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Examples

  • Yes | No | Report from Lt.Cmmdr. Tobin Pipkin wrote 1 year 11 weeks ago

    Florida Keys Swordfish Limerick Contest John Merwin 2008

  • Yes | No | Report from Lt.Cmmdr. Tobin Pipkin wrote 1 year 8 weeks ago

    Florida Keys Swordfish Limerick Contest John Merwin 2008

  • Yes | No | Report from Lt.Cmmdr. Tobin Pipkin wrote 1 year 11 weeks ago

    Florida Keys Swordfish Limerick Contest John Merwin 2008

  • Yes | No | Report from Lt.Cmmdr. Tobin Pipkin wrote 1 year 11 weeks ago

    Florida Keys Swordfish Limerick Contest John Merwin 2008

  • One of these friends, Pipkin, is taken away by a mysterious Something, and the remaining seven follow a sinister man by the name of Moundshroud across history, in an attempt to rescue their friend.

    The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury 2007

  • One of these friends, Pipkin, is taken away by a mysterious Something, and the remaining seven follow a sinister man by the name of Moundshroud across history, in an attempt to rescue their friend.

    Archive 2007-10-01 2007

  • Pipkin is sick, doesn’t look well at all, but is essentially the leader of the group and has never missed a Halloween, so he tells them to go on ahead to a specific house and he will catch up with them.

    “The Halloween Tree” by Ray Bradbury (Knopf, 1972) « The BookBanter Blog 2010

  • Pipkin is sick, doesn’t look well at all, but is essentially the leader of the group and has never missed a Halloween, so he tells them to go on ahead to a specific house and he will catch up with them.

    2010 February 12 « The BookBanter Blog 2010

  • No, the Pipkin is a pipkin, made of common clay -- even though it has the uncommon sweetness and strength to overcome the tendencies of clay -- and fashioned for those common uses of life, deprivation of which to anything that comes from the Potter's hands is the most enduring, the most uncommon sorrow.

    In the Bishop's Carriage Miriam Michelson 1906

  • No, the Pipkin is a pipkin, made of common clay -- even though it has the uncommon sweetness and strength to overcome the tendencies of clay -- and fashioned for those common uses of life, deprivation of which to anything that comes from the Potter's hands is the most enduring, the most uncommon sorrow.

    In The Bishop's Carriage. 1903

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