rohkemate iseloomulike joontega kui Butleri Instituudi maal. 1899 aastal lõpetas ta kolmeteistkümne maali sarja, illustreerides Ameerika merenduse ajaloo ajajärke, alates Leif Ericsoni maaleminekust kuni Admiral Dewey'si laevastiku naasmisest Filipiinidelt (aastal 1899). Tema kõige tuntumate maalide hulgas on : ,, The Bay of New York", ,,The Lord Staying the Waters", ,,Launch of the Lifeboat", ,,The Last of the Wreck", ,,Old Fort Dumpling, Newport", ,, In the Narrows", ,,Devil's Crag" ja ,,Island of Grand Manan". 3 MAALID New Castle on the Delaware 1857 (http://www.butlerart.com/pc_book/pages/edward.htm) Ship At Sea Sunset (http://store.encore-editions.com/aamart/Amz3xar277.html) 4 Ships In New York Harbor 1883 (http://store.encore-editions.com/aamart/Amz2xar225.html) Edward Moran (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Edward_Moran.jpg)
Celtic personal names o Arthur ‘high, noble’ o Donald ‘proud chief’ o Mac ‘son of’ (Scottish) o O’ ‘son of’ (Irish) O’Connor Breton through French: bijou, dolmen, menhir. Celtic before Gaelic, Welsh, Breton, and Cornish, and through Latin, French, and Old English: ambassador/embassy, bannock, bard, bracket, breeches, car/carry/ career/carriage/cargo/carpenter/charge, crag, druid, minion, peat, piece, vassal/valet/varlet. Cornish: porbeagle, wrasse. Gaelic, general: bog, cairn, clarsach, ceilidh, coronach, crag, crannog, gab/gob, galore, skene, usquebaugh/whisk(e)y; Irish: banshee, blarney, brogue, colleen, hooligan, leprechaun, lough, macushla, mavourneen, poteen, shamrock, shebeen, shillelagh, smithereens, spalpeen, Tory; Scottish: caber,
Byron, for example, pokes fun at the sugar sweetness of writers of love songs through the consonants in the second line of When amatory poets sing their loves In liquid lines mellifluously bland... A. may convey various shades of meaning. A.Tennyson, by the use of consonants, suggests firmness and hardness of the eagle and rock in 14 He clasps the crag with crooked hands... In the following example the initial ,,f" is particularly appropriate to the image of the blowing wind: The fair breeze blew, the white foam flew, The furrow followed free ... (S.T. Coleridge) The above example shows that alliteration may become onomatopoetic in quality. Consider also the following instance: Welling water's winsome word, Wind in warm wan weather .. (S.T.Coleridge) Another function of alliteration lies in connecting words by similarity of sound so that you