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Clive and lived
In 1768, Clive lived for a time in the Chateau de Larzac near Pézenas in the Hérault département of the Languedoc-Roussillon region in southern France.
With the late-1998 infusion of new characters, it was established Dusty and her children lived over their minimarket and that in the next door flat were students Declan, Gabby and Clive.
However, Clive never lived here, as he died in 1774 — the year that the house was finished.
His son Clive said, " When my father was asked if he had lived all his life in Glastonbury, he loved to say-not yet.
Clive Bell, David Garnett and Maynard Keynes lived at Charleston for considerable periods ; Virginia and Leonard Woolf, E. M. Forster, Lytton Strachey and Roger Fry were frequent visitors.

Clive and London
London: Clive Bingley.
* Sir Clive Martin ( former Lord Mayor of London and chairman of MPG, an international printing and communication company )
Beginning just before the start of the Second World War, the film tells the story of the Rowan family: Bill, his sisters Sue and Dawn, and his parents Grace and Clive, living in a suburb of London.
* John Leonard Clive, Thomas Babington Macaulay — the Shaping of the Historian ( London: Secker and Warburg, 1973 ).
Recent discussions of Valerius ' work include W. Martin Bloomer, Valerius Maximus and the Rhetoric of the New Nobility ( Chapel Hill, 1992 ), Clive Skidmore, Practical Ethics for Roman Gentlemen: the Work of Valerius Maximus ( Exeter, 1996 ), and Hans-Friedrich Mueller, Roman Religion in Valerius Maximus ( London, 2002 ).
The Executive and Artistic Director of Carnegie Hall ( from July 2005 ) is Sir Clive Gillinson, formerly managing director of the London Symphony Orchestra.
When Clive was nine his aunt died, and, after a brief stint in his father's cramped London quarters, returned to Shropshire.
On 22 November 1774 Clive committed suicide, aged forty-nine, at his Berkeley Square home in London.
* A statue of Clive stands in the main Square in the market town of Shrewsbury, as well as a later one in King Charles Street near St James ' Park, London.
* Clive Road, in West Dulwich, London commemorates Baron Clive despite being so named close to a century after his death.
* A. Mervyn Davies Clive of Plassey ( London ) 1939
* Mark Bence-Jones Clive of India ( London ) 1974
* Thomas Babington Macaulay " Lord Clive " Essays ( London: Longman's, Green & Co .) 1891 pp. 502 – 547.
by Clive Wake and John O. Reed Nocturnes, London: Heinemann Educational, 1969.
In 2008, Fahey appeared in the Chris Ward-written and directed short film What Shall We Do With The Drunken Sailor ( based on the life of artist / model Nina Hamnett, self-styled " Queen of Bohemia "), with Fahey playing the role of Hamnett opposite actor Clive Arrindel, Donny Tourette ( frontman with punk band Towers of London ) and Honey Bane ( former vocalist of the punk band Fatal Microbes ).
Both before and after the Union, Irish peerages were often used as a way of creating peerages which did not grant a seat in the English House of Lords and so allowed the grantee ( such as Clive of India ) to sit in the House of Commons in London.
* The Fitzroy: The Autobiography of a London Tavern, by Lord Killanin, Sally Fiber, and Clive Powell-Williams.
Clive Bloom in his book Violent London claims that " Wright had a history of teenage violence against black teachers and had been attracted by the politics of the fascist National Front ".
George Reid with wife Florence and their children ( left to right ) Douglas, Thelma and Clive, in London, 1915
* Thubron, Colin ( text ) and Boursnell, Clive ( photos ), The Royal Opera House Covent Garden, Hamish Hamilton, London, 1982.
The original echo chamber at EMI's Abbey Road Studios improved by the late Clive Robinson as site foreman at the time of construction, his construction and engineering team perfected the echo booth at Abbey Road Studios, in London it was one of the first in the world to be specially built for recording purposes, when the studio was established in 1931 ; it remains in place and is a prime example of the early 20th-century electro-acoustic echo chamber.
The 1st Duke of Chandos sold the Castle Hotel to John Walcot who in turn sold it to Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive of Plassey ( 1725-1774 ), known as ‘ Clive of India ’, who amassed such wealth during his time in that country that Horace Walpole writing from London to a country friend said: ‘ you will be frightened by the dearness of everything ...

Clive and often
The presenters often have expertise in the story they are sent to cover, for example, former Paris correspondent Jon Sopel presented coverage of the 2007 French presidential elections, while channel presenters and former reporters Ben Brown and Clive Myrie were dispatched to Cairo and Tripoli during the Middle East uprisings.
Gulacy was a film buff, and modeled many characters after film stars: Juliette on Marlene Dietrich, James Larner on Marlon Brando, Clive Reston ( often broadly hinted at as being the son of James Bond as well as the grand nephew of Sherlock Holmes ) occasionally looking like Basil Rathbone and Sean Connery, and a minor character Ward Sarsfield ( after the real-life name of Sax Rohmer ) who looked like David Niven.
Vanessa Redgrave as Imogen was often compared favourably to Ashcroft ; Eric Porter was a success as Jachimo, as was Clive Swift as Cloten.
His role in the city was ostensibly that of an ambassador but as Bengal was increasingly under the dominance of the East India Company he was often given the task of issuing orders to the new Nawab on behalf of Clive and the Calcutta authorities.
Relationships with Clive Bell remained amicable, and Bell stayed with them for long periods fairly often – sometimes accompanied by his own mistress, Mary Hutchinson.
Another member of the office is the useless Clive ( Tom George ) or as Martin calls him, ' young, er, thing ', who often turns publicity stunts into bloodbaths.
One comment often noted was made in 1975, to describe a shot by Clive Lloyd as " the stroke of a man knocking a thistle top off with a walking stick.
He has often appeared at race meetings in recent years with the British actor Clive Owen.
Clive A. Smith ( often credited as Clive Smith ) is a British expatriate director and animator who, with Michael Hirsh and Patrick Loubert, founded Canadian animation studio Nelvana in 1971.
The Australian expatriate writer, Clive James, comments that Goldsworthy's poetry is often seen as a sideline, but argues that it is " at the centre of his achievement ".
Clive is often seen locally as one of the more exclusive areas of northern Shropshire to live in.

Clive and spent
* Writer Clive James spent a large part of his early life in Britain living in Tufnell Park, and describes in detail his disdain for it in his book Falling Towards England.
Clive arrived at Fort St. George in June 1744, and spent the next two years working as little more than a glorified assistant shopkeeper, tallying books and arguing with suppliers of the East India Company over the quality and quantity of their wares.
On 8 July 2008, Marsaxlokk strengthened their squad further with the signings of midfielder Christian Cassar, who joined on a five-year contract from Floriana and defender Clive Brincat from St. George's, although the latter had spent last season on loan with Msida Saint-Joseph.
Clive, by now a fabulously rich nabob, is reputed to have spent over £ 100, 000 on rebuilding the house and a complete remodelling of the celebrated pleasure grounds.

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