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Marlow and Moss
A non-prescriptive group of artists were involved, whose ideals and practices varied widely: Albert Gleizes, František Kupka, Piet Mondrian, Jean Arp, Marlow Moss, Naum Gabo, Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson, Kurt Schwitters, Wassily Kandinsky, Théo Kerg, Taro Okamoto, Paule Vézelay, Hans Erni, Bart van der Leck, Leon Tutundjian and John Wardell Power.

Marlow and 1890
* Gandolfo " Frankie Marlow " Curto ( 1890 1929 )

Marlow and
: John of Cornwall ( 31 January 1232 22 September 1233 ), born and died at Marlow, Buckinghamshire, buried at Reading Abbey
: Isabella of Cornwall ( 9 September 1233 10 October 1234 ), born and died at Marlow, Buckinghamshire, buried at Reading Abbey
" Marlow, however, focused exclusively on the negative aspects of Gaveston's biography, portraying him according to Hamilton as " a sycophantic homosexual with a marked tendency towards avarice, nepotism, and especially overweening pride.
* Marlow ( Scotland ) Lectures IESIS Website, accessed 27 May 2012
* 2001 Marlow " My Teenage Dream " ( Stealth Mix )
* 2001 Marlow " No Heart " ( Vince Clarke 2001 Dance Mix )
* 2009 Marlow " Home " ( Vince Clarke's Starstruck Mix )
* John Marlow Thompson ( 1914 1994 ), British second world war ace and Battle of Britain pilot
W. Galen Weston was born to Reta and W. Garfield Weston at Marlow, Buckinghamshire, near London, England, in October 1940 the youngest of nine children.
He also designed the Marlow Bridge, a suspension bridge across the Thames in Marlow, Buckinghamshire ( built 1829 32 ) and Norfolk Bridge, a suspension bridge over the River Adur in Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex ( designed with Captain Samuel Brown, opened in 1834, replaced in 1923 ).
He married 1871 Edith Peers-William ( d. 1897 ), a daughter of Lt .- Col. Thomas Peers Williams, MP for Great Marlow 1820 1868 and Father of the House of Commons December 1867 1868, of Craig-y-Don near Beaumaris on Anglesey and Temple House, near Marlow.
* Mitchell Marlow bass ( 2001 )
* John Clavering ( MP ) ( 1698 1762 ) Member of Parliament for Great Marlow
Antonia Forest ( 26 May 1915 28 November 2003 ) was the pseudonym of a British author of children's books, best known for the Marlow series.
The Riverboat Postman leaves Ferry Wharf in Dangar Road adjacent to the railway station on its daily run ( Monday Friday ) delivering mail and supplies to the water access only communities of Dangar Island, Wobby, Bar Point, Marlow Creek and Milsons Passage.
* William Clayton ( died 1783 ) ( c. 1718 1783 ), Member of Parliament for Bletchingley, 1745 1761, and Great Marlow, 1761 1783

Marlow and ),
Aboard are four others: the Director of Companies ( the captain ), the Lawyer (" the best of old fellows "), the Accountant ( toying architecturally with dominoes ), and Marlow ( Charlie Marlow )-all share " the bond of the sea " but Marlow is the only one that still " followed the sea "-they are waiting for the tide waters to turn.
Other examples are the Peter Marlow series, beginning with The Private Sector ( 1971 ) by Joseph Hone, which is set during Israel's Six Day War ( 1967 ) against Egypt, Jordan, and Syria, and William Garner's secret agents, the fantastic Michael Jagger, in Overkill ( 1966 ), The Deep, Deep Freeze ( 1968 ), The Us or Them War ( 1969 ) and A Big Enough Wreath ( 1974 ) and the realistic John Morpurgo in Think Big, Think Dirty ( 1983 ), Rats ' Alley ( 1984 ), and Zones of Silence ( 1986 ).
Thus we have an " I " narrator introducing a storyteller as " he " ( Marlow ), who talks about himself as " I " and introduces another storyteller as " he " ( Kurtz ), who in turn presumably told his story from the perspective of " I ".
At the sad little town Christmas dance, Jacy is invited by unsavory Lester Marlow ( Quaid ) to a naked indoor pool party at the home of Bobby Sheen ( Gary Brockette ), a wealthy boy who seems to offer better prospects than Duane.
According to Norman Marlow ( A. N. Marlow, Senior Lecturer in Latin, Department of Classics at the university in the 1960s ), the motto " Arduus ad solem "-taken from Aeneid VI-was a play on words, relating to Manchester's geographical situation.
The Marlow Heights Shopping Center first opened in 1957 ( but extended in 1960 with Hecht's ), adjacent to the large community of Hillcrest Heights.
A well-educated man, " bred a scholar ", Marlow is brash and rude to Mr. Hardcastle, owner of " Liberty Hall " ( a reference to another site in London ), whom Marlow believes to be an innkeeper.
* Timothy Good, Above Top Secret: The Worldwide UFO Cover-up, 1988, Quill ( William Marlow ), ISBN 0-688-09202-0
The 15 clubs entering the competition are all amateur and mainly from the London area: Barnes, Civil Service, Clapham Rovers, Crystal Palace ( 1861 ), Donnington School, Hampstead Heathens, Harrow Chequers, Hitchin, Maidenhead, Marlow, Reigate, Priory, Royal Engineers, Upton Park, The Wanderers and Queen's Park ( Glasgow ).
* Aldermen: J. Aikens, N. Andreychuk, R. Book, F. Godak, M. Marlow, W. Muise, C. Nixon, H. Merritt ( Resigned September, 1975 ), H. Clausen ( Appointed October, 1975 )

Marlow and painter
Marlow filmed behind the scenes of two international contemporary artists ' exhibitions: " Black American painter Kerry James Marshall and eminent French installation artist Daniel Buren.

Marlow and .
He also mentions how Youth marks the first appearance of Marlow.
The story Heart of Darkness focuses on Charles Marlow as he recounts an exotic adventure to a close group of men aboard a sailboat anchored in the Thames Estuary.
Marlow is an English sailor who speaks of a time when he gained a position to captain a steamboat for an ivory trading company ; his job was to transport supplies, company personnel, and ivory-up and down a large river that snakes its way through a mysterious wilderness.
Marlow does not provide the name of the river that he is to pilot the steamer on, but we can assume it is ( the Congo River ) located within the centre of Africa.
The tale Marlow shares exposes the dark side of European colonization and the brutally cruel treatment of the native Africans when at the hands of the company men who partake in such European imperialistic endeavours.
Marlow observes how Kurtz's intellect was intact, but his soul has gone mad.
When she desperately asks to hear the last words Kurtz said, Marlow tells her that his last words was her name.
Some undefined conversation is shared lazily, the sun sets ; then Marlow states how their location also " has been one of the dark places of the earth.
" Marlow continues describing the trials and tribulations that must have been encountered by the first Romans who made their way to England ; how mysterious and incomprehensible the place must have seemed to them.
He also explains how brutal and unscrupulous these Romans must have been: " They were conquerors, and for that you want only brute force "-After some silence, Marlow abruptly starts up again saying, in a hesitating voice, " I suppose you fellows remember I did once turn fresh-water sailor for a bit.
" Marlow introduces the events that led to his appointment to captain a river-steamboat for an ivory trading company.
He describes his passage on ships to the wilderness-to the Company's station, which strikes Marlow as a scene of devastation: " amongst a waste of excavations "-disorganized, machinery parts here and there, now and then explosions of demolition, weakened native black men, that have been demoralized, in chains, literally being worked to death, and strolling behind them a white Company man in a uniform carrying a rifle.
At this station Marlow meets the Company's chief accountant, who's dressed in " unexpected elegance "-" Everything else in the station was in a muddle "-Marlow first hears of a Mr. Kurtz from the chief accountant, who explains that Kurtz is a first-class agent, and later adds: "' He will be a somebody in the Administration before long.
Marlow leaves that station with a caravan to travel on foot some two hundred miles deeper into the wilderness-to the Central Station, where his steamboat is based-the steamer he is to captain.
" Marlow is shocked to learn that his steamboat had been wrecked two days before his arrival.
The manager explains to Marlow that they couldn't wait, and needed to take the steamboat up-river because of " rumours that a very important station was in jeopardy, and its chief, Mr. Kurtz, was ill ." Marlow describes that the manager " inspired uneasiness "-" just uneasiness — nothing more "-Along with the manager, Marlow describes the other Company men at this station as lazy back-biting " pilgrims "-fraught with envy and jealousy.

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