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His lecture was reprinted first in The Pacific, a San Francisco newspaper, and then in the journal Proceedings of the California Academy of Natural Sciences.
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This renewed interest first made itself felt in 1816, when Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur was reprinted for the first time since 1634.
This paper was reprinted in the third volume of his Historische Beiträge zur Philosophie (1867).
Reprints of the first edition, intended for practical use rather than antiquary interest, were published until the 1870s in England and Wales, and a working version by Henry John Stephen, first published in 1841, was reprinted until after the Second World War.
The Analogy was reprinted many times in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, as were Butler's works.
In Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte, a biography by Napoleon's private secretary, Louis de Bourrienne, he notes that Le souper de Beaucaire was reprinted as a book – the first edition issued at the cost of the Public Treasury in August 1798, and a second edition in 1821, following Napoleon's death.
His first attack was reprinted a a pamphlet at the expense of Arthur Tappan, a wealthy sil merchant.
On the third day, another article made it clear that there was no change in the situation On the fourth day, the incident attained the front page again, this time figuring as the subject of drollery by Art Buchwald... On the sixth day, Mr. Buchwald's article of the fourth day was reprinted, for no apparent reason.
The book was reprinted several times and led to the second volume, The Guardians, first published in 1954.
He was a prolific and talented satirist, and "The Algerine Captive" was popular enough that it was reprinted in England, becoming only the second American novel to achieve that distinction.
A printed edition appeared in the late fifteenth century that was reprinted an incredible 11 times before its 'definitive' reprinting in Luke Wadding's 1639 edition of the complete works of Duns Scotus.[6] Thomas of Erfurt belonged to an interesting though somewhat obscure group of late thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century philosophers known as the speculative grammarians or Modistae.
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