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Midas and ),
In a version told by Nathaniel Hawthorne in A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys ( 1852 ), Midas found that when he touched his daughter, she turned to gold as well.
* Sarah Morris, " Midas as Mule: Anatolia in Greek Myth and Phrygian Kingship " ( abstract ), American Philological Society Annual Meeting, 2004.
The public schools in Riverton consist of six public elementary schools ( Riverton, Rosamond, Rose Creek, Southland, Foothills, and Midas Creek ), two middle schools ( Oquirrh Hills and South Hills ),
* John Lyly-Six Court Comedies ( published posthumously by Edward Blount ), containing Campaspe, Endymion, Gallathea, Midas, Mother Bombie, and Sapho and Phao
: Evidence: The play contains passages which seem to borrow from John Lyly's Midas ( 1589 ), meaning it could not have been written prior to 1589.
Games released by Midas include Golful Golf ( Mr. Golf ), The Seed, Buchigire Kongou ( Battle Construction Vehicles ), and A Ressha de Ikou 6 ( A-Train 6 ).
Another great-great grandson, Paul Codman Cabot ( b. 1898 in Brookline ), was cofounder of America's first mutual fund and " Harvard's Midas.
The Paleo-Phrygian corpus is further divided ( geographically ) into inscriptions of Midas ( city ) ( M, W ), Gordion, Central ( C ), Bithynia ( B ), Pteria ( P ), Tyana ( T ), Daskyleion ( Dask ), Bayindir ( Bay ), and " various " ( Dd, documents divers ).
* King Midas ( 1961 ), cantata for voice ( s ) & piano
Tomb at Midas City ( 6th century BC ), near Eskişehir
According to Greek mythographers, the first Phrygian Midas had been king of the Moschi ( Mushki ), also known as Bryges ( Brigi ) in the western part of archaic Thrace.
* Henry Cecil – Catalpa ( 1976 ), Strigida ( 1981 ), Queen Midas ( 1987 ), Alydaress ( 1989 ), Yashmak ( 1997 )
After the real prince's death, his brother found out the truth and took his place, becoming engaged to Abigail, daughter of King Midas ( reluctantly, after his family is threatened by the real prince's adoptive father ), in a deal that unites two kingdoms, with Midas giving the other king gold in exchange for the prince defeating a dragon.

Midas and play
A considerable fragment is extant of his pastoral play Daphnis or Lityerses, in which the Sicilian shepherd, in search of his love Pimplea, is brought into connexion with the Phrygian reaper, son of Midas, who slew all who unsuccessfully competed with him in reaping his grain.

Midas and by
Another King Midas ruled Phrygia in the late 8th century BC, up until the sacking of Gordium by the Cimmerians, when he is said to have committed suicide.
A third Midas is said by Herodotus to have been a member of the royal house of Phrygia and the grandfather of an Adrastus who fled Phrygia after accidentally killing his brother and took asylum in Lydia during the reign of Croesus.
In one, Midas was king of Pessinus, a city of Phrygia, who as a child was adopted by the king Gordias and Cybele, the goddess whose consort he was, and who ( by some accounts ) was the goddess-mother of Midas himself.
Some accounts place the youth of Midas in Macedonian Bermion ( See Bryges ) In Thracian Mygdonia, A wild rose garden at the foot of Mount Bermion was called by Herodotus " the garden of Midas son of Gordias, where roses grow of themselves, each bearing sixty blossoms and of surpassing fragrance ".
When Midas grew up to be a handsome and valiant man, the Phrygians were harassed by civil discord, and consulting the oracle, they were told that a wagon would bring them a king, who would put an end to their discord.
Since the historical Midas of the 8th century BC and Gyges are believed to have been contemporaries, it seems most likely that Herodotus believed the throne was donated by the earlier, legendary King Midas.
However, some historians believe this throne was donated by the later, historical King Midas.
The old satyr Silenus had been drinking wine and had wandered away drunk, later to be found by some Phrygian peasants, who carried him to their king, Midas ( alternatively, he passed out in Midas ' rose garden ).
Some historians believe this Midas donated the throne that Herodotus says was offered to the Oracle of Delphi by " Midas son of Gordias " ( see above ).
Greek sources including Strabo say that Midas committed suicide by drinking bulls ' blood during an attack by the Cimmerians, which Eusebius dated to around 695 BC and Julius Africanus to around 676 BC.
Although no identifying texts were originally associated with the site, it was called Tumulus MM ( for " Midas Mound ") by the excavator.
* The tales of King Midas have been told by many with some variations: by John Dryden ; by Geoffrey Chaucer in the Wife of Bath's Tale ; making Midas ' queen the betrayer of the secret ( as Midas ' wife, Aristotle names Demodike ( or Hermodike ) of Kyme ; Eudemus fr.

Midas and Mary
Some advertising agency executives have originated more than one enduring slogan, such as Mary Wells Lawrence, who is responsible for such famous slogans as " Raise your hand if you're Sure ", " I ♥ New York " and " Trust the Midas touch.

Shelley and ),
Percy Bysshe Shelley composed a " Hymn of Apollo " ( 1820 ), and the god's instruction of the Muses formed the subject of Igor Stravinsky's Apollon musagète ( 1927 – 1928 ).
* Shelley Hack ( born 1947 ), American supermodel and actress
During this time, Berry co-wrote and / or arranged and produced songs for artists outside of Jan and Dean, including The Angels (" I Adore Him ", Top 30 ), the Gents, the Matadors ( Sinners ), Judy & Jill, Pixie ( unreleased ), Jill Gibson, Shelley Fabares, Deane Hawley, The Rip Chords (" Three Window Coupe ", Top 30 ), and Johnny Crawford, among others.
* Rabinovitch, Shelley and Lewis, James ( 2004 ), The Encyclopedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo-Paganism, Kensington Publishing Corporation, ISBN 978-0-8065-2407-8.
In Prometheus Unbound ( 1820 ), a four-act lyrical drama, Percy Bysshe Shelley rewrites the lost play of Aeschylus so that Prometheus does not submit to Zeus ( under the Latin name Jupiter ), but instead supplants him in a triumph of the human heart and intellect over tyrannical religion.
After directing episodes for the revitalized version of ' 50s /' 60s anthology horror series Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre, Burton received his next big project: Beetlejuice ( 1988 ), a supernatural comedy horror about a young couple forced to cope with life after death, and the family of pretentious yuppies who invade their treasured New England home.
Thoreau had taken up a version of Percy Shelley's principle in the political poem The Mask of Anarchy ( 1819 ), that Shelley begins with the powerful images of the unjust forms of authority of his time — and then imagines the stirrings of a radically new form of social action.
He also acted in the global disaster film Meteor ( his second role as a sitting President of the United States after Fail-Safe ), with Sean Connery, Natalie Wood and Karl Malden, and the Canadian production City on Fire, which also featured Shelley Winters and Ava Gardner.
During his years in Oxford, Blunden published extensively: several collections of poetry including Choice or Chance ( 1934 ) and Shells by a Stream ( 1944 ), prose works on Charles Lamb ; Edward Gibbon ; Keats's publisher ; Percy Bysshe Shelley ; John Taylor ; and Thomas Hardy ; and a book about a game he loved, Cricket Country ( 1944 ).
It appears that Shelley found inspiration for the title of her novel in Jean-Baptiste Cousin de Grainville's Le Dernier Homme ( 1805 ), translated into English in 1806 as Omegarus and Syderia.
An inscription can be found on the wall of University College, Oxford the High Street at Oxford ( now the location of the Shelley Memorial ), marking the spot where Cross Hall stood until the early 19th century.
1966 ); Crapsey, Adelaide: " Pierrot " ( c. 1914 ); Faulkner, William: Vision in Spring ( 1921 ); Ficke, Arthur Davison: " A Watteau Melody " ( 1913 ); Garrison, Theodosia: " Good-Bye, Pierrette " ( 1906 ), " When Pierrot Passes " ( before 1917 ); Griffith, William: Loves and Losses of Pierrot ( 1916 ), Three Poems: Pierrot, the Conjurer, Pierrot Dispossesed, The Stricken Pierrot ( 1923 ); Hughes, Langston: " A Black Pierrot " ( 1923 ), " Pierrot " ( 1926 ), " For Dead Mimes " ( 1926 ), " Heart " ( 1932 )— see " Goldweber " under External links below ; Loveman, Samuel: " In Pierrot's Garden " ( 1911 ; five poems ); Lowell, Amy: " Stravinsky's Three Pieces " ( 1915 ); Masters, Edgar Lee: " Poor Pierrot " ( 1918 ); Moore, Marianne: " To Pierrot Returning to His Orchid " ( c. 1910 ); Shelley, Melvin Geer: " Pierrot " ( 1940 ); Stevens, Wallace: " Pierrot " ( 1909, first pub.
In the BBC radio dramatizations, Gandalf has been voiced by Norman Shelley in The Lord of the Rings ( 1955 – 1956 ), Heron Carvic in The Hobbit ( 1968 ), Bernard Mayes in The Lord of the Rings ( 1979 ) and Sir Michael Hordern in The Lord of the Rings ( 1981 ).
Other Asian Stuckists are Shelley Li ( China ), Smeetha Boumik ( India ), Joko Apridinoto ( Indonesia ), Elio Yuri Figini ( Japan ) and Fady Chamaa ( Lebanon ).

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