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Page "The Smoking Room" ¶ 11
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She and seems
She seems to have passed her son off on his grandmother Livia for a number of years.
She has an " evil " identical twin named Ursula who shares Phoebe ’ s quirkiness but unlike Phoebe seems to be cruel and uncaring.
She barely seems to notice this display and continues her conversation.
She seems content to be a perpetual student, however, until she meets Nick, seeing in him a real person under the false persona.
She accepts, but seems to love him very largely for his professed name of Ernest.
She sees the best in people, and to begin with always seems ignorant of other people's malignant intentions.
She seems to lack self-confidence and is a bit passive aggressive.
She seems to have lived the rest of her life in a nunnery.
She seems to have disliked Catherine Parr, and reportedly reacted to the news of Henry's sixth marriage with the unkind joke " Madam Parr is taking a great burden on herself.
She seems to have inherited this indomitability from her mother, who fought to establish her husband's claim to the Kingdom of Naples, and her paternal grandmother Yolande of Aragon, who actually governed Anjou " with a man's hand ", putting the province in order and keeping out the English.
She seems to have pre-deceased her husband, after bearing him a son, David ap Gwion, and therefore there can be no truth in the story that she married into the Corbet family of Caus Castle ( near Westbury, Shropshire ) and later, Moreton Corbet Castle.
( She seems to have been especially endearing to Xavier Privas, hailed in 1899 as the " prince of songwriters ": several of his songs Is Dead ", " Pierrette's Christmas " are devoted to her fortunes.
She is the ( future ) daughter of another character and seems to be able to appear anywhere in time and space.
She asks for love so nakedly and earnestly, it seems downright vicious not to respond .”
She argues that a stage direction in A Shrew seems to indicate a part to be played by the minor actor Simon Jewell, who died in August 1592.
She instantly dislikes him, but he decides he is going to woo her, simply because it seems impossible he would be able to do so.
She seems to be unaware of the other humans she meets, or she simply chooses to ignore them.
In act 4, scene 14, “ an un-Romaned Antony ” laments, “ O, thy vile lady !/ She has robb'd me of my sword ,” ( 22-23 )— critic Arthur L. Little Jr. writes that here “ he seems to echo closely the victim of raptus, of bride theft, who has lost the sword she wishes to turn against herself.
Whether or not I love him, I do not know, but it seems to me that I do .” She married Gumilev in Kiev in April 1910 ; however, none of Akhmatova ’ s family attended the wedding.
She compares Wulfstan's mention of a " chooser of the slain " in his Sermo Lupi ad Anglos sermon, which appears among " a blacklist of sinners, witches, and evildoers ", to " all the other classes whom he mentions ", and concludes as those " are human ones, it seems unlikely that he has introduced mythological figures as well.
She also notices that her teenage niece, Di, is unhappy, and also seems to be trying to use marriage as a way to escape her circumstance.
She originally seems unimpressed by Jim, saying in a sarcastic tone, " I bet you're a real yo-yo.
She guesses he is from the asylum, but as he seems harmless, she arranges for him to join her traveling theatrical group.
She looks similar to Coraline's real mother but taller and thinner, with long black hair that seems to move by itself, black button eyes, paper-white skin, and extremely long, twitchy fingers with long dark red nails.
She is less distanced from the family than Desire, though, and seems to have some feeling at least for Delirium, and also seems to miss Destruction so much that she is able to manipulate Dream into feeling guilty over Destruction's abadoning of his duty.

She and have
She seemed to have come such a long distance -- too far for her destination which had wilfully been swallowed up in the greedy gloom of the trees.
She realized I'd have to notify the police, but fervently hoped I could avoid mentioning her name.
She didn't have the heart.
She might have been someone he had once loved.
She wrote in her journal, `` I have not heard the least profane language since I have been on board the vessel.
She used to tell me, `` When I stand there and look at the flag blowing this way and that way, I have the wonderful, safe feeling that Americans are protected no matter which way the wind blows ''.
She was the opposite of everything she should have been -- a positive pole in a negative home, a living reaction of warmth and kindness to the harsh reality of her father.
`` She wants you and Barbara to have dinner with her tomorrow night ''.
She usually wore weeds, and a stranger watching her board a train might have guessed that Mr. Pastern was dead, but Mr. Pastern was far from dead.
She would have said triumph.
She thought again of her children, those two who had died young, before the later science which might have saved them could attach even a label to their separate malignancies.
She had surprised Hans like she had surprised me when she said she'd go, and then she surprised him again when she came back so quick like she must have, because when I came in with the snow she was there with a bottle with three white feathers on its label and Hans was holding it angrily by the throat.
She ascribed her delight with both experiences to the effect they seemed to have of temporarily removing from her the controls which she felt so compulsively necessary to maintain even when it might seem appropriate to relax these controls.
She teamed up with another beauty, whose name has been lost to history, and commenced with some fiddling that would have made Nero envious.
She later divorced Graham, who is believed to have moved to Bolivia.
She must have looked temptingly pretty to the dean as he put the crown on her head.
She didn't like her stepmother, but nothing is known to have occurred shortly before the crime that could have caused such a murderous rage.
She would have been taking more than a fair risk of being seen and recognized during her travels.
She whirled and faced him, roaring terribly, and Ulyate, watching through the leaves, could not understand why she did not charge and obliterate him, because he wouldn't have much of a chance of getting away, in that thick growth, but she seemed just a trace uncertain ; ;
She was closing and within one more bound would have been able to reach the rear end of the bay, but -- and here Jones and Loveless and Ulyate were holding breath for all they were worth -- she never quite caught up that last bound.
She might have been talking to some of her friends about her husband if they've been having any trouble ''.
She refused to have a doctor, insisting there was nothing a doctor could do for her.
She might, conceivably, have brought one in in a large-enough suitcase.

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