Borris (an Bhuiríos in Irish) is a small town nestled in a sleepy nook along the River Barrow, which meanders through the undulating valleys of South Carlow. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Image File history File links Ireland Map with County Carlow Magnified. ... Over fifty GPS satellites such as this NAVSTAR have been launched since 1978. ... The Irish national grid reference system is a system of geographic grid references commonly used in Ireland. ... The Central Statistics Office is the statistical agency responsible for the Republic of Ireland census and other related data collection activities to assist in government planning. ... The Central Statistics Office is the statistical agency responsible for the Republic of Ireland census and other related data collection activities to assist in government planning. ... Basic Definition In geography, the elevation of a geographic location is its height above mean sea level (or some other fixed point). ... The island of Ireland has 32 counties, with Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland being nicknamed respectively the six counties and the twenty-six counties. ... Carlow (Ceatharlach in Irish) is a county located towards the south east of Ireland, in the province of Leinster. ... During late Gaelic and early historic times Ireland was divided into provinces to replace the earlier system of the tuatha. ... Leinster (Irish: Laighin) is the eastern province of Ireland, comprising the counties of Carlow, Dublin, Kildare, Kilkenny, Laois, Longford, Louth, Meath, Offaly, Westmeath, Wexford and Wicklow. ... The River Barrow is a river in Ireland, it is one of The Three Sisters, the other two sisters are the River Suir and the River Nore. ... Carlow (Ceatharlach in Irish) is a county located towards the south east of Ireland, in the province of Leinster. ...
Borris was elected to the Board of Directors of Division 48 - The Society for the Study of Peace, Conflict and Violence: Peace Psychology division of the American Psychological Association where she has served since 1998.
In 1992 Dr. Borris was the Honoree for Impact for Enterprising Women for her work abroad and home in healing ethnic conflict, trauma and abuse, and for the teaching of forgiveness and reconciliation in international affairs.
Borris is a nationally and internationally known speaker and trainer in the areas of healing relationships, forgiveness, reconciliation, conflict resolution and trauma recovery.
Borris presents his argument in four sections, the first laying out theoretical and historical contexts and the rest treating the three writers in turn.
Borris turns first to the Defense of Poetry to argue that Sidney did not make this distinction, much less reject allegory in favour of an exemplary mode, and that Sidney's expressed views about the function of literature are compatible with allegoresis.
The Son's appointment as "viceregent" over the angels (narrated at V. 603-11), for example, is a Miltonic invention, and is crucial to the plot as the proximate cause of Satan's rebellion; in Borris's reading, this moment pre-figures Christ's later exaltations (not directly represented in the poem) at the Resurrection and at the Apocalypse.