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William Morley Tweedie: Publications

A virtual exhibition on one of Mount Allison University's most notable professors.

Banner image featuring title "William Morley Tweedie," portrait image of Tweedie, and cursive writing from a letter.

Publications

Featured below is a list of Professor William Morley Tweedie's published letters, speeches, and other publications. [1]

  1. Letter dated London, 10 January 1883. The Argosy, vol. 9, February 1883, pp. 50-52.
  2. Letter dated London, 23 April 1883. The Argosy, vol. 9, May 1883, pp. 88-89.
  3. Letter dated Bingen, Germany, 1 September 1883. The Argosy, vol. 10, October 1883, pp. 8-9.
  4. Letter dated London, 22 January 1884. The Argosy, vol. 10, February 1884, pp. 52-53.
  5. “Studying abroad: New Brunswick students in London and Edinburgh. London correspondence of the Globe.” St. John Globe, 5 January 1885.
  6. Letter dated Heidelberg, 1 February 1887. The Argosy, vol. 16, March 1887, pp. 62-65. All five of these letters (1-4, 6) were signed with the pseudonym “TAMAWA.”
  7. “Inaugural address at Mount Allison University.” St. John Sun, 11-12 September 1888.
  8. “Bisher and Seither.” Modern Language Notes, vol. 6, May 1891, p. 156.
  9. “Chaucer’s prologue.” Modern Language Notes, vol. 6, November 1891, p. 218. Comment by J. Kupitza vol. 7, January 1892, p. 30.
  10. “Keat’s Cynewulfe Elne.” Modern Language Notes, vol. 7, February 1892, col. 62 (review).
  11. “Popular etymology.” Modern Language Notes, vol. 7, June 1892, p. 189.
  12. “A forgotten worthy.” The Argosy, vol. 21, December 1894, pp. 11-12, 15.
  13. “The presumption of mathematicians.” The Argosy, vol. 22, December 1895, pp. 9-11.
  14. “Word lists: New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland.” Dialect Notes, part VIII, 1895, pp. 377-91.
  15. “The bicycle as a reformer.” The Argosy, vol. 23, March 1897, pp. 6-8.
  16. “Christabel.” Modern Language Notes, vol. 12, June 1897, p. 191.
  17. “The craze for fact.” The Argosy, vol. 25, December 1898, pp. 318-19.
  18. “What we all write.” The Argosy, vol. 25, March 1899, pp. 8-10.
  19. “Dewey in Boston. Two million people looked on and cheered the procession. Governor Walcott of Massachusetts the most striking figure in the whole parade. The hero of Manila the only man who kept his head. The day at Harvard a mixture of curiosity and patriotism.” St. John Sun, 19 October 1899, 2 cols.
  20. “A lecturer and his lecture.” Review of a lecture by T.W. Higginson. The Argosy, vol. 26, December 1899, pp. 13-16.
  21. “The horrible in Marlowe’s Edward II.” The Argosy, vol. 27, November 1900, pp. 4-6.
  22. “A problem of Midsummer Night’s Dream.” The Argosy, vol. 27, February 1901, pp. 6-8.
  23. “In Memoriam.” Obituary for Fred. W. Sprague. The Argosy, vol. 27, April 1901, pp. 5-6. Anonymous.
  24. “English literature.” Modern Language Notes, vol. 16, May 1901, p. 160. Letter regarding passage in Sidney’s Defense of Poesy.
  25. “The latest life of Tennyson.” The Argosy, vol. 27. May 1901, pp. 13-18. Signed “W.”
  26. “Our library.” The Argosy, vol. 28, October 1901, pp. 13-14. Signed “W.”
  27. “A school girl’s diary.” [Anne Green Winslow]. The Argosy, vol. 28, May 1902, pp. 253-58.
  28. “The letters of Keats.” The Argosy, vol. 29, December 1902, pp. 81-85.
  29. “Alaskan boundary.” The Spectator (London), vol. 90, 7 March 1903, p. 371. A letter.
  30. "The family of Tweedie of New Brunswick" in The History of the Tweedie or Tweedy Family, by M.F. Tweedie, London, 1903, pp. 190-84.
  31. “America and retaliation” (with editorial comment). The Spectator (London), vol. 92, 12 March 1904, p. 411. A letter.
  32. “In Memoriam” Obituary for Eugene Forsey. The Argosy, vol. 31, December 1904, pp. 95-96.
  33. “College words and phrases.” The Argosy, vol. 33, December 1906, pp. 118-21.
  34. “From China to Peru.” Modern Languages Notes, vol. 22, April 1907, p. 126.
  35. “My dear old Alma Mater” and “Marching through Sackville,” poems for music in Mount Allison Songs, Eurhetorian Society, Toronto, 1908, pp. 66, 98-99.
  36. “Everybody able to spell.” The Argosy, vol. 35, April 1909, pp. 245-79.
  37. “The monstrous regiment of women.” The Argosy, vol. 39, April 1913, pp. 377-81.
  38. “Germany and the war.” The Argosy, vol. 41, December 1914, pp. 152-58.
  39. “From an English notebook.” The Argosy, vol. 42, April 1916, pp. 411-15.
  40. “Mount Allison” in History of Nova Scotia, vol. 2, edited by David Allison. Halifax, Nova Scotia, 1916, pp. 871-75.
  41. “An appreciation, Alfred D. Smith, M.A., LL.D.” The Argosy, vol. 43, April 1917, pp. 301-03.
  42. “The function of college.” The Argosy, vol. 44, April 1918, pp. 255-63. An address given by WMT in a course for freshmen.
  43. “The annual meeting of the Alumni Society.” The Mount Allison Record, vol. 2, no. 8, May 1918, pp. 5-7.
  44. “Holidays.” The Argosy, vol. 47, December 1920, pp. 46-49.
  45. “A fortnight in Avon.” The Argosy, vol. 48, March 1922, pp. 238-45.
  46. “A modern minstrel.” [Vachel Lindsay]. The Argosy, vol. 49, no. 1, December 1922, pp. 34-39.
  47. “Frank Day’s new book.” Review of The Autobiography of a Fisherman by Frank Parker Day. The Argosy Weekly, 19 March 1927, p. 2.
  48. “W.H. Irving’s book.” Review of John Gay’s London by W.H. Irving. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 12, February 1929, pp. 67-68.
  49. “New members for the Alumni Society.” The Mount Allison Record, vol. 12, March 1929, p. 84.
  50. Judge Russell’s Autobiography.” Review of The Autobiography of Benjamin Russell by Benjamin Russell. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 16, November 1932, pp. 15-16.
  51. “F. Fraser Bond’s new book.” Review of Breaking into Print by F. Fraser Bond. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 16, January 1933, pp. 46-47.
  52. “On writing verse.” The Argosy Weekly, vol. 60, 16 December 1933, p. 3.
  53. “Albert Scott White (1855-1931).” A Standard Dictionary of Canadian Biography, edited by Charles G.D. Roberts. Toronto, Trans-Canada Press, 1934, pp. 542-43.
  54. An address at a banquet in his honour 1937 upon retiring from active service at Mount Allison after 50 years as a member of the faculty. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 20, May 1937, pp. 83-88. See also: reply, pp. 89-90, upon being granted an honorary LL.D. and p. 90, “Professor Tweedie returns thanks.”
  55. Foreword. Allisonia yearbook, 1937. Dedication and portrait.
  56. Presenting Clarissa Dennis for D.Litt. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 21, 1938, p. 60.
  57. Founder’s Day address, 29 October 1938. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 22, October 1938, pp. 18-29. Also extracts: The Sackville Tribune, vol. 36, 31 October 1938, pp. 1, 4.
  58. “Early Mount Allison papers.” The Argosy Weekly, vol. 66, 9 March 1940, pp. 3, 7.
  59. Introducing Harry C. Rice as Founder’s Day speaker, 1941. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 25, November 1941, p. 3.
  60. “In Memoriam.” Obituary for S.W. Hunton. Mount Allison, 1941-42, vol. 12, 1942, p. 89. See also The Mount Allison Record, vol. 25, March 1942, p. 72-73.
  61. “Student assistance fund.” The Mount Allison Record, vol. 25, April 1942, p. 50.
  62. “University residences of the past.” The Mount Allison Record, vol. 25, no. 2, April 1942, pp. 42-43.
  63. Presenting H.E. Kendall, Lt. Governor of Nova Scotia for LL.D. degree. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 26, 1943, p. 42.
  64. Presenting Ivan C. Rand to Dr. Trueman for the D.C.L. degree. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 28, May 1945, pp. 66-67. Words spoken in laying of the corner stone of the new Residence, 22 May 1945, p. 69.
  65. Presenting Albert W. Trueman for D.Litt. degree. The Sackville Tribune, 26 July 1945, p. 5.
  66. Remarks as chairman of Founder’s Day Celebration, 1945, when Lt. Col. Norman Coll gave the address. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 29, November 1945, p. 4-5.
  67. “Harold Black’s new book.” Review of The True Woodrow Wilson Crusader for Democracy by Harold Black. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 29, June 1946, p. 111.
  68. Remarks on presenting G. Hugh Harrison for LL.D. degree. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 29, June 1946, pp. 119-20.
  69. Remarks while presenting the Governor General, Viscount Alexander of Tunis, for the D.C.L. degree. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 31, Spring 1949, p. 6.
  70. Presenting William Richard Bird for a D.Litt degree. The Sackville Tribune-Post, 19 August 1949, p. 1.
  71. “Frank Parker Day.” The Tribune Post, vol. 48, 4 August 1950, p. 1. Reprinted in The Mount Allison Record, vol. 32, Fall 1950, p. 4.
  72. Remarks while presenting John Babbitt McNair, Premier of New Brunswick, for the D.C.L. degree. The Mount Allison Record, vol. 33, summer 1951, p. 24.

 

Notes


[1] Information was taken from papers in the Raymond Clare Archibald fonds (5501/2/3/1).