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Robert's and poem
Two of the poems aren't very good, and Robert's does okay, but Oswald's knocks them all out of the water with a fantastic poem.
To get them back together, Jackson writes a love poem in Robert's handwriting and sends it to Celine.
Several well-known works, such as Beowulf, the poem Pearl, and the Lindisfarne Gospels, survive today only because of Sir Robert's library.
The popularity of Brother Robert's version spawned a unique parody, Saga Af Tristram ok Ísodd, as well as the poem Tristrams kvæði.

Robert's and was
In 1341 David II, King Robert's son and heir, was able to return from temporary exile in France.
Henry I was crowned after Robert's death in 1031, which is quite exceptional for a French king of the times.
( A story was later circulated that, to prevent further escapes, Henry had Robert's eyes burnt out: this is not accepted by Henry's recent biographer, Judith Green.
It was originally attached to a cycle of prose versions of Robert's poems, which tells the story of the Holy Grail: brought from the Middle East to Britain by followers of Joseph of Arimathea, the Grail is eventually recovered by Arthur's knight Percival.
Fitzhugh wrote little of Robert's academic prowess, dwelling much on the prominence of his family, and erroneously stated the boy was 18.
Picard's personal tragedy was written as his brother Robert's heart attack, but Stewart suggested the loss of his entire family in a fire to add emotional impact.
She stepped down as president of the Girl Guides in 1920 in favor of Robert's wife Olave Baden-Powell, who was named Chief Guide ( for England ) in 1918 and World Chief Guide in 1930.
His wife Matilda was sent to Kent with ships and resources from Boulogne, with the task of retaking the key port of Dover, under Robert's control.
Finally, he was overwhelmed by Robert's men and taken away from the field in custody.
Earlier dukes had been illegitimate, and William's association with his father on ducal charters appears to indicate that William was considered Robert's most likely heir.
After Henri's death in 1520 the printing establishment was maintained by his former partner Simon de Colines who also married Robert's mother, the widow Estienne.
Edith was restored as queen, and Stigand, who had again acted as an intermediary between the two sides in the crisis, was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury in Robert's place.
Also, the quick-reaction soldiers reported fighters wearing Robert's gear and finding " a helmet with a bullet hole in it, which it was clear the last person to wear it had been shot in the head.
Cover of the original 1876 EditionThe first edition of the book, whose full title was Pocket Manual of Rules of Order for Deliberative Assemblies, was published in February 1876 by then U. S. Army Colonel Henry Martyn Robert ( 1837 – 1923 ) with the short title Robert's Rules of Order placed on its cover.
The seventh edition, published in February 1970 on the 94th anniversary of the publication of the first edition, was the first under the title Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised.
( This was more like the Robert's Rules method except it was analogous to a round-robin tournament instead of a single-elimination tournament.
Although he received support from the Church — he became Archdeacon of Pamplona in 1143 — Robert's preference was for translating scientific rather than theological works.
Robert's military successes against Edward II were due to a number of factors, not the least of which was the Scottish king's strategy.
The Blackburn Aeroplane & Motor Company was created in 1914, established in a new factory built at Brough, East Riding of Yorkshire in 1916, where Robert's brother Norman Blackburn was later Managing Director.
Their father John was a Church of England priest, the curate of Freshwater's Church of All Saints, and his two brothers ( Robert's uncles ) were also ministers.

Robert's and prose
The Didot Perceval, a prose continuation of Robert's work, takes up the story, and the knight Percival sits in the seat and initiates the Grail quest.

Robert's and 12th
Sir Robert's son George became the 12th Baron Ros in 1512 and his grandson Thomas was created 1st Earl of Rutland in 1525.
The secret was finally revealed at last in 1884 when Alexander Ireland issued a new 12th edition with Robert's name and an introduction explaining the circumstances behind its publication.

Robert's and century
In 1106, Henry defeated Robert's army decisively at the Battle of Tinchebray and claimed Normandy as a possession of the English crown, a situation that endured for almost a century.
The Lady Chapel and Bishop Robert's Chapel were added in the 13th Century in the Early English style, and in the 15th century, the choir section was rebuilt in the Perpendicular style, including the fan-vaulting Sherborne is still famous for, the remodelling by William Smyth, under Abbot John Brunyng ( 1415 – 1436 ).
'" Robert's theology included belief in " the modern liberal doctrine of man and the optimism of the nineteenth century, and it required a bold, rebellious and spacious mind to grasp its full implication.
With important dictionaries published at the turn of 20th century, such as Émile Littré's, Pierre Larousse's and Arsène Darmesteter's, and later Paul Robert's, the Académie gradually lost much of its prestige.

Robert's and de
Almost immediately his grandfather, Robert de Brus, 5th Lord of Annandale, resigned his Lordship of Annandale to Robert's father, possibly to avoid having to swear fealty to John as a vassal lord.
Robert's son, also called Robert de Gernon, of Grimston Hall, Suffolk, married the heiress of John Potton of Cavendish and obtained a landed estate in the lordship and manor of Cavendish.
He had been betrothed to Eudoxia on a former occasion ; the circumstances surrounding the failed negotiations are unclear, but George Akropolites states that the arrangement was blocked on religious grounds by the Orthodox Patriarch Manuel Sarentos: Robert's sister Marie de Courtenay was married to Emperor Theodore I Laskaris.
* Mila Parély as Geneviève de Marras, Robert's lover
* Pierre Nay as Monsieur de St. Aubin, a guest at Robert's estate
* Odette Talazac as Madame de la Plante, a guest at Robert's estate
* Claire Gérard as Madame de la Bruyère, a guest at Robert's estate
So close was the alliance between both men that Robert's seal shows the arms of de Quincy on a separate shield before his horse
William Talvas ( de Bellême ), Robert's grandfather, had blinded and mutilated William fitz Giroie.
In the Domesday survey, five great Norman lords held the rapes into which Sussex was divided, four of them giving their names to four of the five divisions as they were called in Domesday Book ; at the accession of Henry I of England in 1100 they were Robert of Bellême in Arundel rape, Robert's nephew William, Count of Mortain in Pevensey, William of Warenne in Lewes, the count of Eu in Hastings and, the only fully trustworthy Sussex lord at the time, Philip de Braose in Bramber.
Much later in Robert's life, Adeline, one of de Ropp's mother's cousins, was to figure quite importantly in Robert's development.
After Robert's recovery from the flu, his father sent him to board at a prep school and during the school holidays de Ropp lived with various relations on his mother's side including an aunt in Leicestershire and a great aunt at Salisbury.
In 1925 de Ropp's father, being financially strained, could not pay for Robert's expensive education and took him from school.
In 1264 / 5, Robert's lands were seized by Gilbert de Clare, 3rd Earl of Gloucester.
This is unlikely to be the case as Robert's heirs were the de Carew family-the representatives of his eldest half-brother, William de Carew.
From Robert's son William de Mortain it passed to King Henry I, and is still owned by the Royal Family.
Towns include: Baie Verte, Baytona, Beachside, Birchy Bay, Brent's Cove, Brighton, Burlington, Campbellton, Carmanville, Change Islands, Coachman's Cove, Comfort Cove-Newstead, Cottlesville, Crow Head, Embree, Fleur de Lys, Fogo, Joe Batt's Arm-Barr'd Islands-Shoal Bay, King's Point, La Scie, Leading Tickles, Lewisporte, Little Bay, Little Bay Islands, Little Burnt Bay, Lumsden, Lushes Bight-Beaumont-Beaumont North, Middle Arm, Miles Cove, Ming's Bight, Musgrave Harbour, Nipper's Harbour, Pacquet, Pilley's Island, Point Leamington, Point of Bay, Port Anson, Robert's Arm, Seal Cove, Seldom-Little Seldom, South Brook, Springdale, Summerford, Tilt Cove, Tilting, Triton, Twillingate, Westport, and Woodstock.
; traduit de l ' allemand, par un Amateur ( its title is derived from Étienne-Gaspard Robert's Phantasmagoria ), which had in turn been translated anonymously by Jean-Baptiste Benoît Eyriès ( 1767 – 1846 ) from a number of German ghost stories, and published in Paris during 1812.
His family is unknown, though the second author of the Prose Tristan claimed to be Robert's nephew, calling himself " Helie de Boron ".
On the death of William Rufus, William, Count of Évreux and Ralph de Conches made an incursion into Robert's Norman estates, on the pretence that they had suffered injury through some advice that Robert had given to the King ; their raid was very successful for they collected a vast booty.
His father Robert de Bellême had turned against Henry I on several occasions, had escaped capture at the battle of Tinchebrai in 1106 commanding Duke Robert's rear guard and later, while serving as envoy for King Louis of France, he was arrested by Henry I and imprisoned for life.

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