42,600 research outputs found

    From Deep Space To Dirty Bombs; UNH Scientists Retask Telescope

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    Resuscitating Our Seas; Noted UNH Oceans Expert To Address Annual AAAS Meeting

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    NOAA UNH Coastal Ocean Program Awarded 2 5 Million

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    UNH Study Published in Science Finds Sites in Amazon Forest Are Not Absorbing Carbon as Expected

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    Scientists Reveal Cosmic Roadmap to Galactic Magnetic Field

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    UNH Names Peter T Paul Endowed Chair in Space Science

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    Scientists from 30 Nations to Discuss Global Water system

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    UNH Scientists Provide New Tools for Predicting Arrival, Impact of Solar Storms

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    A Comparison of Milton\u27s Treatment of Death in Death of a Fair Infant and Marchioness of Winchester

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    It is a tribute to Milton\u27s genius to study his delicate line of demarcation between the treatment of death in Marchioness of Winchester and Death of a Fair Infant. In the latter poem, Mi.lton imbues his work with a tone of comfort and hope-a tone which we do not find in the former poem. Of course, we must keep in mind the fact that in Death of a Fair Infant, Milton was emotionally connected with the deceased, and would naturally inject his lines with a note of personal grief and sympathy for the bereaved. Upon contemplating Milton\u27s lines, the reader is aware that his treatment of death is in perfect harmony with the subject. There are beautiful allusions to light, somewhat ethereal figures, and nowhere do we find ponderous passages of dark, black mourning which would add a grimness totally out of keeping with the qualities of fancy in this poem. He tells the lamenting mother that her loss is a gift of God, and closes his poem on a rather enigmatic note of promise

    Students Present Summer Research Results To Scientists At UNH, NASA

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