ellauri052.html on line 686: Apparently his wife Frieda believed him to have had a sexual relationship with a farmer while writing Women in Love in 1916. There's also the coal miner quote you mentioned Kelby. Then there's the quote: I should like to know why nearly every man that approaches greatness tends to homosexuality, whether he admits it or not...
(Älkää yrittäkökään! Mä en ole! Sitäpaizi mä en ole lähelläkään suuruutta! Pienenen kuin pyy maailmanlopun edellä.)
ellauri069.html on line 651: Schlumpf ja Pökäler ovat pedofiilikolleegoja, toinen bylsi tytärtään Ilseä ja toinen 11-vuotiasta Biancaa, ja sen jälkeen vielä Frieda-sikaa. Vähän tollasia antisankareita, niinko kirjassa Catch-22. Love is a many-splendored thing. Niin paljon kuuluu rakkauteen... laulaa Fredi-sika.
ellauri117.html on line 185: Apparently his wife Frieda believed him to have had a sexual relationship with a farmer while writing Women in Love in 1916. There's also the coal miner quote you mentioned Kelby. Then there's the quote: I should like to know why nearly every man that approaches greatness tends to homosexuality, whether he admits it or not...
(Älkää yrittäkökään! Mä en ole! Sitäpaizi mä en ole lähelläkään suuruutta! Pienenen kuin pyy maailmanlopun edellä.)
ellauri117.html on line 353: Äisky ja Pertin eka tyttöystävä, Jessie Chambers, kävi tiukkaa vapaapainia Pertistä. Molemmat naiset oli justiinaluonteita, ja halusivat "länkyttää Pertin hengiltä". Sexin "mysteereihin" sen vihki 23-vuotiaan apteekkarinrouva Alice Dax. Hiän kertoi, miten se näki Pertin runkkaamassa runon kimpussa. Hiän "antoi perää Pertille", auttaaxeen sitä löytämään riimejä. Pertti jätti Jessien löydettyään toisen ystävättären, sexuaalisesti puoleensavetävämmän Louie Burrowsin. Louie oli vetävästä kirkkoveneestä huolimatta liian "kirkollinen". Kaikki 3 jäivät läähättämään Lawrencen perään. 1912 Pertti lätkäänty Frieda Weeklyyn ja karkas viikkolehden kanssa jonnekin. Frieda oli aatelinen professorin rouva, joka jätti 3 lasta koska Pertti oli niin ihana. Frieda oli jättimäinen valkyyria, jonka kanssa Pertti sai otella monen monta erää. Lautasia särkyi monta tusinaa. Pertti oli aika toxinen:
ellauri117.html on line 357: - se sanoi Katherine Mansfieldille. Sen mielestä oli okei miehen vaimoa vaikka mätkiä. Frieda tosin pani sille turpiin toinen käsi selän takana. Pertti ja Frieda ei saaneet koskaan orgasmia yhdessä, joko oli Pertti eellä tai Frieda jäljessä.
ellauri117.html on line 358: Naisilla on aina sexi mielessä. No Frieda oli äidillinen punkero, sen isoihin tisseihin saattoi Pertti kuuman päänsä haudata.
ellauri226.html on line 93: Sea and Sardinia is a travel book by the English writer D. H. Lawrence. It describes a brief excursion undertaken in January 1921 by Lawrence and his wife Frieda, a.k.a. Queen Bee, from Taormina in Sicily to the interior of Sardinia. They visited Cagliari, Mandas, Sorgono, and Nuoro. His visit to Nuoro was a kind of homage to Grazia Deledda but involved no personal encounter. Despite the brevity of his visit, Lawrence distils an essence of the island and its people that is still recognisable today.
ellauri226.html on line 116: Dave is full of breathless switchbacks. You’re always veering giddily from fleeting exaltations (the joy of motion, the wildness of the landscape, the generosity of a peasant) to tedious exasperations (almost everything else). Luckily he had his wife along, the formidable Frieda (he refers to her as “the Q.B.,” for queen bee - Kuningatar! Eskin valtiatar on sekin vanhemmiten aika formidable), whose shrewd affirmations provided a foil for his grumbling discontents. Lawrence found the city “all bibs and bobs" . . . rather bare, rather stark, much of the city was levelled by Allied bombs, and it has not exactly been lovingly restored. “They pour themselves one over the other,” Lawrence sniffed of the Italians, “like so much melted butter over parsnips.” Lawrence ize preferoi tankeampia kelttijuurikkaita.
ellauri226.html on line 118: Sardegna was full of Lawrentian tourist horrors: hunger, bad light, and sharing space with people who annoy you. When Frieda asked what one does in Mandas, the locals told her, “Niente! Kiva plane etta, ei ketään kotona.
ellauri300.html on line 405: Dr Halpers mustasch var full av smulor från matzokakorna, och han stönade av vällust medan han fortsatte att tugga med sina gula tänder. Han kastade kärleksfulla blickar på sin syster Frieda. Det var tack vare henne han nu var måg till den rike Makaver, som redan hade lovat finansiera utgivningen av hans samlade verk på såväl tyska som hebreiska.
ellauri301.html on line 443: Kotona odottaa yllätys: Frieda sanoo Seija minä odotan! Kunps eläisin vivisektioon saakka itkee Barukh vaikka oivaltaa että se voi olla taas tyttö. Eipä olekaan, vaan mongoloidi poika.
ellauri353.html on line 281: Mrs. FRIEDMAN attended Reed College and studied economics at the University of Chicago. She was on the staff of the National Research and the bureau. A few. Home Economics. She next joined the staff of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation where she worked until she married Milton and moved to New York. Since then she has continued home economic research on her own publishing. Individually and coauthoring the three works referred to a few moments ago. She was mostly a producer of the P.B.S. T.V. series free to choose. And in one thousand nine hundred six she received an honorary doctorate from Pepperdine University. The Milton. And Rose de Friedman Foundation which the Freedman's us. Promotes parental choice. Of the schools. Attend. As I mentioned the title of their most recent book is Two lucky people. I'm being told by my parents. That the harder you work the luckier you get. It is no wonder the Friedan consider themselves lucky. They have worked long hard to make the contributions they have made to each other and to our society. We the members and listen. Well are the lucky ones today. To have them share themselves and their insights with us once again. We welcome. (Milton claps his hands to them.)
ellauri402.html on line 383: Thoth-pakan yhdessä Lady Frieda Harrisin kanssa, totesi
ellauri411.html on line 87: Tomin elämä oli Tomista kuin Middleton Murryn kirjoittama Dostojevskin romaani. Pojat älkää kirjoittako runoja, Tom sanoi koulunsa koulupojille. John Middleton Murry (6. elokuuta 1889 – 12. maaliskuuta 1957) oli englantilainen kirjailija. Hän oli tuottelias kirjailija, joka tuotti elämänsä aikana yli 60 kirjaa ja tuhansia esseitä ja arvosteluja kirjallisuudesta, sosiaalisista kysymyksistä, politiikasta ja uskonnosta. Merkittävä kriitikko Murry muistetaan parhaiten suhteestaan Katherine Mansfieldin kanssa, jonka kanssa hän meni naimisiin vuonna 1918 tämän toisena aviomiehenä, ystävyydestään DH Lawrencen ja TS Eliotin kanssa sekä ystävyydestään (ja lyhyestä suhteestaan) Frieda Lawrencen kanssa.
xxx/ellauri068.html on line 265: Vähän ennen kuolemaansa Rautanen vihittiin Helsingin yliopistossa teologisen tiedekunnan kunniatohtoriksi. Rautanen sai paikallisilta lempinimen Nakambale, joka tarkoittaa "sitä joka pitää hattua". Hän piti usein kalottia, jonka ambomaalaiset käsittivät palmukoriksi. Nakambale-sana tulee okambale-sanasta, joka merkitsee pientä koria. Rautanen tunnettiin Nakambalena niin hyvin, että nimi kirjoitettiin jopa hänen hautakiveensä. Häntä kunnioitetaan Namibiassa erittäin paljon vielä nykyisinkin, vaikka hänen kuolemastaan on kulunut jo 90 vuotta. Rautanen meni vuonna 1872 naimisiin saksalaisen lähetyssaarnaajan Franz Kleinschmidt'in tyttären Friedan kanssa. Rautaset saivat yhdeksän lasta, mutta moni lapsista kuoli jo pienenä malariaan.
xxx/ellauri085.html on line 106: If it is a surprise to learn that Lawrence originally conceived of Women in Love as a money-making pot-boiler, it comes as an endearing shock to read that James Joyce submitted some of his early work to the firm of Mills and Boon. There is no record of the reader’s report, beyond the fact that he rejected Dubliners as unsuitable material for the unique imprint of that publishing house. For his part, Lawrence had no doubt that the author of Ulysses was the real smutmonger of modern fiction. ‘My God, what a clumsy olla putrida James Joyce is!’, he wrote to Aldous Huxley, ‘nothing but old fags and cabbage-stumps of quotations from the Bible and the rest stewed in the juice of deliberate journalistic dirty-mindedness.’ To his wife Frieda he wrote, after reading Ulysses, that ‘the last part of it is the dirtiest, most indecent, obscene thing ever written’; and he later complained that Joyce had degraded the novel to the level of an instrument for measuring twinges in the toes of unremarkable men. Joyce’s reply to the charge that he was just another pornographer doing dirt on sex was to claim that at least he had never made the subject predictable or boring. He denounced Lady Chatterbox’s Lover — his title for Lawrence’s notorious novel — as a ‘lush’ production in ‘sloppy English’ and dismissed its ending as ‘a piece of propaganda in favour of something which, outside of DHL’s country at any rate, makes all the propaganda for itself’. It is a minor irony of literary history that both men were married at Kensington Register Office in London, although, unlike Lawrence, the Irishman allowed a decent interval of twenty-five years to elapse before the solemnisation of his nuptials.
xxx/ellauri128.html on line 637: As an undergraduate, Atkinson read Simone de Beauvoir´s The Second Sex, and struck up a correspondence with de Beauvoir, who suggested that she contact Betty Friedan. Atkinson became an early member of Friedan´s National Organization for Women. Atkinson´s time with the organization was tumultuous, including a row with the national leadership over her attempts to defend and promote Valerie Solanas and her SCUM Manifesto in the wake of the Andy Warhol shooting. In 1968 she left the organization because it would not confront issues like abortion and marriage inequalities. She founded the October 17th Movement, which later became The Feminists, a radical feminist group active until 1973. By 1971 she had written several pamphlets on feminism, was a member of the Daughters of Bilitis and was advocating specifically political lesbianism. "Sisterhood," Atkinson famously said, "is powerful. It kills mostly sisters." The Daughters of Bilitis / b ɪ ˈ l iː t ɪ s /, also called the DOB or the Daughters, was the first lesbian civil and political rights organization in the United States. Bilitis is not cholitis nor Kari Matihaldi disease, but a fictional companion of Sappho.
xxx/ellauri252.html on line 220: Friedan Betty">Betty Friedan (/ˈfriːdən, friːˈdæn, frɪ-/February 4, 1921 – February 4, 2006) was an American feminist writer and activist. A leading figure in the women's movement in the United States, her 1963 book The Feminine Mystique is often credited with sparking the second wave of American feminism in the 20th century. In 1966, Friedan co-founded and was elected the first president of the National Organization for Women (NOW), which aimed to bring women "into the mainstream of American society now in fully equal partnership with men".
xxx/ellauri252.html on line 223: Ompas ruma ämmä, sanoi Hande Betty Friedanista.
xxx/ellauri252.html on line 227: Friedan was born Bettye Naomi Goldstein on February 4, 1921, in Peoria, Illinois, to Harry and Miriam (Horowitz) Goldstein, whose Jewish families were from Russia and Hungary. Harry owned a jewelry store in Peoria, and Miriam wrote for the society page of a newspaper when Friedan's father fell ill. Her mother's new life outside the home seemed much more gratifying.
20