Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Oenone" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Her and tragic
Her tragic early death from measles at the age of 32 came as a terrible blow to Severn and adversely affected his own health.
Her tragic cycle Requiem documents her personal experience of this time ; as she writes, " one hundred million voices shout " through her " tortured mouth ".
Her nickname is " The tragic heroine ".
Her agony inspired Dumas fils to write about tragic female characters.
Her capacity for projecting pathos was an inspiration to playwrights Thomas Otway and Thomas Southerne in the three famous tragic roles they wrote for her: Monimia in Otway's The Orphan ( 1680 ), Belvidera in Otway's Venice Preserved ( 1682 ), and Isabella in Southerne's The Fatal Marriage ( 1694 ).
Her first film was The Goddess ( 1958 ), playing a tragic movie star modeled on Marilyn Monroe ( though she and director, John Cromwell, would forever deny Marilyn's influence, using Rita Hayworth as being more accurate ).
Her actions led to tragic consequences for her and Edgar decades later.
Her novel in verse Forsaking All Others ( 1933 ) about a tragic love affair, which many consider her greatest work, reflects this, though it is certainly not autobiographical.
Her audience remarks that it is romantic but she reflects that it is " violent, bitter, tragic ".
Her life became the inspiration for a tragic 1849 drama Adrienne Lecouvreur by Scribe and Legouvé on which Francesco Cilea's opera Adriana Lecouvreur and the operetta Adrienne ( 1926 ) by Walter Goetze are based.
Her beauty is renowned and reached even Chu O's ear, triggering the unfortunate events that led to her tragic death.
Her works lean toward the tragic, within a hostile society of vice and violence.
Her mother's tragic married life might have influenced Tar-Ancalimë's rejection of her husband.
Her sister Marie of Romania eulogized her sister in a letter after her death: " The whole thing was tragic beyond imagination, a tragic end to a tragic life.
Her modernist novels portray the restricted and often tragic lives of women in contemporary Scotland.
Her life was marred by several tragic losses and her own mental problems, which eventually led to her suicide at 48.
Her rather disagreeable way of doing things comes from a tragic event in her childhood where she was beaten in her " hometown " of Alberta after trying to sell apples with her self-made cart.
Her appearance in the play is brief: she and her son are introduced in Act IV Scene II, a climactic and tragic scene that ends with both her and her son ’ s life.

Her and story
Her first appearance was in a short story published in The Sketch magazine in 1926, " The Tuesday Night Club ", which later became the first chapter of The Thirteen Problems ( 1932 ).
Her nickname appears as a store name in the story " Christmas in Duckburg ", featured on page 1 of Walt Disney ’ s Christmas Parade # 9, published in 1958.
Her function as bestower of authority to rule is also attested in the story related by Livy in which a Sabine man who sacrifices a heifer to Diana wins for his country the seat of the Roman empire.
Her story is the basis for the celebration of Purim in Jewish tradition.
Her story The Land of Far-Beyond is a Christian parable along the lines of John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, with modern children as the central characters.
Her story was greatly developed, during the Middle Ages, in the tradition of Aggadic midrashim, the Zohar and Jewish mysticism.
Her story " The Autobiography of My Mother " was one of the 1977 O. Henry Prize stories.
Her story is told in Cortez and Marina ( 1963 ), by Edison Marshall.
Her story soon becomes one of Japan's most notorious scandals.
Her first story, Atlanta Girl Sees Italian Revolution, by Margaret Mitchell Upshaw, appeared on December 31, 1922.
** " Her Majesty's Servants " ( originally titled " Servants of the Queen ") ( short story )
* THE MOURNER: In a Landscape of Sadness, Offering Just Her Presence, New York Times, 10 / 1 / 2001 the story of Carol O ' Neill, wife of a founder of Sandler O ' Neill
Her dependence on magic becomes so consuming that it develops into a dark force that takes her on a redemptive journey in a major story arc when she becomes the sixth season's main villain, threatening to destroy the world in a fit of grief and rage.
Her story of the doomed trumpet player Rick Martin was inspired, she wrote, by " the music, but not the life " of Beiderbecke, but the image of Martin quickly became the image of Beiderbecke: His story is about " the gap between the man's musical ability and his ability to fit it to his own life.
Her sexual life story then continues featuring various boys, her husband, ministers, other women's husbands, boyfriends, swinging sessions, and the adult Lazarus Long / Theodore Bronson.
Her latest book, Child No More, is the heartfelt story of losing her mother.
Her legacy survives in numerous works of art and the many dramatizations of her story in literature and other media, including William Shakespeare's tragedy Antony and Cleopatra, Jules Massenet's opera Cléopâtre and the film Cleopatra ( 1963 ).
Her recent biographers, however, question the veracity of this story.
Her favorite fairy tale, which she reads to her younger brother at the beginning of the film is " Rigoletto ", the story of a cursed fairy prince who must live as an ugly monster until he can find someone who can see through his appearance to the heart within.
Her story is used as a means to teach relative pronouns to the students.
Her scenes are mostly what happened in times other than shown in the pilot episode " Encounter at Farpoint "; the story diverges from the " normal " time-frame as events in the finale occur.
Her personal account of the struggles of women artists is documented in her published journals, which are a revealing story of the bourgeoisie.
Her story was popularised in Euripides's tragedy Alcestis.
Her story was also put to the stage in the verse tragedy Canace ( 1588 ), by Italian playwright Sperone Speroni.

0.370 seconds.