Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Shiver my timbers" ¶ 11
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Marryat and wrote
He also wrote sea novels somewhat in the style of Marryat, including The Unfortunate Man ( 1835 ), Ben Brace, the last of Nelson's Agamemnons ( 1836 ), The Arethusa ( 1837 ), Jack Adams, or the Mutiny of the Bounty ( 1838 ), The Spitfire ( 1840 ), Tom Bowling ( 1841 ), Jack Malcolm's Log ( 1846 ).

Marryat and fiction
This appears in such later fiction as " The White Wolf of the Hartz Mountains ": an episode in the novel The Phantom Ship ( 1839 ) by Marryat, featuring a demonic femme fatale who transforms from woman to wolf.

Marryat and were
The three Marryat children were painted in 1851-2 in Rome by the young Frederick Leighton.
In 1870 The Times described Chamier as ' a veteran novelist, one, indeed, whose sea novels some quarter of a century ago were almost as universally popular as those of Captain Marryat '.

Marryat and .
* February 10 – Captain Frederick Marryat, British author ( d. 1848 )
Tradition has it that Terneuzen was once the home of the legendary Flying Dutchman, Van der Decken, a captain who cursed God and was condemned to sail the seas forever, as described in the Frederick Marryat novel The Phantom Ship and the Richard Wagner opera The Flying Dutchman.
Wimbledon House, a separate residence close to the village at the south end of Parkside ( near present day Peek Crescent ), was home in the 1790s to the exiled French statesman Vicomte de Calonne, and later to the mother of writer Frederick Marryat.
Their association with the area is recorded in the names of nearby Calonne and Marryat Roads.
Lawson was a keen reader of Dickens and Marryat and novels such as Robbery under Arms and For the Term of his Natural Life ; an aunt had also given him a volume by Bret Harte.
* Poor Jack, novel by Frederick Marryat, 1840.
In his novel Marryat, who was himself a seaman before he turned to writing, vividly describes the unlikely rise of a fictional mudlark, Thomas Saunders, to the position of river pilot.
* December 26-Frederick Marryat is promoted to lieutenant after distinguished service at sea in the War of 1812.
In 1876, he collaborated with Florence Marryat, the author and reciter, on Entre Nous.
During the previous seven years the popular taste had had turned toward the " service novel ", examples of which are Frank Mildmay ( 1829 ) by Frederick Marryat, Tom Cringle's Log ( 1895 ) by Michael Scott, The Subaltern ( 1825 ) by George Robert Gleig, Cyril Thornton ( 1827 ) by Thomas Hamilton, Stories of Waterloo ( 1833 ) by William Hamilton Maxwell, Ben Brace ( 1840 ) by Frederick Chamier and The Bivouac ( 1837 ), also by Maxwell.
Lymington is mentioned in The Children of the New Forest by Captain Marryat.
It was in this context that Frederick Marryat, author of The Children of the New Forest, was sent on patrol here as a young naval lieutenant in 1821, to watch over the Christchurch Bay area.
* Matilda Elizabeth Somerset ( 1815-3 April 1905 ) ( portrait 1843 ) who married 1842 Horace Marryat ( 1818-1887 ), a prolific traveller in Europe, and had issue two sons-Adrian Somerset Marryat ( b 1844 ) and Frederick Marryat ( b 1851 ), and one daughter Ida Horatia Charlotte Marryat ( 1843 – 1910 ) who married 19 September ( not November ) 1863 ( div 1889 ' Count Gustavus Frederick Bonde ( 1842 – 1909 ), a Swedish nobleman, with issue two sons and one daughter ( or three sons and two daughters.
This story was adapted in the English melodrama The Flying Dutchman ; or the Phantom Ship: a Nautical Drama, in three acts ( 1826 ) by Edward Fitzball ( 1792 – 1873 ) and the novel The Phantom Ship ( 1839 ) by Frederick Marryat.
The Marryat Hall, gifted by his sister Mrs Emma Grace Marryat, links to Caird Hall.
At one point he fought a bloodless duel with Captain Frederick Marryat, then editor of the Metropolitan Magazine, after Willis sent a private letter of Marryat's to George Pope Morris, who had it printed.
In 1834 Frederick Marryat published Peter Simple and Jacob Faithful.
Peter Simple is an 1834 novel written by Frederick Marryat about a young British midshipman during the Napoleonic wars.
His literary influences included Frederick Marryat, R. M. Ballantyne, G. A. Henty, and H. Rider Haggard.

Stevenson and both
On this issue, the President received a detailed report from his U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson, who had just returned from Paris, and Mr. Kennedy asked Stevenson to search for a face-saving way -- for both Paris and Tunis -- out of the imbroglio.
However, Stevenson and Wassersug observe that for sustained activity, a work rate of about 1 hp per horse is consistent with agricultural advice from both 19th and 20th century sources.
In the week before the convention opened, Kennedy received two new challengers when Lyndon B. Johnson, the powerful Senate Majority Leader from Texas, and Adlai Stevenson, the party's nominee in 1952 and 1956, officially announced their candidacies ( they had both privately been working for the nomination for some time ).
Nathaniel P. Langford and James Stevenson, both members of the Hayden Geological Survey of 1872, found The Enclosure during their early attempt to summit Grand Teton.
However, a number of his friends and associates ( such as George Wildman Ball ) quietly began organizing a " draft Stevenson " movement for President ; they persisted in their activity even when Stevenson ( both publicly and privately ) told them to stop.
Early in 1957, he resumed law practice, allying himself with Judge Simon H. Rifkind in a firm based in Washington, D. C. ( Stevenson, Paul, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison ) and another in Chicago ( Stevenson, Rifkind & Wirtz ), both related to New York City's Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.
* Miriam Stevenson 1954 Miss USA and Miss Universe winner, first to hold both titles
Daisy Steiner ( Jessica Stevenson ) and Tim Bisley ( Simon Pegg ) are two London twenty-somethings who meet by chance in a café while both are flat-hunting.
At the same time, drummer Bill Stevenson had also joined Black Flag, intending to be in both bands at once but soon finding it too difficult due to Black Flag's touring and recording schedule :" The band had time off so I spent like two years with Black Flag.
Original Descendents members Tony Lombardo and Frank Navetta made appearances on the album: Navetta wrote the song " Doghouse " and both he and Lombardo played on it, marking the first recording by the original Descendents lineup of Aukerman, Lombardo, Navetta, and Stevenson since Milo Goes to College in 1982.
It was rumored that Epitaph would not sign All without getting the Descendents as well, but Stevenson explained that the arrangement was made because Epitaph head Brett Gurewitz would allow both bands to make albums at their discretion:
Lead guitarist Jerry Miller and drummer Don Stevenson ( both formerly of The Frantics, originally based in Seattle ) joined guitarist ( and son of actress Loretta Young ) Peter Lewis ( of The Cornells ), bassist Bob Mosley ( of The Misfits, based in San Diego ) and Spence, now on guitar instead of drums.
Stevenson, Alvarez, and Egerton continued to tour and record with both bands, eventually releasing All's critically acclaimed 1998 album Mass Nerder, 2000 ’ s Problematic, and the 2001 Descendents / All live split Live Plus One.
Bill Stevenson and Karl Alvarez both live in Fort Collins, Colorado ; Stevenson is currently playing with Only Crime and The Lemonheads, and running his own recording studio, The Blasting Room, while Alvarez has contributed bass to The Lemonheads ’ 2006 album, Underminer, and has toured with Gogol Bordello.
Stevenson came to see both behaviorism and psychoanalysis as unable to explain the formation of individual characteristics and personality.
The island has two lighthouses, Hoy High ( NE ) and Hoy Low ( NW ), both built in 1851 by Alan Stevenson for the 19th century herring industry.
He was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1952, and again in 1956 when he was endorsed by President Truman but lost to Adlai Stevenson both times.
His biographer, Robert Mackenzie, says that his counsel awoke for a time the spiritual fires in Fergusson ; Robert Louis Stevenson was less complimentary: both however were writing many years after the event.
For Stevenson, moral disagreements may arise from different fundamental attitudes, different moral beliefs about specific cases, or both.
Lee and Stevenson divorced in March 1944 with both daughters staying with their father.
Stevenson ran for Governor of Illinois in 1982 and 1986, losing both elections to James R. Thompson.

0.445 seconds.