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Maud and who
The first was probably the cycle A Shropshire Lad set by Arthur Somervell in 1904, who had begun to develop the concept of the English song-cycle in his version of Tennyson's Maud a little previously.
His mother, Maud Humphrey, was a commercial illustrator, who received her art training in New York and France, including study with James McNeill Whistler, and who later became artistic director of the fashion magazine The Delineator.
A famous early practitioner was Maud Allan who in 1907 gave a private performance of the dance to King Edward VII.
With his relationship with Maud unraveling, Whistler suddenly proposed to and married Beatrice (" Trixie ") Godwin ( née Beatrix Birnie Philip ), a former pupil and the former wife of his architect Edward William Godwin, who had died two years earlier.
# Maud Holland ( 1359 – 1391 ), who married Waleran III of Luxembourg, Count of Ligny ( 1355 – 1415 ),
* Maud Crawford, missing attorney from Camden, Arkansas, who disappeared in 1957, was reared in Warren and graduated in 1911 from Warren High School.
At her death, the trustee of her estate and brother, Adrian Honoré, sold her local land holdings to Burks Hamner, Longleaf Pine forest: 1921 Burgert Brothers photo of Temple Terrace pre-development Vance Helm, Maud Fowler, Cody Fowler, and D. Collins Gillett, who formed two development corporations — Temple Terrace Estates, Inc., which developed the golf course and residential areas ; and Temple Terraces, Inc., which developed of orange groves that originally surrounded the city to the west and north, the largest orange grove in the world in the 1920s.
* Helen Fowler, who inspired the character Margaret in the famous Maud Hart Lovelace book series, Betsy-Tacy, was a resident of Forest Lake during the middle of the 20th century.
He also had 3 daughters: Gunnor, who married Robert, Lord of Rayleigh ; Cecily, who married William d ' Aubigny " Brito "; and Maud, who married William d ' Aubigny " Pincerna ", and was mother to William d ' Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel.
Maud Allan, an actress who had played Wilde's Salome in a performance authorised by Ross, was identified as a member of the " cult ".
The town was named for Maud Stearns, a sister to the wives of two men who owned the first general store.
Maud is the birthplace of rockabilly singer Wanda Jackson, who has a street ( Wanda Jackson Boulevard ) named after her, and noted high school football coach Jim Acree.
Hubert Walter was the son of Hervey Walter and his wife Maud de Valoignes, one of the daughters ( and co-heiresses ) of Theobald de Valoignes, who was lord of Parham in Suffolk.
His widow Maud resided in the castle until her death in 1446 when it passed to Richard, 3rd Duke of York who was killed at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460.
Beyond that, he sought de Braose's wife, Maud de St. Valery, who, the story goes, had made no secret of her belief that King John had murdered Arthur of Brittany.
Gerald of Wales describes Maud as a ' prudent and chaste woman ' who bore her husband three sons William, Giles and Reginald de Braose.
Yeats, who hated MacBride for capturing his muse Maud Gonne, and who later heard negative reports of MacBride's treatment of Gonne in their marriage, from Gonne herself, gave him the following ambivalent eulogy in his poem " Easter, 1916 ":
Later chapters in the books deal with atomic structure ( Mr Tompkins spends time as a conduction electron, returning to consciousness when he is annihilated in an encounter with a positron ) and thermodynamics ( the Professor expounds an analogy between the second law of thermodynamics and the bias towards the casino in gambling before being confounded by a local reversal of the second law through the intervention of Maxwell's demon who has introduced himself to Maud in one of her dreams ).
When he died, Matilda, also known as the Empress Maud, was in Normandy and her cousin Stephen of Blois managed to get back to London before she did, and claimed the throne-with the support of many barons who were unprepared for the novel idea of a woman ruler.
Following Anne's death, in about 1414, the Earl of Cambridge married the widowed Maud Neville ( Clifford ), former wife of John de Neville, 6th Lord Latimer ( 1382 – 1430 ). They had one daughter Alice, who may have been born postumusly to both Richard and Maud.

Maud and was
Montgomery was born in Kennington, London, in 1887, the fourth child of nine, to an Anglo-Irish Anglican priest, the Reverend Henry Montgomery, and his wife, Maud ( née Farrar ).
Bernard's mother, Maud, was the daughter of the well-known preacher Frederic William Farrar, and was eighteen years younger than her husband.
Trumbo was born in Montrose, Colorado, the son of Maud ( née Tillery ) and Orus Bonham Trumbo, and his family moved to Grand Junction in 1908.
Bogart was born on Christmas Day, 1899 in New York City, the eldest child of Dr. Belmont DeForest Bogart ( July 1867, Watkins Glen, New York – September 8, 1934, Tudor City apartments, New York City ) and Maud Humphrey ( 1868 – 1940 ).
The Third Thule Expedition ( 1919 ) was depot-laying for Roald Amundsen's polar drift in Maud.
One sister, Gisela, was married to Humbert II, Count of Savoy, and then to Renier I of Montferrat ; another sister, Maud, was the wife of Eudes I of Burgundy.
In 1918, Amundsen began an expedition with a new ship Maud, which was to last until 1925.
Maud, under the command of Wisting, was to resume the original plan to drift over the North Pole in the ice.
The Methodist Church has allowed ordination of women with full rights of clergy since 1956, when Maud Jensen was ordained and admitted into full connection in the Central Pennsylvania Annual Conference.
He was an active recruiter for the sect's Isis-Urania temple, and brought in his uncle George Pollexfen, Maud Gonne, and Florence Farr.
A separation was granted with Maud having custody of the baby with John having visiting rights.
According to Foster " when he duly asked Maud to marry him, and was duly refused, his thoughts shifted with surprising speed to her daughter.
When Maud told her that she was going to marry, Iseult cried and told her mother that she hated MacBride.
A few months after the poet's approach to Maud, he proposed to Iseult, but was rejected.
She was christened there on 23 September 1900, in the local parish church, All Saints, and her godparents included her paternal aunt Lady Maud Bowes-Lyon and cousin Mrs Arthur James.
She was the oldest surviving child of Sir Thomas Parr, Lord of the Manor of Kendal in Westmorland ( now Cumbria ), descendant of King Edward III, and the former Maud Green, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Thomas Green, Lord of Greens Norton, Northamptonshire.
Through Catherine's mother, Maud, she was also related to Henry by her ancestress Joan Wydville ( or Woodville ), sister of Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers, father of King Edward IV consort, Elizabeth Woodville.
At the time of Maud Parr's pregnancy, she was at court attending the Queen, and by necessity the Parr family was living in their home at Blackfriars, London.
* Jane Shore ( 1915 ): Elizabeth was played by Maud Yates.

Maud and ten
Maud is on the St. Louis Southwestern Railway near U. S. Highway 67 ten miles ( 16 km ) south of Boston and is seventeen miles ( 27 km ) southwest of Texarkana in southern Bowie County.
Most of Maud Lewis ' paintings are quite small-often no larger than eight by ten inches, although she is known to have done at least five paintings 24 inches by 36 inches.
In Gibralter, he shares his life with Maud ( Celia Johnson ) his devoting, domesticated wife, just three years his juniorliving a respectable, sober existence, and going to bed every night no later than ten o ' clock with their cocoa.

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