Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Campion" ¶ 25
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Campion and one
Campion Hall is one of the Permanent Private Halls of the University of Oxford in England.
Campion was born in London, the son of John Campion, a clerk of the Court of Chancery, and Lucy ( née Searle – daughter of Laurence Searle, one of the queen's serjeants-at-arms ).
In Police at the Funeral, the venerable Caroline Faraday is aware of his true identity, and knows his grandmother Emily ( who she refers to as " The Dowager ")-she calls him by his real name of " Rudolph " and states at one point that the rest of his family blame Emily for encouraging Campion in his adventurous ways.
In Campion v. Towns, No. CV-04-1516PHX-ROS, * 2 n. 1 ( D. Ariz. 2005 ), a tax protester raised TONA as one of his defenses to a charge of tax evasion.
Wexman's Jane Campion: Interviews, critic David Thomson describes Campion, " as one of the best young directors in the world today.
For many years, Nea Erythraia was home to the senior division of Campion, one of Greece's oldest English-language schools.
In 1947, Whistler created one of the wedding gifts for Princess Elizabeth, a glass goblet engraved with the words of a 1613 poem by Thomas Campion, written for the marriage of Elizabeth of Bohemia, daughter of James I.
to Campion to ask if a few people will turn up and conceal the sparsity of attendance ); then he will take the Committee down to the Newman Room ... and come to roost in a comfortable chair if he can still find one.

Campion and novel
In the aftermath of the events of the novel Dracula, a now disgraced and divorced Mina Harker ( née Murray ) is recruited by Campion Bond on behalf of British Intelligence and asked to assemble a league of other extraordinary individuals to protect the interests of the Empire.
* Pearls Before Swine, the twelfth novel in the Albert Campion series by Margery Allingham ( published in UK as Coroner's Pidgin )
* Campion ( Watership Down ), a rabbit from the novel Watership Down by Richard Adams
In Susannah Kells ' novel Fallen Angels, a phaeton is the transportation of choice for the main character, Campion, who later crashes the carriage in a perfect example of its dangerous and fickle reputation.
, Simon Vinnicombe's Year 10, Joy Wilkinson's Fair which transferred to the West End ; Waterloo Day with Robert Lang ; Sarah Phelps ’ Modern Dance for Beginners, subsequently produced at the Soho Theatre ; Carolyn Scott-Jeffs ' comedy Out in the Garden, which transferred to the Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh ; the London premiere of Larry Kramer's The Destiny of Me ; The Women ’ s War – an evening of original suffragette plays ; Steve Hennessy ’ s Lullabies of Broadmoor ( about the Finborough Road murder of 1922 ); the Victorian era comedy Masks and Faces ; Etta Jenks with Clarke Peters and Daniela Nardini ; The Gigli Concert with Niall Buggy, Catherine Cusack and Paul McGann which transferred to the Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh ); Hortensia and the Museum of Dreams with Linda Bassett, Albert's Boy by James Graham starring Victor Spinetti, Peter Oswald ’ s Lucifer Saved with Mark Rylance, Blackwater Angel, the UK debut of Irish playwright Jim Nolan with Sean Campion, the first London revival for over seventy years of Loyalties by John Galsworthy, the world premiere of Plague Over England by Nicholas de Jongh which subsequently transferred to the West End at the Duchess Theatre, the first revival of Hangover Square, adapted by Fidelis Morgan from the novel by Patrick Hamilton, the UK premiere of the musical Ordinary Days by Adam Gwon and a season of plays by William Saroyan.

Campion and House
Each current house at Bishop Douglass Science College is represented and named after a different catholic martyr .· Campion House takes its name from Saint Edmund Campion, a Catholic convert, Jesuit priest and martyr who was canonized as a saint in the Catholic Church.
Her TV Series have included This Year, Next Year about Yorkshire hill farmers, General Hospital, playing the gynaecologist, with Lynda Bellingham, Strike it Rich-two series in the 1980s-and guest appearances in The Sweeney, Minder, Jemima Shore Investigates, House of Eliot, and Campion.
The school moved to Mansion House in Hurstpierpoint and then, thanks to the local benefactors the Campion Family, on the 21 June 1853 made its final move to its present site.

Campion and .
* 1581 – Edmund Campion, English Jesuit ( b. 1540 )
); and Carlotta Campion, a film star who has embraced life and benefited from every experience.
In his Historie of Ireland completed 1571, Blessed Edmund Campion gives a description of the hounds used for hunting the wolves on the Dublin and Wicklow mountains.
* 1540 – Edmund Campion, English Jesuit ( d. 1581 )
In 1951 Alfred Deller, the famous counter-tenor ( 1912-1979 ), recorded songs by Dowland, Thomas Campion, and Philip Rosseter with the label HMV ( His Master's Voice ) HMV C. 4178 and another HMV C. 4236 of Dowland's " Flow my Tears ".
Examples of such colleges are Bishop's University in Canada, St. Thomas University in Fredericton, Canada, John Cabot University in Rome, Italy, European College of Liberal Arts in Germany, University College Utrecht in the Netherlands, Foundation for Liberal and Management Education in Pune, India, Campion College in Sydney, Australia and Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane, Morocco.
Spring Squill, Buck's-Horn Plantain, Scots Lovage, Roseroot and Sea Campion are abundant, especially in sheltered places.
The Vellacott Historical Essay Prize, The Kelvin Science Prize, The Thomas Campion Prize are awarded by Peterhouse to members of the Lower Sixth or year twelve in a British Secondary School.
* March 1 – Thomas Campion, English poet and composer ( b. 1567 )
* January 24 – Edmund Campion, English Jesuit and Roman Catholic martyr ( d. 1581 )
In 1994, he released Fantasies and Tableaux, a collection of two earlier works, " Six Fantasies on a Poem by Thomas Campion " and " Still Time.
* December 1 – Execution in England of the Jesuit priest Edmund Campion for treason.
** Edmund Campion, English Jesuit ( martyred ) ( b. 1540 )
* February 12 – Thomas Campion, English poet and composer ( d. 1620 )
Richardson was born in Shipley, Yorkshire in 1928, the son of Elsie Evans ( Campion ) and Clarence Albert Richardson, a chemist.
In 1604 Bodeck left for London and met John Dowland, Philip Rosseter, and Thomas Campion.
Bodeck befriended them, and Campion wrote a song dedicated to Bodeck.
Byrd's setting of the first four verses of Psalm 78 ( Deus venerunt gentes ) is widely believed to refer to the cruel execution of Fr Edmund Campion in 1581, an event that caused widespread revulsion on the Continent as well as in England.
Important composers included William Byrd ( 1543 – 1623 ), John Dowland ( 1563 – 1626 ) Thomas Campion ( 1567 – 1620 ), and Robert Johnson ( c. 1583 – c.
In The Guardian dated 6 September 2008, Bunny May, a contributor to the letters page, claims that he ( along with John Junkin and David Clime ) invented the game in 1970, in an actors ' club off Shaftesbury Avenue called " Gerry's " ( which was run at the time by Gerald Campion ), in order to infuriate and bemuse patrons whom they found boring or boorish.
Writing in 1571, Edmund Campion named the pharaoh Amenophis ; Keating named him Cincris.
It also includes a number of blogs by Evening Standard writers, such as restaurant critic Charles Campion, theatre critic Kieron Quirke and music critic David Smyth.

one and protagonists
Each series was set in a different historical period with the two protagonists accompanied by different characters, though several reappear in one series or another, for example Melchett and Lord Flashheart.
* Ivan, one of the protagonists of the historical novel by the Cuban writer Leonardo Padura Fuentes, El hombre que amaba a los perros ( The Man Who Loved Dogs ), is the editor of a university journal of veterinary medicine, who manages to make a living during the Special Period in Cuba by helping people take care of their dogs.
The story is narrated by Laura, one of the two main protagonists of the tale.
One series concerns the rogue and adventurer, Northwest Smith, and his wanderings through the Solar System ; the other is a short fantasy series about Jirel of Joiry ( one of the first female protagonists in sword-and-sorcery fiction ).
Historically, one of the most important protagonists of the movement was Walter Martin ( 1928 – 89 ), whose numerous books include the 1955 The Rise of the Cults: An Introductory Guide to the Non-Christian Cults and the 1965 The Kingdom of the Cults: An Analysis of Major Cult Systems in the Present Christian Era, which continues to be influential.
In the sequel to Summer of Night, A Winter Haunting, Dale Stewart ( one of the first book's protagonists, and now an adult ), revisits his boyhood home to come to grips with mysteries that have disrupted his adult life.
In this book the hapless protagonists are ensnared in a web of deceit by a malignant monk called Schedoni and eventually dragged before the tribunals of the Inquisition in Rome, leading one contemporary to remark that if Radcliffe wished to transcend the horror of these scenes she would have to visit hell itself.
His career revival began when the young Italian director Sergio Leone boldly cast Van Cleef, whose career was still in the doldrums, as one of the two protagonists, alongside Clint Eastwood, in Leone's second western, For a Few Dollars More.
While the two protagonists are separated, one or both of them usually realizes that they are ideal for each other, or that they are in love with each other.
* In the manga and anime One Piece, one of the main protagonists, " Black Leg Sanji ," uses kicking techniques very similar to Savate.
* In the manga Medaka Box, one of the main protagonists " Hitoyoshi Zenkichi " uses Savate as his general fighting style after being taught by his mother.
Skuld was one of a series of characters created by Kōsuke Fujishima, and is depicted as the younger sister of Belldandy, one of the two main protagonists of the series.
The protagonists of Song of Songs are a woman ( identified in one verse as " the Shulamite ") and a man, and the poem suggests movement from courtship to consummation.
Not only Esmond but also Barry Lyndon and Catherine are set then, as is the sequel to Esmond, The Virginians, which takes place in America and includes George Washington as a character who nearly kills one of the protagonists in a duel.
* William Makepeace Thackeray's novel Vanity Fair takes place during the Napoleonic Wars — one of its protagonists dies at the Battle of Waterloo.
In 2005, dozens of local organizations and hundreds of their volunteers celebrated the theme of the 1905 peace treaty — reached with ordinary citizens providing a crucial, neutral, supporting atmosphere, not for one or the other of the protagonists, but for peace.
She is one of the main protagonists of the original Star Wars trilogy.
The Mémoires paint a magisterial ( if biased ) portrait of the Romantic era through the eyes of one of its chief protagonists.
As with protagonists, there may be more than one antagonist in a story.
In some novels, the protagonists may be impossible to identify, because multiple plots in the novel do not permit clear identification of one as the main plot, such as in Alexander Solzhenitsyn's The First Circle, depicting a variety of characters imprisoned and living in a gulag camp, or in Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace, depicting 15 major characters involved in or affected by a war.
When the novel was serialised in Tinsley's Magazine between September 1872 and July 1873, Hardy chose to leave one of the main protagonists, Henry Knight, literally hanging off a cliff staring into the stony eyes of a trilobite embedded in the rock.
The queen monster chases the protagonists until Bimbo grabs its tongue and, with one mighty yank turns it inside out.
Three bad endings see one of the protagonists undergo the second transformation if Indiana could not convince Ubermann to use the machine instead, or if Sophia was not freed from her prison or Nur-Ab-Sal's influence.
The full text of this essay is included in the story, and itself includes a lengthy sub-story told as a true experience by one of the essay's protagonists, Imhrat Khan.

0.270 seconds.