All About 12th Edition of Cricket World Cup

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As you may have read in my earlier article, Cricket is being played in three formats – Tests, One-Day and T20s. In order to decide the champion of the game, the world cup is being played, in the One-Day format. I’ve covered a few vital information about its upcoming world cup, which begins at the end of this month.

General

2019 cricket world cup, starting from 30th May 2019, is the 12th edition of the men’s cricket world cup. The showpiece event is the most coveted award in the sport, going to be played between 10 teams. The world cup is always played in the One-Day format. The event is being held in the ODI format. England & Wales will play the host, for the 5th time overall, and the first time since 1999.

Qualification

As a qualification criterion, eight teams automatically qualified based on their international One Day rankings. The last two spots were fought by six teams in the qualifier played in 2018. That was an intensely fought contest in Zimbabwe. Six teams were divided into two groups, where each team played two matches in the group. Top two teams from each group played the semi-finals, and winners of semi-finals played the final.

Teams

India, Australia, England, New Zealand, Pakistan, Bangladesh, South Africa, and Sri Lanka were the teams automatically qualified based on the rankings. West Indies and Afghanistan were the ones to enter through the qualification route. Looking at its rich cricketing history, West Indie being forced to enter through qualification was a tough pill to swallow for many cricket lovers.

Based on the recent form and match winning record, hosts England and India are labeled as favorites to win the competition. Australia – the defending champions – are the dark horses, who may surprise few teams to win the world cup. South Africa has been a force to reckon since their inception in world cricket, never to go beyond semifinals. Their fans are hoping that South Africa will break this jinx to wind a world cup this time.

Schedule Summary

The event will start on 30th May 2019, and go on for 46 days. The hosts England will play against South Africa in the opening match. Two semi-finals will be played on 9th July and 11th July respectively, with final to be hosted on 14th July, Sunday.

Venues

11 grounds over 10 different cities across England & Wales will host the world cup matches.

Here is the list of grounds & cities:

England:

1. Kennington Oval – London

2. Lord’s – London

3. Trent Bridge – Nottingham

4. Country Ground – Bristol

5. Old Trafford – Manchester

6. The Cooper Association Country Ground – Taunton

7. The Rose Bowl – Southampton

8. Headingley – Leeds

9. Edgbaston – Birmingham

10. Riverside Ground – Chester-le-Street

Wales:

11. Sophia Gardens – Cardiff

Do visit the ground and be the part of the historical event if you are in a particular city on a day.

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Source by Nishant Desai

1066: The Year of the Conquest

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Introduction

In this critique of 1066: The Year of the Conquest, I will identify Howarth’s purpose in writing this book and discuss how well he fulfilled his purpose. Also I will evaluate the merits and shortcomings of this book in relation to the themes, sources used, and the author’s writing style.

Author’s Theme

Howarth’s 1066 was a description of the “tremendous drama [in England] that began on January 6 with the burial of King Edward in Westminster Abbey, and ended on Christmas Day in the same place with the coronation of King William” (7). Howarth balances his book by offering insights into the lives and characters of all people in England, from the peasants to the ruling classes, before and after the conquest.

Author’s Purpose

Howarth states that was “not meant to be read as a work of scholarship, only as an evocation of the excitement, pleasures, and miseries of that year” (7). Howarth acknowledges the difficulty of ascertaining a strictly factual account of a time in which sources were scarce and/or biased. Because of this, Howarth necessarily had to make some assumptions and conclusions in his account of the conquest.

Author’s Writing Style

When reading Howarth’s book, it was very easy for one to forget that this is an historical account of the Norman Invasion. His writing is very descriptive and colorful. Howarth succeeded magnificently in keeping the reader engrossed in the book. The book reads so much like a historical novel, that one wonders how much is factual. Howarth admittedly added his own opinions and advanced his own conclusions to the account to fill in the gaps that there are no sources for. For example, Howarth believes the change in King Harold’s behavior between the Battle at Stamford Bridge and the Battle at Hastings is due to his learning that William had papal blessing. This conclusion may be correct, but Howarth offers no evidence to support it. He never mentions that someone specifically told King Harold of that fact, he only says that someone must have. Therefore, Howarth is not basing his conclusions on factual evidence, but on what he surmises must have happened. This may be necessary when very few sources exist, but, for me, it casts doubts on the validity of his assertions.

Howarth’s writing style is the popular style, not scholarly. The portrait he paints of medieval England is very vividly done. Through his words, an image springs to the mind of exactly how the country looked at this time. Besides the image of England, Howarth also is very successful in giving us insights into the characters of the men involved in the battle, from the villagers turned soldiers to the rulers they fought for. For example, it is very easy for the reader to see the disillusionment and indecision in Duke William’s face after hearing that King Edward was dead and that Harold had been crowned the new king.

I enjoyed very much the way Howarth included the customs of the people involved. I believe customs determine why people act as they do, and so it is important to consider that when reading history. For this reason, I find the first chapter that details the lives of the average Englishman and Englishwoman very informative and entertaining.

I also appreciate how Howarth included prior political and social events that influenced how people acted before, during, and after the Battle of Hastings. For example, William’s invasion would have seemed baffling if Howarth had not informed us about King Edward’s promise to him and the meeting between William and Harold in Normandy.

Author’s Sources

Howarth used mainly primary sources for this book. He states that of the twenty sources he used, “twelve were written within living memory of 1066, and all but two within a hundred years” of the Battle at Hastings ( 7). Howarth also varied his sources to present the different versions of what happened; the different versions belonged to the English, Normans, and Scandinavians.

Conclusion

Taken as a whole, I believe this was a good text on the Norman Conquest. Even though I find some of his conclusions suspect, the book is written in a manner to entertain, while also offering valuable information about the lives of medieval peoples during one of the most important dates in Western history.

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Source by Mary Arnold

Red Rose History

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Evidence suggests that the red rose is nearly 35 million years old. The most commonly available roses belong to two broad categories: the Oriental species and their hybrids, and the European or Mediterranean species and their hybrids. It is possible to grow a red rose anywhere in the world, if the species to which it belongs is selected according to climatic conditions.

Not surprisingly, therefore, ancient civilizations such as those of the Egyptians, the Greeks and the Romans seemed to have given the red rose a place of pride. Rose fossils have been found near ancient Egyptian tombs. Greek mythology is replete with references to the red rose being sacred to Bacchus, the Greek god of wine, and Venus, the Greek goddess of love. Cupid, of course, is inextricably linked to the red rose.

The Romans seem to have been rather preoccupied with the red rose. Their preoccupation was not just the result of their appreciation for its beauty and fragrance. They had discovered the medicinal properties of the red rose, and also found ways of capturing its fragrance in perfumes. In fact, there is evidence which suggests that they experimented with cultivation techniques and found ways to make red roses blossom beyond their natural peripheries.

The beauty of the red rose has always driven rose lovers to find ways and means of collecting them, displaying them and growing them. French Empress Josephine, particularly after her divorce with Emperor Napoleon, took to roses and dedicated a large space and resources to the cultivation and hybridization of roses. The palace of Malmaison became home to rose gardens with old and new species. Among these, the red rose received plenty of attention.

The red rose also has an interesting place in the history of England. Opposing factions in York and Lancaster fought for control over England in the 15th century. York was synonymous with the white rose and Lancaster with the red rose. In fact, the friction between these warring factions led to the coining of the term ‘War of the Roses’. Lancaster emerged victorious, but this victory did not spell defeat for York. Tudor Henry VII and his bride from York facilitated the symbolic union of red rose and the white rose, and gave England ‘the Rose of England’.

Whether it’s red roses in England, or in any other part of the world, botanists credit China with the ‘ever-blooming’ variety. In the late 18th century, botanists succeeded in bringing these to Europe, and then the rest of the world. Today, including hybrids, there are over 150 species of roses. Several of these are red. There are different shades of red roses available today, and they are of different sizes.

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Source by Damian Sofsian

FIFA World Cup Results – Drawing Everybody’s Attention

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FIFA world cup results can be considered to be the most awaited news in the world. Every media channel and press eagerly waits to publish and broadcast the outcomes of this most popular sport event. In Western countries, soccer is considered as a religion and people religiously worship this particular game. The fans always prefer to check out the last page of any journal i.e. the sports part. When it comes to online TV, people usually prefer to watch the sports channels in order to grab the latest updates and news. Before the 2010 tournament, Mexico and England had a friendly match recently. This was a sort of warm up match in order to get prepared for the forthcoming event, which is scheduled to be started on 11th June. This time South Africa is going to host the world cup.

In this match, England team was coached by Fabio Capello. The former team easily defeated the Mexican team by 3-1. Ledley King had a comeback in the winning team. He had scored his second goal for his team. Peter Crouch, better known as Robot managed to score at a close range after a header from Rooney. However, Mexico was not left behind, as within seconds the losing team fought back, when Guillermo Franco managed to score a goal. The final goal in the match was scored by Glen Johnson. It was his first international goal and this led England to victory with 3-1 points. Now England will be playing her final match against Japan before the world cup. The game is scheduled to be held in Graz.

Italian football news is always in the limelight. One country that always strikes one’s mind, while thinking of soccer is Italy. The world cup fever has already started to gain momentum. Jose Mourinho recently announced that from now onwards he would be supporting the Santiago Bernabeu stadium, where his team, Milan had just won the Champions League. Earlier, the audience was already given a chance to watch its hero, Christiano Ronaldo in his full spirits. The same enthusiasm is still afresh in the minds of the Italian audience in order to witness another enthralling match.

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Source by Hemank Sharma

Indian World Cup Win No Fluke, Suggests Flash Cricket Simulator

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Earlier this year, the Indian cricket team won the 2011 edition of the Cricket World Cup. Although India were the favourites leading into the tournament, cricket is a sport where any of the top teams can beat any other on their day. Thanks to the existence of online cricket simulators, we can try to determine what the chances were of India winning, and how the other placings should have gone.

ODI CricSim is a flash cricket simulator that determines the results of matches by crunching over 200 variables from each player’s actual world career, including the average length of a batsman’s innings, the chance of hitting a four or a six on any given ball, the bowler’s strike rate and the bowler’s economy rate. For this experiment I used the ODI CricSim engine to run 1,000 simulated World Cups based on the quarterfinal standings of the various teams. The teams for each match were the same as the teams in the actual world, and in cases where a simulated team advanced when their actual world counterpart did not, the quarterfinal team was used for their next match.

The results were as follows:

First Quarterfinal – Pakistan vs. West Indies:

Pakistan 572
West Indies 428

Second Quarterfinal – India vs. Australia:

India 576
Australia 424

Third Quarterfinal – New Zealand vs. South Africa:

New Zealand 399
South Africa 601

Fourth Quarterfinal – Sri Lanka vs. England:

Sri Lanka 568
England 432

The results from these quarterfinal matchups suggest that New Zealand beating South Africa was the biggest upset of this stage of the tournament. South Africa was the only losing team that the simulator suggested should have won. In fact, South Africa were the team with the highest simulated chance of winning their quarterfinal, which will add more heartbreak to Proteas fans who felt that this tournament was a great chance for their team to break their Cricket World Cup duck.

First Semifinal:

There were four possible matchups for this semifinal, and the following were the predicted chances that the matchup in question would have resulted:

New Zealand vs. England (172 iterations)
New Zealand vs. Sri Lanka (same as actual world) (227 iterations)
South Africa vs. England (260 iterations)
South Africa vs. Sri Lanka (341 iterations)

The simulator results were as follows:

New Zealand vs. England: NZL 105, ENG 67.
New Zealand vs. Sri Lanka: NZL 134, SRL 93.
South Africa vs. England: SAF 181, ENG 79.
South Africa vs. Sri Lanka: SAF 180, SRL 161.

Second Semifinal:

There were four possible matchups for this semifinal, and the following were the predicted chances that the matchup in question would have resulted:

India vs. West Indies (247 iterations)
India vs. Pakistan (same as actual world) (329 iterations)
Australia vs. West Indies (181 iterations)
Australia vs. Pakistan (243 iterations)

The simulator results were as follows:

India vs. West Indies: IND 197, WIN 50.
India vs. Pakistan: IND 238, PAK 91.
Australia vs. West Indies: AUS 138, WIN 43.
Australia vs. Pakistan: AUS 186, PAK 57.

Final:

There were sixteen possible matchups for the final, and the following were the predicted chances that the matchup in question would have resulted:

India vs. South Africa (157 iterations)
India vs. Sri Lanka (same as actual world) (110 iterations)
India vs. New Zealand (104 iterations)
India vs. England (64 iterations)
Australia vs. South Africa (117 iterations)
Australia vs. Sri Lanka (82 iterations)
Australia vs. New Zealand (78 iterations)
Australia vs. England (47 iterations)
Pakistan vs. South Africa (53 iterations)
Pakistan vs. Sri Lanka (38 iterations)
Pakistan vs. New Zealand (35 iterations)
Pakistan vs. England (22 iterations)
West Indies vs. South Africa (34 iterations)
West Indies vs. Sri Lanka (24 iterations)
West Indies vs. New Zealand (22 iterations)
West Indies vs. England (13 iterations)

The simulator results were as follows:

India vs. South Africa: IND 98, SAF 59.
India vs. Sri Lanka: IND 69, SRL 41.
India vs. New Zealand: IND 63, NZL 41.
India vs. England: IND 54, ENG 10.
Australia vs. South Africa: AUS 65, SAF 52.
Australia vs. Sri Lanka: AUS 57, SRL 25.
Australia vs. New Zealand: AUS 47, NZL 31.
Australia vs. England: AUS 37, ENG 10.
Pakistan vs. South Africa: PAK 22, SAF 31.
Pakistan vs. Sri Lanka: PAK 19, SRL 19.
Pakistan vs. New Zealand: PAK 14, NZL 21.
Pakistan vs. England: PAK 12, ENG 9.
West Indies vs. South Africa: WIN 13, SAF 21.
West Indies vs. Sri Lanka: WIN, SRL 14.
West Indies vs. New Zealand: WIN 8, NZL 14.
West Indies vs. England: WIN 6, ENG 7.

These results give the following percentage chances of winning the 2011 Cricket World Cup, given the quarterfinal standings and given that the simulator is accurate:

India 28.5%
Australia 20.6%
South Africa 16.3%
New Zealand 10.7%
Sri Lanka 9.9%
Pakistan 6.7%
West Indies 3.7%
England 3.6%

It is important to note here that these rankings do not reflect the relative merits of each team, but their chances of winning the tournament given the quarterfinal standings and eventual opponents in the semifinals and final. Perhaps disappointingly for the tournament itself, the two top teams met each other in the quarterfinal stages, robbing it of what would have been a titanic final between the eventual champions and the triple defending champions.

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Source by Vince McLeod

History of Bankruptcy

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Bankruptcy is defined as “a legally declared inability or impairment of ability of an individual or organization to pay its creditors”. Though a less-than-pleasant experience, it is often an unavoidable step that enables the debtor to make a fresh start and the creditor to recoup at least part of the debt. Bankruptcy has got a lot of coverage in recent times, especially with the worst recession since the Great Depression of 1929 assailing world economy. However, the history of bankruptcy dates back at least 500 years to medieval England.

Before we embark on a journey through time to trace bankruptcy’s roots, its important to know the origin of the word. The word “bankrupt” originates from the ancient Latin bancus (a bench or table), and ruptus (broken). Ancient bankers used to conduct their business at a bench in public places like marketplaces and fairs. When a banker failed, his bench (bancus) was broken (ruptus) to advertise to the public that he was no longer in a condition to do business. Even today, the word “bankrupt” means the inability of an individual or company to do business.

The first bankruptcy law was enacted in England in 1542 during the reign of Henry VIII, and was heavily biased against the debtor where he could be jailed and all his assets seized. With time, the law was relaxed to allow debtors out of prison, many of whom promptly fled to the debtors colonies in Georgia and Texas. Even as imprisonment became rarer in the 1800s, collusive bankruptcy (agreed upon by creditor and debtor) became legal in 1825. Voluntary bankruptcy was authorized in England in 1849.

When the United States Constitution was adopted in 1789, bankruptcy was specifically mentioned as being subject to federal law. The first US bankruptcy law was passed in 1800 and provided only for involuntary proceedings. Voluntary bankruptcy was legalized in 1841 and its scope expanded by subsequent legislation in 1898 and 1938. The Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, commonly known as the Bankruptcy Code, made major changes to bankruptcy law.

There was considerable confusion on the overlapping and conflicting jurisdictions of the new court structure, and an “Emergency Rule” had to adopt by the courts. This rule remained in effect until enactment of the 1984 legislation on July 10, 1984 when the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act was implemented. Consequently, new bankruptcy courts were allowed to exercise the entire subject matter jurisdiction of the district courts, subject to certain limitations.

In 1986, the Bankruptcy Judges, United States Trustees, and Family Farmer Bankruptcy Act made considerable changes relating to family farmers and established a permanent trustee system. In recent years, the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994 has enacted changes that affect the mortgage banking industry. At present, there exist six types of bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy Code, located at Title 11 of the United States Code:

1. Chapter 7 – straight bankruptcy for basic liquidation.

2. Chapter 9 – municipal bankruptcy to resolve municipal debts.

3. Chapter 11 – corporate bankruptcy for restructuring.

4. Chapter 12 – family farmers and fishermen bankruptcy.

5. Chapter 13 – wage earner bankruptcy for regular income earners.

6. Chapter 15 – international bankruptcy to allow foreign debtors to clear debts.

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Source by Jimm Knight

The Most Colossal Collection of Shakespeare Memorabilia

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The “Folger Shakespeare Library” houses the largest collection of literary sources and other items relating to William Shakespeare. Surely such a monument would exist only in England, London, or Stratford Upon Avon – the famous Bard’s home. No. It might surprise most people that this building is located in Washington DC, a block from the U.S. Capitol.

Built by Henry Clay Folger and his wife Emily Folger, a wealthy couple from New York City, the Folger Shakespeare Library houses not just the world’s largest collection of the printed works of England’s most famous writer, William Shakespeare, but is a major storage facility for at least thirty other categories of rare artifacts from the sixteenth century to the first half of the eighteenth century England.

Henry Clay Folger was an American aristocrat who lived between 1857 and 1930. Folger played the role of a minor tycoon, becoming president and later chairman of Standard Oil of New York late in life. Although he was a frugal spender, most of the money he earned was spent on his Shakespeare collection. Unlike his brother James who founded “Folger Coffee,” Henry’s name almost became synonymous with William Shakespeare, because he was such a driven, avid collector of anything and everything relating to William Shakespeare. Folger spent most of the money he earned at Standard Oil collecting “Shakespeareana.” Most of the time, he simply took out loans from the company. He paid to happy booksellers who served as middlemen to bid on any item Folger chose. Usually, he won what he bid on. Of course, all of his booksellers loved doing business with this man, because he always paid cash on the barrel.

Folger married Emily Jordan Folger who also had a true intellectual passion for the famous playwright. Beginning in 1885, they started their collection, cataloguing and storing what they bought. Together they collected as many printed materials about Shakespeare and other related historical documents as they could. After adding up the entire collection, over 250,000 books, 60,000 manuscripts, and over 50,000 maps, prints, and engravings had been counted. The collection also included a vast collection of theatre items, sculptures, instruments and costumes related to Shakespeare and his time. Folger’s collection includes 82 rare “First Folios” – the first book that included all 36 of the Bard’s entire plays. As few as 220 First Folios were printed in 1623. Folger owned almost half of them. One copy sold at an auction at Sotheby’s for $5 million dollars in 2006.

In 1932, two years after Henry’s death, the library had been built and opened to the public. Everyone, from school children to the most seasoned academic professor is always invited to view the library and study the rare collections of literary material. The chances of finding any specific information about Shakespeare, no matter how small are extremely good; the library has just about anything related to the greatest English writer.

For more interesting information about Henry and Emily and their library, please read, “Collecting Shakespeare: The Story of Henry and Emily Folger” by Stephen H. Grant.

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Source by Harrington A Lackey

The Evolution of Nursing – Florence Nightingale

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Florence Nightingale made great strides in the evolution of nursing. Her actions in the 1800s revolutionized the nursing profession and the care of patients. The Lady with the Lamp became an important figure within medicine and the changes that she made to nursing have saved millions of lives.

Born in 1820, Nightingale received training in languages, mathematics, and other disciplines as a young girl. In 1837, she reported that she heard the voice of God telling her that she had a mission in her life. She came to believe that this mission rested in nursing others who were sick or injured.

Traveling to Prussia, Nightingale participated in a program designed to teach girls and young women to nurse. When she left the school, she worked in Paris for a brief time for a Sisters of Mary hospital. Even this early, those who came into contact with her often respected her opinions, thoughts, and acts highly.

In 1853, Nightingale returned to England where she became the superintendent of the Institution for the Care of Sick Gentlewomen in London. She received no pay for the position. Shortly after taking the position, reports began to circulate in England about the poor conditions for injured and sick soldiers in the Crimean War.

Nightingale gathered thirty-eight other women and together they left for Scutari, Turkey. From 1854 to 1856, she headed up nursing in the military hospitals. One of the things that Nightingale focused on was improving sanitation within the hospitals. She ordered additional clothing and bedding and raised funds from individuals back in England to support her efforts.

Soon, the mortality rate in the hospitals Nightingale oversaw nursing in dropped from 60 percent to 2 percent. She also used her background in mathematics to conducted statistical studies of disease and mortality. She became the general superintendent for the Female Nursing Establishment of the Military Hospitals of the Army in 1856.

When she returned to England, Nightingale continued the evolution of nursing. She helped found the Royal Commission on the Health of the Army and advised government officials on sanitation issues in India. She also started a school to train other nurses in London.

Nightingale suffered from an unknown illness after she returned from the Crimean War, although she continued to write about nursing and sanitation issues. By 1901, she was blind. In 1907, she received the Order of Merit from the King. She died in 1910.

The evolution of nursing has been greatly impacted by the work of Florence Nightingale. She brought many new advances to the discipline of nursing and helped make it a highly respected position for individuals to take. Her dedication to improving conditions for injured and sick individuals, as well as training others in her met

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Source by Karen Rodgers

English Adventurers and Spanish Conquistadors – One in the Same

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The English adventurers and Spanish conquistadors were most certainly “brothers under the skin” in that they both set out to reap the rewards of the New World with little to no regard for the local peoples. They both faced the same problems back in Europe. These problems included disease, poverty, and overcrowding. There were simply too many people competing for the same things, whether they were money, food, or land. This coupled with stories of fortune and a Northwest Passage to Asia created a sense of hope that voyages west would solve the many problems of a needy continent. For this reason, both the English and the Spanish looked to the New World with the goal of finding treasures and later on, colonization. The idea that there were valuable land, resources, and treasures located in the New World that would alleviate or solve European problems motivated both countries to try their hand at exploration.

Of course, these rewards came at a cost to the native peoples of the Americas. As “brothers under the skin,” the English and Spanish viewed the natives as savages. They both believed that they had not only a right, but also a duty to instruct these people in that ways of European civilization and Christianity. However, they both used this as an excuse to exploit the local people. When Hernando Cortes raided Tenochtitlan, he wrote of attacking before dawn, vowing to do all the harm that he could. This included murdering woman and children, leaving them to rot in the streets while the Spanish conquistadors looted the homes and businesses of the city. The Aztecs had done no great harm to Cortes; in fact, they treated him and his men as gods. However, greed spurred Cortes and his men on to kill thousands. Of course, this did not bother anyone because the men, women, and children that they killed were savages that could not be saved.

Richard Hakluyt, an Englishman, wrote a letter detailing an almost identical plan to get England involved in the Americas. They would go over under the guise of spreading Christianity, but they would make full use of the resources and advance the economic interests of the country. He talked of putting the poor of England to work in the Americas. However, similarly to the Spanish, the plans necessitate the exploitation of the natives. He wrote, “If we find the country populous and desirous to expel us and injuriously offend us, that seek but just and lawful traffic, then, by reason that we are lords of navigation and they are not so, we are the better able to defend ourselves by reason of those great rivers and to annoy they in many places.” (Origins of English Settlement) As you can tell by this passage, not only is there a sense of entitlement and superiority that exists within the mind of the English, there are already plans to conquer the Indians.

To the royal governments of England and Spain, the English adventurers and the conquistadors served the same purpose. That is to secure a foothold in the New World from which to advance the causes of the country. More than that, the conquistadors and adventurers were men meant to bring civilization and religion to the uncouth idol worshippers of the New World. I am sure the leaders of England and Spain truly believed that they were doing a service to the Aztecs and other Indians by murdering them and taking their things. Both the English and the Spanish believed that the natives were savages that were beyond saving for the most part. For this reason, killing many was an evil that was necessary in order to save a few. They believed that as stronger, more developed countries, it was their duty to rid the world of this evil. It was their duty to instruct the savages in the ways of the Lord. To them, the adventurers and conquistadors were good, moral men that were doing the will of God. While in actuality, they were brutal, self-righteous thieves.

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Source by Andrew Bridges

Lord Byron’s "She Walks in Beauty"

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Lord Byron’s opening couplet to “She Walks In Beauty” is among the most memorable and most quoted lines in romantic poetry. The opening lines are effortless, graceful, and beautiful, a fitting match for his poem about a woman who possesses effortless grace and beauty.

Life in England

Lord Byron was born George Gordon Noel Byron in London in 1788. He became a Lord in 1798 when he inherited the title and the estate of his great-uncle. Byron’s mother had taken him to Scotland for treatment for his club foot, but she brought him back to England to claim the title and the estate.

Byron was privately tutored in Nottingham for a short period. He then studied in Harrow, Southwell, and Newstead, and finally at Trinity College. Byron discovered a talent for writing poetry and published some early poems in 1806 and his first collection, called Hours of Idleness, in 1807 at the age of 19. When he turned age 21 he was able to take his seat in the House of Lords.

However, Lord Byron left England for two years with his friend, John Hobhouse, to travel through Europe. They toured Spain, Malta, Greece, and Constantinople. Greece especially impressed Byron and would create a recurring theme in his life.

After returning to England Lord Byron made his first speech to the House of Lords. Later that year he published a “poetic travelogue” titled, Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, a respectable collection of verses about his recent travels in Europe. The collection earned Lord Byron lasting fame and admiration. Lord Byron had become a ladies’ man and the newly earned celebrity brought him a series of affairs and courtships.

Lord Byron married Anna Isabella Milbanke in 1815 and his daughter, Augusta, was born later that year. However, the marriage did not last long. In early 1816 Anna and Augusta left Lord Byron and later that year he filed for legal separation and left England for Switzerland, a self-imposed exile.

Life in Europe

While in Switzerland Lord Byron stayed with Percy Bysshe Shelley, a prominent metaphysical and romantic poet, and had an illegitimate daughter, Allegra, with Claire Clairmont. After that affair ended, Lord Byron and his friend, John Hobhouse traveled through Italy, settling first in Venice, where he had a couple more affairs, including an affair with the nineteen year old Countess Teresa Guicciolo. Here Lord Byron began his most famous and most acclaimed work, the epic poem Don Juan.

Lord Byron and Teresa moved to Ravenna, then to Pisa, and then to Leghorn, near Shelley’s house, in 1821. The poet Leigh Hunt moved in with Lord Byron later that year after Shelley drowned off the coast near Leghorn in a storm. Lord Byron contributed poetry to Hunt’s periodical, The Liberal, until 1823 when he took the opportunity to travel to Greece to act as an agent for the Greeks in their war against Turkey.

Lord Byron used his personal finances to help fund some of the battles by the Greeks against the Turks. He even commanded a force of three thousand men in an attack on the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto. The siege was unsuccessful and the forces withdrew. At this time Lord Byron suffered one or two epileptic fits. The remedy of the day, blood-letting, weakened him.

Six weeks later, during a particularly chilly rainstorm, Lord Byron contracted a severe cold. The accompanying fever was treated by repeated bleeding by trusted physicians, but his condition worsened until he eventually slipped into a coma and died on April 19, 1824.

Lord Byron was a hero in Greece and was deeply mourned there. His heart was buried in Greece and his body was sent to England where it was buried in the family vault near Newstead. He was denied burial in Westminster Abbey because of the perceived immorality of his life and numerous controversies. Finally in 1969, 145 years after his death, a memorial was placed in the Poets’ Corner of Westminster Abbey, commemorating his poetry and accomplishments.

Shortly after his arrival in Greece, Lord Byron had written these appropriate lines.

“Seek out–less often sought than found–

A soldier’s grave–for thee the best

Then look around, and choose thy ground,

And take thy rest.”

An interesting and exceptional biography of Lord Byron’s life was written in 1830 by a contemporary and friend, John Galt, titled, The Life of Lord Byron. The 49 chapters give a good measure of Lord Byron’s complexity.

“She Walks in Beauty”

In June, 1814, several months before he met and married his first wife, Anna Milbanke, Lord Byron attended a party at Lady Sitwell’s. While at the party, Lord Byron was inspired by the sight of his cousin, the beautiful Mrs. Wilmot, who was wearing a black spangled mourning dress. Lord Byron was struck by his cousin’s dark hair and fair face, the mingling of various lights and shades. This became the essence of his poem about her.

According to his friend, James W. Webster, “I did take him to Lady Sitwell’s party in Seymour Road. He there for the first time saw his cousin, the beautiful Mrs. Wilmot. When we returned to his rooms in Albany, he said little, but desired Fletcher to give him a tumbler of brandy, which he drank at once to Mrs. Wilmot’s health, then retired to rest, and was, I heard afterwards, in a sad state all night. The next day he wrote those charming lines upon her–She walks in Beauty like the Night…”

The poem was published in 1815. Also in that year Lord Byron wrote a number of songs to be set to traditional Jewish tunes by Isaac Nathan. Lord Byron included “She Walks in Beauty” with those poems.

She Walks in Beauty

1

She walks in beauty, like the night

Of cloudless climes and starry skies;

And all that’s best of dark and bright

Meet in her aspect and her eyes:

Thus mellow’d to that tender light

Which heaven to gaudy day denies.

2

One shade the more, one ray the less,

Had half impair’d the nameless grace

Which waves in every raven tress,

Or softly lightens o’er her face;

Where thoughts serenely sweet express

How pure, how dear their dwelling place.

3

And on that cheek, and o’er that brow,

So soft, so calm, yet eloquent,

The smiles that win, the tints that glow,

But tell of days in goodness spent,

A mind at peace with all below,

A heart whose love is innocent!

Discussion of the Poem

The first couple of lines can be confusing if not read properly. Too often readers stop at the end of the first line where there is no punctuation. This is an enjambed line, meaning that it continues without pause onto the second line. That she walks in beauty like the night may not make sense as night represents darkness. However, as the line continues, the night is a cloudless one with bright stars to create a beautiful mellow glow. The first two lines bring together the opposing qualities of darkness and light that are at play throughout the three verses.

The remaining lines of the first verse employ another set of enjambed lines that tell us that her face and eyes combine all that’s best of dark and bright. No mention is made here or elsewhere in the poem of any other physical features of the lady. The focus of the vision is upon the details of the lady’s face and eyes which reflect the mellowed and tender light. She has a remarkable quality of being able to contain the opposites of dark and bright.

The third and fourth lines are not only enjambed, but the fourth line begins with an irregularity in the meter called a metrical substitution. The fourth line starts with an accented syllable followed by an unaccented one, rather than the iambic meter of the other lines, an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one. The result is that the word “Meet” receives attention, an emphasis. The lady’s unique feature is that opposites “meet” in her in a wonderful way.

The second verse tells us that the glow of the lady’s face is nearly perfect. The shades and rays are in just the right proportion, and because they are, the lady possesses a nameless grace. This conveys the romantic idea that her inner beauty is mirrored by her outer beauty. Her thoughts are serene and sweet. She is pure and dear.

The last verse is split between three lines of physical description and three lines that describe the lady’s moral character. Her soft, calm glow reflects a life of peace and goodness. This is a repetition, an emphasis, of the theme that the lady’s physical beauty is a reflection of her inner beauty.

Lord Byron greatly admired his cousin’s serene qualities on that particular night and he has left us with an inspired poem.

The poem was written shortly before Lord Byron’s marriage to Anna Milbanke and published shortly after the marriage.

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Source by Garry Gamber