I

Revision as of 14:20, 7 August 2007 by Gideon (Talk | contribs) (Inconvenience)

Ice, Immanuel
659; Frederick Ice was a Hollander from Amsterdam who settled in Monongalia County on the Cheat River in 1767. Two of his children, William and an unnamed daughter, were captured by Indians. William, "was adopted and raised as an Indian, acquired all of their habits, but never quite forgot his white relations and frequently would make his escape and coming back to his old home, remaining until his 'acquired indolence' would cause some friction with his parents or some member of the family when he would leave and go back to the Indians. . . . His sister married an Indian and was the mother of thrirteen children, two of whom became famous amongst his red brethren, Tecumseh and his brother, the prophet, who gave the colonial government a vast amount of trouble" (2437-38). Ice's Ferry is a town on Cheat Lake, the result of the damming of the Cheat River. [1]

I Gluttoni
104; from Scammozetta

Iliad
242; 370; 443

Illuminati
358; 377; 489; 543

impersonations
Swedes, 613

Inanimate
291; 372; 377

Inconvenience, H.M.S.

28; Fender-Belly Bodine's ship (to appear again in 2006 in Against the Day) (See also, "Inconvenience," pages 57, 103, 370, 401, 414.)

Indian Queen
290; ale venue in Philadelphia; 357; 352

Ingvarr
764; Ben Franklin's "Assistant"

Interface
Single Shadowless Moment, 59; 282; Tangent Point, 323; 361;

Invisible Gamesters
40

Invisible Hand
411; Adam Smith's notion that rational agents guided by their own self-interest would act in such a way as to promote the public interest, the foundation of laissez-faire economics which caused much of the misery associated with the Industrial Revolution.

Irish Baronet
532

Iron Hill
470; in The Wedge, "known to Elf Communities near and far"

ITALIAN TRANSLATIONS
219: "Eppur si muove" = "Yet, it moves" Supposedly Galileo's words after an interrogation by the church in which he was forced to recant his heretical view that the Earth orbits the Sun.; "Bellezza, che chiama": "a beauty that beckons" (416)

Italian Wind-Rose
688; The compass card or wind-rose on the Oxford dial is printed with sixteen triangular points, between which are a further sixteen divisions at the outer rim showing the thirty-two winds, or points of the compass. The North point is shown by a fleur-de-lis, and on the rim at the East point is a small cross. There is no other decoration or any colouring or numbering. Wikipedia entry

References

  1. Comstock, Jim, The West Virginia Heritage Encyclopedia, Volume 11 (Richwood, West Virginia; 1976)
Mason & Dixon Alpha Guide
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