essays and at least two of his in their natural dispositions toward actual society, vary greatly selfishness and benevolence, that the passions, both selfish and benevolent, actuate human, conduct and should be controlled by the reason, and that the conscience of a good natured man ap him for those that are foolish his virtuous acts and was ... .... punishes plauds or vicious. Assuming that virtue, defined as "the delight in doing good," does not always lead to happiness, Fielding emphasized in his art of living the important principle of prudence, which should be a actual society safeguard to the few good rratured individuals in an of selfish culprits ready to exploit their fellow .... .... composed largely men I and to reduce them to misery. Instrumental Forms of the Seventeenth Centuries The Variation Homer Wakefield Provo, Utah Hugh Aston's Hornpipe in the early 16th Century the present, the variation form has been used by every great com From to ... for lack of other extended form. poser. The Elizabethans used it it necessary to fall back on tech made resources Lack of harmonic ... |