ellauri005.html on line 1787: Abram slikt uträttar,

ellauri006.html on line 573:
Ärjäise kaislikon pedolle,

ellauri008.html on line 326: kuin hauki kaislikkoon.

ellauri011.html on line 1340: He regarded the latter as of the highest importance because dislike and ill opinion force people to conform in their behaviour to social norms, however he didn't consider public opinion as a suitable influence for governments.
ellauri020.html on line 721: However unlikely it seemed, Ivana was now considered a tabloid heroine, and her popularity seemed in inverse proportion to the fickle city’s new dislike of her husband. “Ivana is now a media goddess on par with Princess Di, Madonna, and Elizabeth Taylor,” Liz Smith reported. Months earlier, Ivana had undergone cosmetic reconstruction with a California doctor. She emerged unrecognizable to her friends and perhaps her children, as fresh and innocent of face as Heidi of Edelweiss Farms. Although she had negotiated four separate marital-property agreements over the last fourteen years, she was suing her husband for half his assets. Trump was trying to be philosophical. “When a man leaves a woman, especially when it was perceived that he has left for a piece of ass—a good one!—there are 50 percent of the population who will love the woman who was left,” he told me.
ellauri030.html on line 920: This has been tested experimentally. Audiences predictably enjoyed witnessing the demise of a disliked character. Testing had to be discontinued when the team ran out of subjects.
ellauri031.html on line 802: Flere år senere, på 1990-tallet, fant Minos igjen det han hadde skrevet og ble svært forundret. Samfunnet hadde endret seg slik at det som stod i profetien om ekteskap i oppløsning, samboere, umoralsk bilder på TV (internett), ikke lengre var en radikal profeti, men et speilbilde av verden.
ellauri042.html on line 498: Vignette of a Dislikeable Man

ellauri052.html on line 943: It may be helpful to note here that Bellow’s fame, already growing after The Adventures of Augie March, exploded after the publication of Herzog in 1964—the same year Daniel, his youngest son, was born. By the time the newly rich writer, urged by his third wife, moved into a fancy co-op on Lake Michigan, Greg already possessed enough of what he thought were his own opinions to dislike the white plush carpets, the 11 rooms “filled with fancy furniture and modern art.” Reminding the reader he was “raised by a frugal mother and a father who had no steady income,” Greg says that he “found the trappings of wealth in their new apartment so repellent that I complained bitterly to Saul,” who replied that he didn’t care about the new shiny things so long as he could still write—which he could. “As I always had, I accepted what he said about art at face value,” Greg admits, but he stopped visiting the new place. After the marriage deteriorated and Saul moved out, 3-year-old Daniel, in the words of ex-child-therapist Greg, “took to expressing his distress” by peeing on the carpets. “I have to admit that the yellow stains on them greatly pleased me,” Greg writes—for once showing off the Bellovian touch.
ellauri069.html on line 230: Gilbert ja Sullivan: Mulla on joku kirja niiden lyriikoista. Sullivan nikersi sävelmät ja Gilbert nakersi sanat. Sullivan's dislike of what he considered the artificial nature of Gilbert's plots led to their split.
ellauri074.html on line 649: Wallace was deeply suspicious of the media infrastructure that was, when he died, still largely known as “the Net”—“I allow myself to Webulize only once a week now,” he once told a grad student—and he remarked to his wife, as they were moving computer equipment into their house, “thank God I wasn't raised in this era.” Having written his first big stories on a Smith Corona typewriter, Wallace disliked digital drafts and e-publishing in general. He took particular pleasure in the fact that his house in Indiana, the one recreated in The End of the Tour, had the elegantly atavistic address of “Rural Route 2.” He preferred to file his students’ work not on computers, but in a pink Care Bears folder.
ellauri078.html on line 155: Upon their return, unmarried daughters were indeed expected to demonstrate their dutiful nature by setting aside their own interests in order to meet the needs of the home. For Dickinson the change was hardly welcome. Her letters from the early 1850s register dislike of domestic work and frustration with the time constraints created by the work that was never done. “God keep me from what they call households,” she exclaimed in a letter to Root in 1850.
ellauri080.html on line 155:
  • Dislikes change

  • ellauri080.html on line 159:
  • Dislikes abstract or theoretical concepts

  • ellauri080.html on line 182:
  • Dislikes structure and schedules

  • ellauri080.html on line 219:
  • Dislikes making small talk

  • ellauri080.html on line 221:
  • Dislikes being the center of attention

  • ellauri080.html on line 532: Concerning John Maynard Keynes, an INTJ, it was said: “[He spoke] on a great range of topics, on some of which he was thoroughly an expert, but on others [he had] derived his views from the few pages of a book at which he had happened to glance. The air of authority was the same in both cases.” Meanwhile, Bertrand Russell famously said that “The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.” Coincidentally, history records a number of ENTPs and INTJs very much disliking each other.
    ellauri089.html on line 205: Dave Langford reviewed Job: A Comedy of Justice for White Dwarf #61, and stated that "When blasphemy stops being witty and shocking, it tends to become pointless, like graffiti scrawled on church wall. I didn't dislike this one, but . . . wait for the paperback, eh?"
    ellauri095.html on line 227: Several issues led to a melancholic state and restricted his poetic inspiration in his last five years. His workload was heavy. He disliked living in Dublin, away from England and friends. He was disappointed at how far the city had fallen from its Georgian elegance of the previous century. His general health suffered and his eyesight began to fail. He felt confined and dejected. As a devout Jesuit, he found himself in an artistic dilemma. To subdue an egotism that he felt would violate the humility required by his religious position, he decided never to publish his poems. But Hopkins realised that any true poet requires an audience for criticism and encouragement. This conflict between his religious obligations and his poetic talent made him feel he had failed at both.
    ellauri097.html on line 107: Like Nietzsche, he also lambasted religious belief and the very concept of Cod, as Mencken was an unflinching atheist, particularly Christian fundamentalism, Christian Science and creationism, and against the "Booboisie," his word for the ignorant middle classes. In the summer of 1925, he attended the famous Scopes "Monkey Trial" in Dayton, Tennessee, and wrote scathing columns for the Baltimore Sun (widely syndicated) and American Mercury mocking the anti-evolution Fundamentalists (especially William Jennings Bryan). The play Inherit the Wind is a fictionalized version of the trial, and as noted above the cynical reporter E.K. Hornbeck is based on Mencken. In 1926, he deliberately had himself arrested for selling an issue of The American Mercury, which was banned in Boston by the Comstock laws. Mencken heaped scorn not only on the public officials he disliked but also on the state of American elective politics itself.
    ellauri097.html on line 426: Nietzsche especially disliked Kant’s idea that moral motivation consists in respect for a universal concept of virtue:
    ellauri098.html on line 526: ESFJs are traditionalists and believe in the authority of groups. They love stability and dislike conflict, so they can sometimes end up dismissing minority opinions in the name of achieving consensus. This can lead them to be controlling and intolerant. Some ESFJs also focus too much on making everyone happy at their own expense. But most ESFJs bring harmony to everyone around them.

    ellauri105.html on line 141: People are the same with their "dislike" of the Duchess of Sussex.
    ellauri106.html on line 392: "I'm exactly the opposite of religious, I'm anti-religious. I find religious people hideous. I hate the religious lies. It's all a big lie. … I have such a huge dislike. It's not a neurotic thing, but the miserable record of religion. I don't even want to talk about it, it's not interesting to talk about the sheep referred to as believers."
    ellauri110.html on line 318: Lydia Volchaninova, a good-looking, but very stern and opinionated young teacher with somewhat dictatorial inclinations is deeply engaged in the affairs of the local zemstvo. Devoted to the cause of helping peasants, she is interested in doing and speaking of nothing but practical work, mostly in the fields of medicine and education. Lydia dislikes the protagonist, a landscape painter, who frequently visits their house. From time to time the two clash over problems of both the rural community and Russia as a whole.
    ellauri115.html on line 396: Hume still felt, justly, under-appreciated. The "banks of the Thames", he insisted, were "inhabited by barbarians". There was not one Englishman in 50 "who if he heard I had broke my neck tonight would be sorry". Englishmen disliked him, Hume believed, both for what he was not and for what he was: not a Whig, not a Christian, but definitely a Scot. In England, anti-Scottish prejudice was rife. But his homeland too seemed to reject him. The final humiliation came in June 1763, when the Scottish prime minister, the Earl of Bute, appointed another Scottish historian, William Robertson, to be Historiographer Royal for Scotland.
    ellauri117.html on line 689: Zodiac Sign: John Locke is a Virgo. People of this zodiac sign like animals, healthy food, nature, cleanliness, and dislike rudeness and asking for help. The strengths of this sign are being loyal, analytical, kind, hardworking, practical, while weaknesses can be shyness, overly critical of self and others, all work and no play. The greatest overall compatibility with Virgo is Pisces and Cancer.
    ellauri119.html on line 553: Pragma comes from the Greek term πρᾶγμα, meaning "businesslike", from which terms like "pragmatic" are derived. Lee defines pragma as the most practical type of love, not necessarily derived out of true romantic love. Rather, pragma is a convenient type of love.
    ellauri135.html on line 565: Konsta ajaa Oka jokea alavirtaan peräprutkulla. Poijunvartija Shaslik varottaa ukonilmasta. Konsta pelastautuu poijusedän kaa Svjatoslav Richterin kesämökille. Svjatoslav on tiettävästi homo. Ahaa soittajaa ei ole vielä näkynyt, sanoo Shishkebab. Hän tuokin aina pelinsä mukanaan. Kazokaa tuota ovea. Se on niin leveä, et peli mahtuu sisälle.
    ellauri144.html on line 70: The Greeks were creative but, like puellae, they lacked steadiness of purpose. From the Roman point of view, they were puerile, they just “fooled around” (nugari). Romans are brought up to be serious and businesslike, moralistic and
    ellauri144.html on line 928: Tore Hund (norrønt Þórir hundr), født rundt 990 og død en gang etter 1030, var en av de betydeligste høvdingene i Hålogaland. Han hadde gård på Bjarkøy i det senere Troms fylke. Tore Hund var en av lederne i opprøret mot kong Olav Haraldsson Digre, slik det er blitt beskrevet i Snorre Sturlassons saga om Olav den hellige i Heimskringla.
    ellauri144.html on line 932: Fremst i kongshæren sto Olav selv, og han hogg med sverdet etter Tore, men Tore hadde ei reinsskinnskofte, og slaget sklei av i en sky av reinshår. Kongen ropte da til Bjørn Stallare som hadde øks: «Slå du hunden som jern ikke biter på!» Bjørn Stallare ga Tore et slag med øksehammeren slik at han vaklet, men slo ham ikke overende. I stedet kjørte Tore spydet Selshevneren gjennom den andre mens han sa: «Slik spidder vi bjørnene!»
    ellauri144.html on line 944: Tore Hund og hans følgesmenn kjempet ikke mot en rettferdig helgenkonge. Tvert imot, de bekjempet den urimelige og harde kong Olav Haraldsson som kom sørfra. Helgengjøringen skjedde etter slaget på Stiklestad og i et slikt omfang at alle tidligere vurderinger og verdier ble snudd opp ned. En av grunnene var at danskekongens Knut den mektige.
    ellauri144.html on line 948: Det kirken fordømte mest, å gjøre opprør mot en kristen konge og således mot Gud selv, er det samme som i Sigvats øyne likevel kan beundres ettersom det krever en mann med usedvanlig krigersk mot å gå imot slike mektige krefter.
    ellauri150.html on line 625: More than three years later, we see Ben-Hur working one of many oars. He is going by "41" (or is that XLI?), his seat number, and he is full of hate. A Roman consul, Quintus Arrius, has boarded the ship, and it goes to war almost immediately. The consul wants Ben-Hur for a charioteer, and doesn't understand why Ben-Hur has any other hopes of life after the galleys; if they succeed in battle, he'll keep rowing, and if they don't, he'll die chained to the oar. Ben-Hur makes clear that he believes God will help him, also that he dislikes the idea of dying chained to the oar; this has a delayed effect; at the time, "back to your oar," but the consul orders him unchained after all the galley slaves had been chained.
    ellauri152.html on line 315: KORYDON Kuitenkin se laiduntaa Joensuun parhaissa kaislikoisssa ja yläjuoxulla, mis kasvaa hirvenjuuria ja vesiminttua mehevänä luhtana.
    ellauri159.html on line 1197: You dislike writing according to a predetermined structure. You want control over their own creative process. You are drawn to original pictures and imaginative symbols. When revising a draft, search for a central, unifying theme, and articulate it for your reader. At the same time, avoid trying too hard to be unique. Instead, aim for authenticity, remember to mention the sources of the pictures.
    ellauri160.html on line 50: Both of us young and happy-hearted. Two small people, without dislike or suspicion.
    ellauri164.html on line 421: Got 90 pages in and I disliked every character, is that the goal?
    ellauri164.html on line 552: Two lessons: 1. The failings of good men may be culpable in God's sight and displeasing to him out of all proportion to the degree of blameworthiness they present to our eye. So far is it from being true (as many seem to think) that believers' sins are no sins at all, and need give no concern, that, on the contrary, the Lord dislikes the stain of sin most when it is seen in his dear children. The case of Moses is not singular. Sins which the Lord overlooks in other men he will occasionally put some mark of special displeasure upon, when they are committed by one who is eminent for holiness and honourable service. It is, no doubt, a just instinct which leads all right-thinking people to be blind to the failings of good men who have been signally useful in their day. But if the good men become indulgent to their own faults they are likely to be rudely awakened to a sense of their error. The better a man is, his sins may be the more dishonouring to God. A spot hardly visible on the coat of a labouring man, may be glaringly offensive on the shining raiment of a throned king.
    ellauri197.html on line 524: By the 1930s, the term gold digger had reached the United Kingdom because British film industry made a remake of The Gold Diggers. While the film has been disliked by critics, several sequels with the same title have been made.
    ellauri197.html on line 649: By the age of 12, Browning had written a book of poetry, which he later destroyed for want of a publisher. After attending one or two private schools and showing an insuperable dislike of school life, he was educated at home by a tutor, using the resources of his father's library. By 14 he was fluent in French, Greek, Italian and Latin. He became an admirer of the Romantic poets, especially Shelley, whom he followed in becoming an atheist and a vegetarian (and a bisexual). At 16, he studied Greek at University College London, but left after his first year. His parents' evangelical faith prevented his studying at either Oxford or Cambridge University, both then open only to members of the Church of England. He had inherited substantial musical ability through his mother, and composed arrangements of various songs. He refused a formal career and ignored his parents' remonstrations by dedicating himself to poetry. He stayed at home until the age of 34, financially dependent on his family until his marriage. His father sponsored the publication of his son's poems. Varsinainen vanhapiika, neiti-ihminen.
    ellauri219.html on line 975: Underworld (also released as Paying the Penalty) is a 1927 American silent crime film directed by Josef von Sternberg and starring Clive Brook, Evelyn Brent and George Bankrupt. The film launched Sternberg's eight-year collaboration with Paramount Pictures, with whom he would produce his seven films with actress Marlene Dietrich. Journalist and screenwriter Ben Hecht won an Academy Award for Best Original Story. Time felt the film was realistic in some parts, but disliked the Hollywood cliché of turning an evil character's heart to gold at the end. Filmmaker and surrealist Luis Buñuel named Underworld as his all time favorite film. Critic Andrew Sarris cautions that Underworld does not qualify as "the first gangster film" as Sternberg "showed little interest in the purely gangsterish aspects of the genre" nor the "mechanics of mob power." Film critic Dave Kehr, on the other hand, writing for the Chicago Reader in 2014, rates Underworld as one of the great gangster films of the silent era. "The film established the fundamental elements of the gangster movie: a hoodlum hero; ominous, night-shrouded city streets; floozies; and a blazing finale in which the cops cut down the protagonist."
    ellauri221.html on line 271: Surrounded by anthropogenic ecological disasters, brutal wars, and the threat of destruction looming over the future of the planet itself due to our actions, constructed knowledge, and structured ignorance, it becomes urgent to examine the underlying ontological concepts and the reality from which our children are incarcerated in schools. This research is an attempt to look at what is the knowledge that children get exposed to and my main question is whether identity and civilisation are not the underlying culprits in our alienation from the world. As Tove Jansson shows in her moominbooks, perhaps it is necessary to empathise even with the one who dislikes us and not limit ourselves to people only, but see if “I can often have tender, concerned feelings for anyone (animals and people included) as fortunate or less fortunate than me”.
    ellauri222.html on line 617: Mildred Stark is a crippled girl who goes to work for Einhorn after the stock-market crash and becomes his mistress. She is aged about thirty and heavy, but Einhorn is flattered that she is in love with him. Mildred dislikes Augie.
    ellauri223.html on line 70: Domestic affairs and partnerships are of little account, because, excepting the sign of honor, each one receives what he is in need of. To the heroes and heroines of the republic, it is customary to give the pleasing gifts of honor, beautiful wreaths, sweet food, heroine, or splendid clothes, while they are feasting. In the daytime all use white garments within the city, but at night or outside the city they use red garments either of wool or silk. They hate black as they do dung, and therefore they dislike the Japanese, who are fond of black, and Africans, for obvious reasons. Pride they consider the most execrable vice, and one who acts proudly is chastised with the most ruthless correction. Wherefore no one thinks it lowering to wait at table or to work in the kitchen or fields or clean the toilets. All work they call discipline, and thus they say that it is honorable to go on foot, to do any act of nature, to see with the eye, and to speak with the tongue, and waft with the tail; and when there is need, they distinguish philosophically between tears and spittle. Every man who, when he is told off to work, does his duty, is considered very honorable.
    ellauri245.html on line 483: – Vi ønsker å gjøre foreldre oppmerksomme på at dette skjer, for å bevisstgjøre dem på at det kan skje med deres barn. Og vi ønsker at de tar grep som gjør at barna deres kan framdeles også legge ut slike videoer, sier politioverbetjent ved Kripos, Hanne Andreassen.
    ellauri247.html on line 417: Lady Mary Montagu (1689-1762), court beauty, wife of the British Ambassador to Istanbul and prolific letter-writer, was the first major female travel writer of her time. She was a correspondent with Alexander Pope, knew and was disliked by Horace Walpole, and introduced the Turkish, then Ottoman, method of inoculation to Britain.
    ellauri257.html on line 387: Do leftists dislike Jordan Peterson because he is a threat to them and they cannot win an argument against him?
    ellauri257.html on line 388: No. I dislike Jordan Peterson because I find his arguments on many subjects uninformed and riven with factually incorrect assumptions.
    ellauri260.html on line 382: There is, in fact, to-day over wide areas of life a positive dislike of man, a taedium generis humani, as it was called in the last days of the ancient world. We have at one and the same time the evil of overpopulation, the concentration of men in cities, the economic struggle, and so on. We have not space enough. One man is the enemy of another. Above all our particular questions we feel the power over men of the trivial, the common, the evil. The idea of Superman Tattoo occurred to some ; but can thought alone get over realities and their power ? So the human problem finds us involved in a terrible complication, and the Socialist ideal cannot extricate us. The situation would be hopeless if there were not higher forces working in man, making more of him, unsealing old and new springs of life to him. At present, however, we are merely searching, but I bet I am on the right track here.
    ellauri262.html on line 168: C. S. Lewis wrote that he regarded MacDonald as his "master": "Picking up a copy of Phantastes one day at a train-station bookstall, I began to read. A few hours later, I knew that I had crossed a great frontier."[citation needed] G. K. Chesterton cited The Princess and the Goblin as a book that had "made a difference to my whole existence". Even Mark Twain, who initially disliked MacDonald, became friends with him, and there is some evidence that Twain was influenced by him. MacDonald's theology "celebrated the rediscovery of God as Father, and Christ as a shaved Lion King."
    ellauri262.html on line 233:
    Suislikossa kahisee

    ellauri262.html on line 235: Kenneth Grahame (8. maaliskuuta 1859 Edinburgh, Skotlanti – 6. heinäkuuta 1932 Pangbourne, Berkshire, Englanti) oli brittiläinen satukirjailija. Hänen tunnetuin teoksensa on vuonna 1908 julkaistu lastenkirjaklassikko Suislikossa kahisee (engl. The Wind in the Willows).
    ellauri313.html on line 473: Most Americans are not entirely comfortable with the concept of "cool," or businesslike, negotiations in an atmosphere of some degree of physical threat or coercion. For the most part, they do not consciously assign to force any rational or reasonable role in "ordinary" negotiations. In the recent past (except in the case of "just" revolutions), we have tended to the view that only a criminal or a sick or insane person initiates the use of force. Therefore, we are inclined to believe that someone who uses force is not only our enemy, but an enemy of humanity—an outlaw who deserves extermination, imprisonment, or medical constraint and treatment. The "crusade," and even an initial pacifism as well, comes more naturally to Americans than the kind of cool, restrained, and moderate willingness to threaten or use force that will be suggested in this book.
    ellauri323.html on line 187:

    Kaislikossa kuhisee


    ellauri323.html on line 194: Marianne Moore syntyi Kirkwoodissa, Missourissa, presbyteerikirkon pappilassa, jossa hänen äidinpuoleinen isoisänsä John Riddle Warner palveli pastorina. Hänen isänsä, John Milton Moore, koneinsinööri ja hullu keksijä, kärsi psykoottisesta episodista, jonka seurauksena hänen vanhempansa erosivat ennen hänen syntymäänsä; Moore ei koskaan tavannut häntä. Hiän oppi myöhemmin sukulaisilta, että uskonnollisen harhan kuumeessa hän katkaisi oikean kätensä. Hiänet ja hiänen vanhemman veljensä John Warner Moore kasvatti heidän äitinsä Mary Warner Moore. Perhe kirjoitti toisilleen suuria kirjeitä koko elämänsä ajan, ja he osoittivat toisiaan usein leikkisillä lempinimillä, jotka perustuivat Kaislikossa suhisee kirjan hahmoihin ja käyttivät yksityistä kieltä.
    ellauri359.html on line 42: Elokuva "Kaislikossa suhisee" oli yllättävän paska. All male panel ikäviä hinurityyppejä, varsinkin toad, mutta muutkin. Oliko kirjoittaja kenties vasenkätinen?
    ellauri362.html on line 114: Darcy ja hänen serkkunsa Richard Fitzwilliam matkustavat joka kevät Kentiin auttamaan tätiään Lady Catherinea tämän Rosings Parkin kartanon kevätsiivouxessa. Lady Catherine Bourgh inhoaa kevätsiivousta yhtä paljon kuin Kaislikossa suhiseen myyrä. Heidän linja-automatkallaan Lontoosta Fitzwilliam huomaa Darcyn surkeasti sormeilevan Elizabethin kirjontalangan kirjanmerkkiä, ja hän haluaa kuulla siihen liittyvän romanttisen tarinan. Välttääkseen kertomasta Fitzwilliamille totuutta Darcy päättää nopeasti tarjota hänelle vaihtoehtoisen tarinan siitä, kuinka hän pelasti yhden parhaista ystävistään harkitsemattomasta avioliitosta. Tarina tyydyttää Fitzwilliamin uteliaisuuden ja lisää hänen arviotaan Darcysta.
    ellauri364.html on line 354: näillä he kiusaavat noloja huldroja. slikt retar de snöda huldror.
    ellauri365.html on line 47: Nordiska familjebok (jonka Jöns koppasi Tutun jäämistöstä) tähdentää Antonin ällistyxexi Maupassantin suurta terveyttä. Vaikea uskoa, Nissen mielestä, Guyhän oli sadisti joka nai ja suomi kirjoissa äitiä ja tytärtä. Pähkähulluhan se oli loppupeleissä. Sen hulluus juontui luultavasti ranujen 1870-71 sodan nolosta tappiosta sakuille. Eräässä ekoista Guyn lastuista lutka Läskipallero antoi preussilaiselle isänmaallisesti pillua ja joutui siitä silti muiden vihoihin. Maupassantit oli porvareita, le particule oli pelkkää hämäystä. Family guytä paaponut äiti ryhtyi elävän leskexi, kun isälle ei riittänyt pelkkä sexi vaan se ryhtyi väkivaltaisexi. Kiltit "sedät" Flaubert ja Swinburne väänsivät Guyn vizaa in loco parentis. (Mixi Guy ylipäänsä kävi Algernonin kanssa naku-uinnilla? Ota kiinni mistä saat, pikkukaveri.) Guy piti veneilystä kuten se Kaislikossa tuulee Ratty.
    ellauri375.html on line 206: or disliked can be really tough. If you're up for it, I'm here to listen and chat about anything you'd like.
    xxx/ellauri075.html on line 155: Shestov's dislike of the Soviet regime led him to undertake a long journey out of Russia, and he eventually ended up in France. (LOL se lähti livohkaan bolshevikkeja, niinkuin monet muutkin ökyporvarit.) The author was a popular figure in France, where his originality was quickly recognized. That this Russian was newly appreciated is attested by his having been asked to contribute to a prestigious French philosophy journal.
    xxx/ellauri122.html on line 1203: However, despite her stylized and artificial appearance, Lukyanova strongly dislikes the Barbie monicker, arguing that she is just "a classy girl."
    xxx/ellauri123.html on line 716: Nabokov´s wife Véra was his strongest supporter and assisted him throughout his lifetime, but Nabokov admitted to having a "prejudice" against women writers. He wrote to Edmund Wilson, who had been making suggestions for his lectures: "I dislike Jane Austen, and am prejudiced, in fact against all women writers. They are in another class." Although Véra worked as his personal translator and secretary, he made publicly known that his ideal translator would be male, and especially not a "Russian-born female". In the first chapter of Glory he attributes the protagonist's similar prejudice to the impressions made by children's writers like Lidiya Charski, and in the short story "The Admiralty Spire" deplores the posturing, snobbery, antisemitism, and cutesiness he considered characteristic of Russian women authors.
    xxx/ellauri124.html on line 464: is almost never used sarcastically. It's used to demonstrate dislike or
    xxx/ellauri127.html on line 132: Dostoyevsky, Nabokov told anyone who would listen, was “a third-rate writer and his fame is incomprehensible.” He called Henry James “that pale porpoise.” Philip Roth? “Farcical.” Norman Mailer? “I detest everything that he stands for.” T. S. Eliot and Thomas Mann were “fakes.” When his friend Wilson suggested that he include Jane Austen in his Cornell survey course on European literature, Nabokov responded, “I dislike Jane [Austen] and am prejudiced, in fact, against all women writers.” Leo Tolstoy and Nikolai Gogol: da. Everybody else: nyet.
    xxx/ellauri127.html on line 743: Endymion received scathing criticism after its release, and Keats himself noted its diffuse and unappealing style. Keats did not regret writing it, as he likened the process to leaping into the ocean to become more acquainted with his surroundings; in a poem to J. A. Hessey, he expressed that "I was never afraid of failure; for I would sooner fail than not be among the greatest." However, he did feel regret in its publishing, saying "it is not without a feeling of regret that I make it public." Not all critics disliked the work. eg. the poet Thomas Hood.  Henry Morley said, "The song of Endymion throbs throughout with a noble poet's sense of all that his art means for him. What mechanical defects there are in it may even serve to quicken our sense of the youth and freshness of this voice of aspiration." Meaning: Dig it mon. Endymionin jälkeen Keaz kommentoi sen vastaanottoa seuraavasti.
    xxx/ellauri129.html on line 648: When Illinois opened its first hospital for the mentally ill in 1851, the state legislature passed a law that within two years of its passage was amended to require a public hearing before a person could be committed against his or her will. There was one exception, however: a husband could have his wife committed without either a public hearing or her consent. In 1860, Theophilus Packard judged that his wife was "slightly insane", a condition he attributed to "excessive application of body and mind". He arranged for a doctor, J.W. Brown, to speak with her. The doctor pretended to be a sewing machine salesman. During their conversation, Elizabeth complained of her husband's domination and his accusations to others that she was insane. Dr. Brown reported this conversation to Theophilus (along with the observation that Mrs. Packard "exhibited a great dislike to me"). Theophilus decided to have Elizabeth committed. She learned of this decision on June 18, 1860, when the county sheriff arrived at the Packard home to take her into custody.
    xxx/ellauri137.html on line 763: Everyone who knew me at this point knows that I dislike first person narratives and it must be an absolutely amazing story for me to overcome that strong, strong dislike. In this case because I had to follow Rei's every thought, I couldn't help but judge her for them and find her bratty and ...in need of common sense.
    xxx/ellauri149.html on line 485: Also, something of note is that, as much as he dislikes it, the mob is technically just calling him to do his job, which puts them mostly on the side of Rome ("We have no king but Caesar")...sort of. So by appeasing them THEN, he establishes himself as being both pro-Rome and pro-Jews.
    xxx/ellauri165.html on line 318: In 1783, Greville needed to find a rich wife to replenish his finances, and found a fit in the form of eighteen-year-old heiress Henrietta Middleton. Emma would be a problem, as he disliked being known as her lover (this having become apparent to all through her fame in Romney's artworks), and his prospective wife would not accept him as a suitor if he lived openly with Emma Hart.
    xxx/ellauri177.html on line 369: Äänet olivat tulleet selvemmiksi. Puutarhan eläimet puolestaan ​​huusivat heitä rakastamaan toisiaan kuin aikuistuneet bambit Disneyn Bambi-leffassa. Rumpali rummutti puunrunkoa. Cicadas lauloi hellällä kuoliaaksi. Perhoset levittävät suudelmia siipien räpyttäessä. Varpusilla oli hetken mielijohteisuutta, sulttaanien hyväilyt kulkivat innokkaasti seragion keskellä. Kirkkaissa vesissä kuului kutuaan auringossa olevien kalojen pyörtymistä, sammakoiden kiihkeää ja melankolista huutoa, koko salaperäinen intohimo, joka oli hirviömäisesti kyllästynyt kaislikoiden harmaaseen tylsyyteen. Metsän syvyyksissä satakielet huusivat nautinnon helmiäisnaurua, polttarit uljasivat, humalassa sellaisesta himosta, että he kuolivat väsymykseen lähes supistuneet naaraat. Ja kallioiden laatoilla, harvoin pensaiden reunalla, käärmeet, solmitut kaksi kerrallaan, sihisivät hiljaa kaxihaaraisine kyrpineen, kun taas suuret liskot haudivat munia, niiden selkärangat värähtelivät lievästä hurmiosta. Kaikkein syrjäisimmistä kulmista, auringonpaistetta, varjossa olevia reikiä, nousi eläimen haju, lämmin yleisestä urasta. Kaikessa tässä kuhisevassa elämässä oli lapsellista jännitystä. Jokaisen lehden alla sikiöi hyönteinen; jokaisessa ruohotumpussa kasvoi perhe; lentävät kärpäset, liimattuina toisiinsa, eivät odottaneet laskeutumistaan ​​lannoittaakseen. Näkymättömät elämän palaset, jotka asuttavat ainetta, aineen atomit itse, rakastivat, pariutuivat, antoivat maaperälle herkullisen liikkeen, tekivät puistosta suuren haureuden.
    xxx/ellauri187.html on line 103: Rilke's diaries and letters, lively with tales of self-dislike and depression, seem to out-Kafka Kafka himself. Still, biographers should beware of making too much of these highly polished introspections. Rilke conceived of writing as a form of prayer, as Kafka did, and he made astringent self-examination a ritualistic prelude to work. Both writers magnified their inadequacies, sometimes to the point of a vaunting self-regard; it was an efficient way to wrest from their doubts a diligent beauty of creation.
    xxx/ellauri193.html on line 72: Moreover, dark empanzees were a little higher in neuroticism, a type of negative thinking, but did not score higher on depression, anxiety or stress. Instead, their neuroticism may reflect sub-traits such as anger, hostility or self-doubt. Indeed, the dark empanzees reported judging themselves more harshly than those with dark triad personalities. So it seems they may have a conscience, perhaps even disliking their dark side. Alternatively, their negative emotions may be a response to their self-loathing.
    xxx/ellauri193.html on line 464: If immigrants still feel that they dislike everything this country and its people stand for, there is a big wide world out there with plenty of places to choose to live in, but I doubt they would find anywhere better than here.
    xxx/ellauri224.html on line 369: It is clear that Eliot would have preferred to live in a society in which it was not even possible to ask awkward spiritual questions. He grew up under an austere Unitarianism and moved to a high Anglicanism – not because he disliked the doctrinal certainties of the Catholic church, but because Anglicanism meant he could amalgamate religious certainty with a high Tory monarchism that regarded even the rise of the Tudors as a dilution of the divine right of kings. (He mourned Richard III each year with a white rose in his lapel). His antisemitism was expressed in visceral terms but at root it was free-thinking he thought should have little place in a good society as much as the Jews he identified it with.
    xxx/ellauri250.html on line 336: I Norge kalles det "konstruktiv overtalelse", slik kvinner gjerne forventer av en mann, det ligger tross alt en rollespil mellom kjønnene.
    xxx/ellauri314.html on line 35: ”If you wish to see the truth, then hold no opinions for or against anything. To set up what you like against what you dislike is the disease of the mind… Do not search for the truth; only cease to cherish opinions”.
    xxx/ellauri320.html on line 363: Det å bli gammel, tenkte jeg ikke over før for 2 år siden da jeg plutselig havnet på sykehuset en morgen. Jeg skulle dusje, så da vannet kom over hodet mitt, var det plutselig vondt å få vann i håret? Jeg skjønte ingenting, så ble alt rundt meg "rosa?" Da besvimte jeg og hektet av glassdøren på dusjkabinettet. Jeg våknet etter noen sekunder på gulvet utenfor dusjen med døren på snei! Jeg hadde ikke følt meg dårlig før dette. Var frisk som en fisk og syklet mye. På sykehuset konstanterer de dobbel lungebetennelse, og flere mangler i blodet, bl.annet Kadium? Og jeg som spiser variert mat, tar mine vitaminer og noe kosttilskudd, vet ikke hvorfor dette skjedde. Men etter noen dager på sykehus var alt ok igjen. Det var ikke hyggelig å reise til sykehus med håndkle rundt håret og badehåndkle rundt kroppen uten noen andre ting med. Jeg ler av det i dag. Men tilbake til det å bli gammel! Plutselig skjer det noe uventet, som artrose, dårligere tarmfunksjon. Jeg la om kostholdet mitt 100%, og vips var alle smerter borte, tarmene har begynt å fungere normalt igjen etter å ha fått Ulcerøs kolitt. Med min nye måte å spise på, er alt bra hittil. Håper det fortsetter slik. Når man blir gammel, gjør det ofte litt vondt her og der. Men kostholdet er nøkkelen til god og smertefri helse. God sommer!
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