The fable was well known in Ancient Greece; Athenaeus records that Hieronymus of Rhodes, in his Historical Notes, quoted an epigram of Sophocles against Euripides that parodied the story of Helios and Boreas.[2] It related how Sophocles had his cloak stolen by a boy to whom he had made love. Euripides joked that he had had that boy too, and it did not cost him anything. Sophocles´ reply satirises the adulteries of Euripides: "It was the Sun, and not a boy, whose heat stripped me naked; as for you, Euripides, when you were kissing someone else´s wife the North Wind screwed you. You are unwise, you who sow in another´s field, to accuse Eros of being a snatch-thief."
ellauri042.html on line 710: Furthermore, his first wife, who was something of an impulse purchase, suffered from tuberculosis, so he had an impassionate affair with a young woman called Apollinaria Suslova on the side. It ended tragically due to his obsession with gambling. Beside of these blows he suffered from frequent epileptic seizures. At the bedside of his sick wife he wrote “Notes from Underground” (1864), a psychological study of an outsider. The work starts with a confession by the writer: “I am a sick man … I am a wicked man …” Fair enough.
ellauri060.html on line 112: The result of his Yale fellowship was Notes for a New Culture, written when Ackroyd was only 22 and eventually published in 1976. The title, an echo of T. S. Eliot's Notes Towards the Definition of Culture (1948), was an early indication of Ackroyd's penchant for exploring and re-examining the bollocks of other London-based writers.
ellauri074.html on line 255: Tony Robbins has written over six books throughout his career. (Over six? like almost seven?) His first book, Unlimited Power, was published in 1986 and became a national bestseller. He has also written many other great books such as Awaken The Giant Within, Notes From A Friend, MONEY Master the Game, Giant Steps, and Unshakeable.
ellauri078.html on line 89: She effectively secluded herself and poured forth poems with a profligacy bordering on hypographia. If you want a fairly succinct on-line biography of Dickinson, I enjoyed Barnes & Noble’s SparkNotes.
ellauri101.html on line 672: Yhdysvaltalainen esseisti Susan Sontag liitti käsitteen camp populaarikulttuuriin vuonna 1964 julkaistussa esseessään Notes on ”Camp”. 1980-luvulla camp yleistyi kytkeytyen postmodernismiin.
ellauri109.html on line 571: In his fury and his hunger for retribution, Roth produced “Notes for My Biographer,” an obsessive, almost page-by-page rebuttal of Bloom’s memoir: “Adultery makes numerous bad marriages bearable and holds them together and in some cases can make the adulterer a far more decent husband or wife than . . . the domestic situation warrants. (See Madame Bovary for a pitiless critique of this phenomenon.)” Only at the last minute was Roth persuaded by friends and advisers not to publish the diatribe, but he could never put either of his marriages behind him for good. He was similarly incapable of setting aside much smaller grievances. As Benjamin Taylor, one of his closest late-in-life friends, put it in “Here We Are,” a loving, yet knowing, memoir, “The appetite for vengeance was insatiable. Philip could not get enough of getting even.”
ellauri109.html on line 609: At the University of Pennsylvania, a friend and colleague—acting, the friend admits, almost as a “pimp”—helped Roth fill the last seats in his oversubscribed classes with particularly attractive undergraduates. Roth’s treatment of a young woman named Felicity (a pseudonym), a friend and house guest of Claire Bloom’s daughter, is particularly disturbing. Roth made a sexual overture to Felicity, which she rebuffed; the next morning, he left her an irate note accusing her of “sexual hysteria.” When Bloom wrote about the incident in her memoir, Roth answered in his unpublished “Notes” with a sense of affront rather than penitence: “This is what people are. This is what people do. . . . Hate me for what I am, not for what I’m not.”
ellauri135.html on line 208: In the early 1850s, Nikolai Vasilyevich joined the "young faction" of Moskvityanin and became a member of what came to be known as the Ostrovsky circle. In 1853 he went to Sevastopol as a correspondent, and stayed there until the end of the siege, working as a translator at the headquarters of the Commander-in-Chief. He later published Notes on the Siege of Sevastopol (Moscow, 1858) and the Sevastopol Album, a collection of 37 drawings.
ellauri135.html on line 227: Leaving in 1853 service at the Bank, Berg turns into a tourist. The ensuing hostilities led him to the southern army, then in Crimea, in Sevastopol, where he served first in the 4th Department of the Treasury, he is in charge of awards, and then was a translator at the headquarters of the commander-in-chief, participated in the battle on the Black river, alive and on the bastions during the siege. All this Berg described in "Notes on the siege of Sevastopol", in his "Sevastopol album", which appeared in 1858.
ellauri135.html on line 229: After the surrender of Sebastopol and the transition of the chief of staff of the Crimean army in Odessa, Berg left the service, and until 1868 was not employed at all, leading the life of a tourist. The war of 1859 between Italy and Austria drew Berg in Lombardy, where he was at different headquarters of the French, Italian and at the end of Garibaldi, the detachment of Alpine rifles, wrote a number of correspondences in the "Russian Gazette" in 1859 the Movement in 1860, in the Lebanese mountains between Druze and Maronites drew Berg to the East. He lived in Beirut, Damascus, visited Jerusalem, said, Alexandria. Cairo, pyramids and Keepaway left an inscription, then the first in the Russian language. The fruit of these wanderings there were a few articles in Moscow and St. Petersburg editions and book "Guide to Jerusalem and its surroundings" (1863). During this trip, Berg studied the Bedouin life, which wandered in the wilderness. In 1861 he returned to Russia and has translated a significant part of "pan Tadeusz" (printed in "Domestic. Notes" 1862). Then again, Berg went to the East, lived again in Beirut, Damascus and Jerusalem, and printed about this trip in several articles in "Fatherlands. Notes", "Russian Gazette", "Our time" and SPb. Statements".
ellauri151.html on line 198: For several years, Bridgman gained celebrity status when Charles Dickens met her during his 1842 American tour and wrote about her accomplishments in his American Notes. Her fame was short-lived, however, and she spent the remainder of her life in relative obscurity, most of it at the Perkins Institute, where she passed her time sewing and reading books in Braille. LOL
ellauri275.html on line 121: Satiirisen proosan mestariteoksessa "Onko hän mies?" kirjailija osoitti vanhan, taantumuksellisen maailman kuolevaisen tuhon. On huomattava, että sana "vallankumous" Gruusian kirjallisuudessa kuultiin ensimmäisen kerran Ilja Chavchavadzen Notes of a Passerby -teoksen sivuilta: "Älkää antako sanan vallankumous pelotella sinua, lukija! Vallankumous on rauhallisen menon alku!"
ellauri390.html on line 245: Vsevolod Krestovskin merkittävimpänä teoksena pidetään romaania "Pietarin slummit" (venäjäksi "Петербургские трущобы"). Romaani julkaistiin Patrionic Notes -lehdessä (1864-1866), otteita siitä julkaistiin myös Epokha-lehdessä (1864). Romaani julkaistiin erillisenä neljänä osana vuonna 1867 ja siitä tehtiin useita näköispainoxia.
xxx/ellauri129.html on line 637: Esofagus pseudonyme de Pierre Faillet 1872-1933. Danse Macabre. Vai olixe George? FAGUS 2068 (pseudonyme de Georges Faillet). Né de parents français à Bruxelles le 22 janvier 1872, mort accidentellement à Paris le 9 novembre 1933. Notes biographiques : Il a occupé un emploi à la préfecture de la Seine. Il collabora dès vingt ans aux revues littéraires La Plume, La Revue blanche, La Revue de Champagne, L´occident, le Mercure de France, assuma la direction de la ... Tästä hemmosta ei ole edes nenänpäätä pinnalla. Enintään näppylä ja karva. Un volume in-8, broché, non coupé.
xxx/ellauri130.html on line 564: Delphin-Antoine-Edmond Thiaudière, né le 17 mars 1837 à Gençay, où il est mort le 9 novembre 1930, est un homme de lettres français, à la fois poète, romancier, philosophe et « maximiste ». Issu d’une famille de médecins depuis quatre générations, Edmond Thiaudière, opte pour une carrière d’homme de lettres après s’être détourné de ses études de droit brillamment menées à Poitiers. Il s’essaie au roman, aux nouvelles, à la poésie, au théâtre, écrit des essais politiques et autres pamphlets, mais il se distingue surtout par son œuvre philosophique, parsemant sur quarante années une douzaine de recueils aux titres sibyllins, avec le sous-titre générique Notes d’un Pessimiste. Son premier recueil de pensées, La Proie du Néant, qu’il publie en 1886, contient en préambule une longue dédicace adressée à Léa et Mosès, ses deux chiens fidèles.
xxx/ellauri138.html on line 266: Roth also gave Bailey copies of two self-published manus, "Notes to my Biographer," a 295-page rebuttal of his ex-wife Memoirs of Claire Bloom in 1996, and "Notes on a Slander-Monger", a response to the notes and interviews Miller had compiled.
xxx/ellauri138.html on line 274: Meanwhile, the estate has aggressively decided to control access to the Roth documents independently held at Princeton University, which the university has purchased.Born in 2018 to Roth's friend Benjamin Taylor. The cache includes a copy of "Notes on a Slander-Monger ", unpublished essays on topics such as money, marriage and illness, and a list of his relationships with women, with commentaries.
xxx/ellauri138.html on line 302: One day Philip handed me the manuscript of Notes for My Biographer. 'Take it,' he said, holding out the stack of pages held together by a large rubber band.'I want you to read it.' The book was a rebuttal to Claire Bloom's Leaving a Doll's House, Philip's ex-wife's account of their marriage, which was published in 1996. Many of the stories he'd already told me. He'd talked a lot to me about both Claire and his first wife, Margaret Martinson.
xxx/ellauri154.html on line 103: Fyodor Dostoevsky "read widely in the numerous novels of George Sand" and translated her La dernière Aldini in 1844, but "discovered to his dismay that the work had already appeared in Russian". In his mature period, he expressed an ambiguous attitude towards her. For instance, in his novella Notes from Underground the narrator refers to the sentiments he expresses as, "I laugh off at that point the European, inexplicably lofty subtleties of George Sand".
xxx/ellauri224.html on line 223: Kyllä, Dostojevski kärsi lamauttavista epilepsiakohtauksista ja kamppaili peliriippuvuuden kanssa, mutta hän oli myös omistautunut perheenisä (haha), joka löysi elämänsä rakkauden noin toisen vaimonsa ja läheisen siivoojansa Annan kanssa. Jotkut hänen tunnetuimmista teoksistaan ovat "Karamazovin veljet", "Notes from Underground" ja "Crime and Punishment", kirjat, jotka muovasivat eksistentialismia ja jopa Freudin psykologiaa.
xxx/ellauri224.html on line 295: Tämä lainaus on poimittu kirjasta " Notes From Underground " (1864), Dostojevskin vastauksesta toisen venäläisen kirjailijan Nikolai Tšernyševskin villisti suosittuun filosofiseen romaaniin nimeltä "Mitä on tehtävä?"
xxx/ellauri224.html on line 307: "Notes from Underground" -elokuvan anonyymi päähenkilö oli ristiriitojen sotku, "vapaa" ihminen, joka tuskin pystyi toimimaan yhteiskunnassa. Jos jätettäisiin seuraamaan hänen "rationaalista omaa etuaan", seurauksena olisi kaaos, ei utopia. Dostojevski jatkoi teemaa " Rikos ja rangaistus ", ensimmäisessä hänen suurista romaaneistaan, jossa miehen julman rationaaliset suunnitelmat murhata vanha nainen rahan vuoksi menevät pahasti pieleen.
xxx/ellauri394.html on line 285: "Court Notes". The Independent. Vol. XI, no. 1586. Honolulu. August 16, 1900. p. 4. Archived from the original on October 8, 2016. Retrieved October 2, 2016.; "Dr. English's Suit Against Liliuokalani". The Honolulu Republican. Vol. I, no. 71. Honolulu. September 5, 1900. Image 8, col. 3. Archived from the original on November 9, 2017. Retrieved October 15, 2017.
24