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Page "Kushiel's Dart" ¶ 23
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Phèdre and becomes
Phèdre becomes increasingly frustrated when she sees Alcuin working to solve this mystery and yet he will not tell her why.
Phèdre becomes the bed-slave of Gunter Arnlaugson, the lord of the steading.
At this point, Phèdre officially becomes the Comtesse de Montrève, inheriting Delaunay's mother's estate in Siovale as well.

Phèdre and Selig's
It takes Selig's best riders four days to catch up with Phèdre and Joscelin ; while Joscelin battles several of them, the young Harald the Beardless out of Gunter's steading attempts to recapture Phèdre ; she kills him with her dagger in order to escape.

Phèdre and learns
From Hyacinthe, Phèdre learns that she and Joscelin were tried and convicted in absentia for the murders of Delaunay, Alcuin, and the entire household.
Phèdre also learns that Prince Benedicte de la Courcel has re-married.
Phèdre also learns from Prince Benedicte's children that his marriage abroad has made him bitter.
Phèdre is kept unawares of this and only learns she has been betrayed when she is forcibly put on the Serenissiman ship at the excahnge.
Phèdre also learns of how Melisande plans to kill Queen Ysandre: Melisande has gotten one of the Cassiline royal guards to kill Ysandre in retribution for Ysandre's mother, Isabel L ' Envers, allegedly having killed his sister, the late fiancee of Prince Rolande, Edmée de Rocaille.
The doors then open and Phèdre gains access to the Temple and learns the Name of the One God.

Phèdre and plans
With her chevaliers, Remy, Fortun and Ti-Phillipe ( see Phèdre's Boys ), and her lover and protector Joscelin Verreuil, the former Cassiline brother, Phèdre returns to the City of Elua, to resume her life as a Servant of Naamah in the hopes of discerning where Melisande is and what she plans.

Phèdre and Terre
* Phèdre nó Delaunay, the premier courtesan of Terre D ' Ange in Jacqueline Carey's Kushiel's Legacy novels.
She parades Phèdre before the nobles of Terre d ' Ange.
Phèdre and Joscelin eventually reach Terre d ' Ange.
Once back in Terre d ' Ange, Phèdre and Joscelin encounter the men of the Marquis le Garde, one of the Allies of Camlach ; she borrows names from Cereus House and tells them she is Suriah of Trefail, and that Joscelin is her cousin Jareth, refugees from a town that has been set upon by the Skaldi.
Phèdre must now go to Alba and Eire and convince the Dalriada to help Drustan reclaim his throne, so that Drustan can bring his army to Terre d ' Ange to help defeat the Skaldi.
Here Phèdre informs Drustan that the price of marrying Ysandre is helping her to secure her throne from invasion, and that the Master of the Straits will only allow the Albans to cross to Terre d ' Ange after Drustan wins his own throne back.
In the novel, the journey of famed anguissette, Phèdre nó Delaunay brings her all the way to Caerdicca Unitas, chasing after the path of the infamous traitor of Terre d ' Ange, Melisande Shahrizai.
While he is unwilling to take the risk of standing up to La Serenissima and, if Phèdre is unsuccessful, Terre d ' Ange, he does agree to send letters to the Marsilikos.
The Queen, her entourage, Phèdre, Joscelin, and Ti-Phillipe rush back to Terre d ' Ange to try to reclaim the throne.
This brings some solace to the Prince and he agrees that he will travel back to Terre d ' Ange while Phèdre and Joscelin travel onward on their search for the Name of God.
In Jebe-Barkal, Phèdre is given gifts to take back to the Queen of Terre d ' Ange and is given gifts of her own.
Phèdre presents Imriel in Terre d ' Ange to the Queen, where she is punished by Queen Ysandre for not having sent Prince Imriel back to Terre d ' Ange and instead taking him with them on a dangerous journey.

Phèdre and d
In 1807 he attracted much attention in France by an essay in the French language, Comparaison entre la Phèdre de Racine et celle d ' Euripide, in which he attacked French classicism from the standpoint of the Romantic school.
Phèdre achieves the impossible when they accidentally stumble upon Isidore d ' Aiglemort's traitorous forces.
Phèdre spends much of the next few weeks translating for Ysandre and others, as she is one of the few d ' Angeline who speak Cruithne or Skaldi, and the only one who can be wholly trusted.

Phèdre and by
He was " the creator of ... that cage which is the theatre of Shakespeare's Othello, Racine's Phèdre, of Ibsen and Strindberg ," in which "... imprisoned men and women destroy each other by the intensity of their loves and hates ", and yet he was also the literary ancestor of comic dramatists as diverse as Menander and George Bernard Shaw.
In the seventeenth century, Racine expressed admiration for Sophocles but was more influenced by Euripides ( e. g. Iphigenia at Aulis and Hippolytus were the models for his plays Iphigénie and Phèdre ).
This was followed by revivals of Racine's Phèdre ( 24 February ), Octave Feuillet's Dalila ( 8 March ), Gaston de Wailly's Patron Bénic ( 14 March ), Edmond Rostand's La Samaritaine ( 25 March ), and Alexandre Dumas fils's La Dame aux Camélias on 9 April.
It launched in June 2009 with a broadcast of Phèdre with Helen Mirren, which was shown in over 200 cinemas around the world and seen by a worldwide audience of more than 50, 000 people.
( Phèdre ) written, performed and produced and by drench ( CD-2002 )
** The title role of Phèdre by Racine ( 21 January )
** Phèdre, by Jean Racine
Phèdre ( originally Phèdre et Hippolyte ) is a dramatic tragedy in five acts written in alexandrine verse by Jean Racine, first performed in 1677.
With Phèdre, Racine chose once more a subject from Greek mythology, already treated by Greek and Roman tragic poets, notably by Euripides in Hippolytus and Seneca in Phaedra.
In the absence of her royal husband Thésée, Phèdre ends by declaring her love to Hippolyte, Thésée's son from a previous marriage.
After Phèdre, Racine ceased writing plays on secular themes and devoted himself to the service of religion and the king until 1689, when he was commissioned to write Esther by Madame de Maintenon, the morganatic second wife of Louis XIV.
During her husband's absence, Phèdre has become consumed by an illicit but overpowering passion for her stepson Hippolytus, which she has kept as a dark secret.
Their discourse is interrupted by Phèdre, who distraughtly pleads for the rights of her infant son, explaining her coldness and personal despair.
Seeing Hippolytus by Theseus ' side, Phèdre grants Oenone free rein.
After his long period in captivity, Theseus is surprised by his cold reception from his wife and son, each anxious to conceal their passions: Phèdre, consumed by guilt ; and Hippolytus, anxious to distance himself from his stepmother's advances, but unable to tell his father of his love for Aricia.
Theseus has just been told by Oenone that Hippolytus has attempted to take Phèdre by force.
Everything about Phèdre was masterly: the tragic construction, the deeply observed characters, the richness of the verse and the interpretation of the title role by Marie Champmeslé.
Although Phèdre is perhaps less often studied at high school level in France than Britannicus or Andromaque, it is still frequently performed, and the eponymous role has been played by actresses such as Sarah Bernhardt and Isabelle Huppert.
* Phèdre, tragédie lyrique en 3 actes, music by Lemoyne, premiere 26 October 1786 au château de Fontainebleau ;
A tradition saying that he spared their sister, Aricia, whom he kept as slave, is followed in Jean Racine's Phèdre but is not supported by extant genuinely ancient sources.

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