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Page "Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein" ¶ 5
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Her and memoirs
Edward wrote fondly of his mother in his memoirs: " Her soft voice, her cultivated mind, the cosy room overflowing with personal treasures were all inseparable ingredients of the happiness associated with this last hour of a child's day ...
Her papers, letters, memoirs, and notebooks were burned.
Her memoirs, Nostalgia Isn't What It Used To Be, were published in 1978.
Her video jockey memoirs have a complete list of all the live music she documented during her VJ breaks.
Her elder son, the Earl of Harewood, however, wrote about his parents ' marriage in his memoirs The Tongs and the Bones and challenged these widespread rumours that the marriage was an unhappy one.
Her second volume of memoirs, Pentimento: A Book of Portraits, appeared in 1973.
Her political memoirs, entitled Momentum: The Struggle for Peace, Politics and the People, were published in 2002.
Her memoirs Shephard's Watch: Illusions of Power in British Politics were published in 2000.
Her memoirs were published in the United States in 1984.
Her memoirs contain no trace of mental abnormality.
Her Mémoires appeared about five years later, and have often been reprinted, both separately and in collections of the memoirs of the 17th and 18th centuries, to both of which the author belonged both in style and character.
Her brother Guy reports this event in his memoirs, but fails to list any vital information about the child.
Her work based both on her own culinary experience and on 17th century and 18th century memoirs by Polish szlachta.
Her husband helped with writing the publicity and set up a small publishing house, published Lady Chatterley's Lover and hired Samuel Putnam to translate famous model Kiki's memoirs.
Her first husband was Alexandre Kochetovsky, a fellow Ballet Russes dancer by whom she had two children — a son, Leo Kochetovsky, who was killed in a car accident and a daughter, Irina Nijinska, a ballet dancer in her own right who subsequently carried on her work, including editing and publishing her mother's memoirs in 1972.
Her book Catherine the Great was positively reviewed in the New York Times ( Dec 20, 1925, pg BR8 ), which notes that Miss Anthony had, apparently for the first time, access to all of Catherine's private memoirs.
Her memoirs, translated into English under the title of " Crowning Anguish: Memoirs of a Persian Princess from the Harem to Modernity 1884-1914 ", is held in the archives of Iran's National Library.
Her own lack of knowledge about birth control ( as stated in her memoirs ) led to her interest in the causes of birth control and abortion.
Her memoirs, Mes amours que j ' ai tant aimées (" The Loves I So Loved "), were published in 1958.
Her memoirs have been published under the title " An Inheritance ".
Her next role was as the equestrienne Felicity in Sydney Pollack's Academy Award-winning Out of Africa, based on the memoirs of the famed Danish writer Isak Dinesen, and starring Meryl Streep, Robert Redford and Klaus Maria Brandauer.
Her memoirs have been important sources for historians doing research on southern society during and after the Civil War.
Her memoirs start with her childhood days, where she shamefully remembers her joy at reading tales to the point of praying to the Buddha to be able to read all of them, and relegating spiritual life as a lesser priority, despite several dreams which she interpreted as admonishments from the heavens.
Her memoirs, Theatre Street, discusses her training at the Imperial Ballet School, and her career at the Mariinsky Theatre and the Ballet Russe.

Her and do
Her father, James Upton, was the Upton mentioned by Hawthorne in the famous introduction to the Scarlet Letter as one of those who came into the old custom house to do business with him as the surveyor of the port.
Her education included how to spin and weave and she was forbidden to say or do anything, either in public or private.
Her name may have to do with the fact that Hylas was the son of Theiodamas, the king of the Dryopes.
Her stubbornness exasperated her interrogator, Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, who reported, " I do see it in her face that she is guilty ".
Her later portraits and actions, however, do not indicate that she was physically fragile.
Her husband gives her leave to do Messer Ansaldo's pleasure: he, being apprised of her husband's liberality, releases her from her promise ; and the necromancer releases Messer Ansaldo from his bond, and will take nought of his.
Her performance was called " memorable ... funny and poignant in turns ", and she earned a Tony Award. Richard Watts, Jr. of the New York Post wrote: " nothing I have ever seen her do prepared me for the loveliness, humor, gift for joyous characterization, and sheer lovableness of her portrayal of Nellie Forbush ....
Her last words were " Pardon me sir, I meant not to do it ", to Henri Sanson the executioner, whose foot she had accidentally stepped on after climbing the scaffold.
Her husband was called away frequently to do the bidding of Cromwell and the King and be present during Parliament.
Her mother followed in 1910 with their daughters Olinda and Maria do Carmo.
Though the monarch does not personally rule in judicial cases, this function of the Royal Prerogative instead performed in trust and in the Queen's name by officers of Her Majesty's court, common law holds the notion that the sovereign " can do no wrong "; the monarch cannot be prosecuted in her own courts, judged by herself, for criminal offences.
Her lyrics are composed of short fragments of simple speech that do not form a logical coherent pattern.
Her longings showed themselves partly as despair and partly as a resolve to fool her father into believing she was not his daughter, but she was unable to devise a means to do so.
Her hair changes style and color constantly, as do her clothes.
Her husband Caecina Paetus was ordered by the emperor Claudius to commit suicide for his part in a rebellion but was not capable of forcing himself to do so.
Charles wrote to the Convent of Santa Clara caretakers: " It seems to me that the best and most suitable thing for you to do is to make sure that no person speaks with Her Majesty, for no good could come from it ".
The Lords Reading Clerk reads the Commission aloud ; the senior Commissioner then states, " My Lords, in obedience to Her Majesty's Commands, and by virtue of the Commission which has been now read, We do declare and notify to you, the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled, that Her Majesty has given Her Royal Assent to the several Acts in the Commission mentioned.
Her letters in those days to do well despite the intrepid Marshal, in this trance, he could not be entitled to their confidence.
Her books have a very strong sense of place, with settings that play as significant a role as do the characters themselves.
With the move of Rabbi Dovber, the Shechina ( Divine Presence ) " Packed up Her belongings and moved from Medzhybizh to Mezeritch, and all we can do is follow "
Her origin sometimes, is also falsely depicted as " hindu ", either by Indocentrist historians or by those historians who do not understand that her incorporation in to Buddhist lore was a much later development which was most likely a conversion-to-Buddhism strategy for Iranian speaking Gandharans.
Her book Freedom Within Reason argues for a view of free will as the ability to do what one reasonably thinks is the right thing.
Her parents must sell their stock in order to pay for her institutionalization, which they do just before the Great Depression.

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