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'The Burning Inns' is a fictionalized account of a true incident. The two Inns mysteriously burned to the ground on the same spot forty-seven years apart. The authorities never charged or even accused anyone of arson. An old man who lived through both incidents and his grandson tell the story. The story spans almost a hundred years.
The Burning Hotels is a memoir by Thomas Lampion, centered around his eccentric North Carolina Hometown and its bizarre past while encompassing the mysteries of childhood, adulthood, American History and the importance of where we come from.
’No one of Shakespeare’s plays is harder to characterize’, said Coleridge of Troilus and Cressida. Over the centuries, generations of critics have faced the challenge of determining exactly what sort of play Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida is. Described by Victorian commentators as ’dark’, ’decadent’ and ’bitter’, the work has, until now, retained its designation as a ’problem play’. In this ground-breaking study, leading Shakespeare scholar, W R Elton attempts to dismantle this presumption. His research places the play in the historical context of the Inns of Court law-revels tradition. By close analysis of the text, Elton demonstrates his belief that Troilus and Cressida was written specifically for an audience of law students and lawyers and that the play manifests many elements of a law-revel, including misrule, inversion, mock rhetoric and logic, and mock trials. In so doing, he provides explanations for many of the puzzling and mysterious elements that have previously baffled critics.
When confronted with a fire protection problem, building management is often desperately short on information and know-how in this critical component of protection for their own facility. It is not that the material is hard to grasp, but that there is so much of it that makes the task seem so daunting. Touching on the many subfields of fire protect
Autumn Porter never expected a mystery to fall right under her nose when she moved to Harbor Village with her parents one summer. As soon as she moved in, secrets emerged from behind her closet, in the foreboding woods where a statue of a young man stands, and in the town itself. As summer went on, Autumn realized that even secrets from her hometown were catching up to her in Harbor Village. Can she discover the keys to the mystery before they catch up to her? Will her faith in God be strong enough as she fights the evil that has infested her family? She tries one last thing as she nears death and this moment could be her last.
This play is a Tragedy. Sinopse:During a storm, a traveller arrives tired at a mountain inn. He is travelling towards the sea, which he has never seen but dreams of.The innkeeper's daughter, when she hears of it, decides to go herself in search of the sea and leaves as well.In the beginning of her journey a lightning falls on the inn killing everyone there.Without knowing of these deaths the young woman goes on her journey in search of the world, the life and finally the seaThis is a tragedy written in a poetic style although in prose.
A fully illustrated social history profiling forty historic hotels spread over five regions of the southern interior of British Columbia, covering the time period of the 1890s to 1950s. Room at the Inn reveals the long-forgotten histories of British Columbia’s early hospitality industry, through the riveting stories of the men and women who built, ran, and frequented hotels, hostelries, resorts, and roadhouses in the southern Interior. From the Similkameen town of Keremeos to Spences Bridge at the confluence of the Thompson and Nicola Rivers, east to the Alberta border along the Trans-Canada Highway, and south to the Canada–US border, the history of these hotels mirrors the history of BC’s mining towns and boom-bust economy of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as waves of prospectors, settlers, and eventually tourists shaped the culture of the province that we know today. Of the forty historic hotels profiled in this book, all contributed to their communities in various ways. They provided more than just a roof over the heads of weary travellers; they were often the sites of live entertainment, places where community members could meet and socialize. Some even doubled as makeshift hospitals during wildfires and floods. Through colourful anecdotes, meticulous research, and fascinating archival photography, Room at the Inn transports readers to a bygone era and pays tribute to the pioneers, entrepreneurs, and hard-work men and women who built and operated these historic accommodations.