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122 Sentences With "solitudes"

How to use solitudes in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "solitudes" and check conjugation/comparative form for "solitudes". Mastering all the usages of "solitudes" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"That contributed to whatever continued later on as insecurities, as solitudes," he said.
The images in "Les Hautes Solitudes," though, seem more casually strung together than assembled for specific meanings.
I recently returned home to Montreal after 19503 years abroad, curious to discover whether the two solitudes still existed.
It taps into centuries-old economic and linguistic tensions at the heart of the Two Solitudes narrative of our country.
"Today the French speak English and the English speak French, and that didn't exist when you had the two solitudes," he said.
As I stirred and stretched, it occurred to me that this might be the thing we share, this grief for our many solitudes.
A lot of ambient music can feel escapist or enveloping, something to overwhelm the chaos around you, but Limpid as the Solitudes has a slightly different feeling.
A new collection, a pluralized "Dialogues With Solitudes," was published last year by Steidl and Le Bal with support from Stephen Bulger Gallery and Howard Greenberg Gallery.
"Les Hautes Solitudes" isn't only silent (no audible dialogue, no music), it also has no explanatory text of any kind (subtitles included) or opening and closing credits.
The problem is loneliness, especially after dark; though not close friends, they are both widowed, and she's wondering whether they might pool their solitudes, as it were, and find comfort.
"Crowded Solitudes," his new album on the Clean Feed label, features an alert trio with Kris Davis on piano and Gerald Cleaver on drums, bringing tangible shape to compositions that often court abstraction.
Les hautes solitudes (1974) is the most stunning film of this transitional period, a completely silent work that unfolds in a series of captured moments, or what Garrel has described as the outtakes of a film that never existed.
The sculptures are a powerful metaphor for this city, which has long been polarized by what the celebrated Canadian novelist Hugh MacLennan called the "Two Solitudes" — the perception, fairly or not, that French- and English-speaking Quebecers coexist uneasily.
In getting ready for my trip, I decided to explore whether the cultural divisions between English and French Canadians — referred to as "The Two Solitudes" — still existed in Montreal in 2018, some 28 years after I left Quebec, my birthplace.
"It is taboo to talk about the two solitudes, because we are supposed to pretend that we all get along when we are, in many ways, still separate," said Heather O'Neill, a Montreal-based Anglophone novelist, who has daringly explored the city's decadent underworld from the perspective of French Quebecois characters.
Mostly what we get is her: the Bum running and jumping; playing in the canyons; snuggling in a sleeping bag with a copy of Edward Abbey's Desert Solitaire (while Abbey, one of the great misanthropes of American literature, rolls sickened in his grave, as the secret places of his blessed solitudes now unspool in mass communications for all the world to find and invade).
Jean-François Courtine. Paris: L'Herne, 1989. Repris dans Solitudes I. • “Au demeurant,” in Demeure-Bauduin. Saint-Brieuc: Office Départemental de Développement Culturel des Côtes-du-Nord, 1989. • “Musicage,” Revue d'esthétique, 13/14/15, 1988. Repris dans Solitudes II. • “Du pareil au Même,” Le Temps de la réflexion, IX, 1988. Repris dans Solitudes II. • “Tourner la page?,” La Nouvelle Revue de Psychanalyse, 37, 1988. Repris dans Solitudes I. • “L'Horreur du vide,” Le Temps de la réflexion , VIII, 1987. Repris dans Solitudes I. • “Martin Heidegger,” La Nouvelle Revue Française, 410, 1987. • “Du Monologue,” La Nouvelle Revue de Psychanalyse, 36, 1987. Repris dans Solitudes I. • “Long est le Temps,” La Nouvelle Revue de Psychanalyse , 32, 1985.
Two Solitudes is a 1945 novel by Hugh MacLennan. It popularized the term two solitudes to refer to the perceived lack of communication between English- and French-speaking Canadians.
"Two Solitudes" refers to a perceived lack of communication, and moreover a lack of will to communicate, between Anglophone and Francophone people in Canada. The term was popularized by Hugh MacLennan's novel Two Solitudes. In her investiture speech as Governor-General of Canada, Michaëlle Jean specifically stated that "the time of 'two solitudes' had finished".
Until April 2012, about 223 studio albums were released by Solitudes. The years of release are according to Solitudes' official website. The albums released within the same year are listed randomly since no exact release date can be found. This list is incomplete.
The cultural divide between Canada's Francophone and Anglophone culture is strong and was famously referred to as the "Two Solitudes" by Canadian writer Hugh MacLennan. Reflecting their deep-seated colonial roots, the Solitudes were historically strongly entrenched in Montreal, splitting the city geographically at Saint Laurent Boulevard.
His most famous novel, Two Solitudes, a literary allegory for the tensions between English and French Canada, followed in 1945. That year, he left Lower Canada College. Two Solitudes won MacLennan his first Governor General's Award for Fiction. In 1948, MacLennan published The Precipice, which again won the Governor General's Award.
Yuri's name has appeared on numerous record releases with EMI, Universal Music, Sony Music, Solitudes and Avalon and other record labels.
March 10, 1989. Of Hopscotch and Little Girls,"Two film solitudes?: Producer pulls films from Genies in favour of new Jutras". Montreal Gazette.
Hutcheon, Linda. Splitting Images: Contemporary Canadian Ironies. Toronto: OUP, 1991. pp. 18-21. For Hutcheon's work on ethnic minority writing see Other Solitudes: Canadian Multicultural Fiction. Eds.
Montreal is also the cultural capital for English Quebec. The Montreal Gazette newspaper, McGill University, and the Centaur Theatre are traditional hubs of Anglo culture. The cultural divide between Montreal's and Canada's Francophone and Anglophone culture was strong and was famously referred to as the Two Solitudes by Canadian writer Hugh MacLennan. Reflecting their deep-seated colonial roots, the Solitudes were historically strongly entrenched in Montreal, splitting the city geographically at Saint Laurent Boulevard.
Louis Carmain is a Canadian writer."New solitudes: What do three new works of Francophone fiction reveal to the Anglophone reader? Thankfully, nothing cohesive". The Globe and Mail, October 17, 2015.
Music for the film was composed by Maurice Jarre, his first and only work for a Canadian film.Stephen Godfrey, "Dr. Zhivago's composer takes on Two Solitudes". The Globe and Mail, March 27, 1978.
The Canadian Classique, also known as the 401 Derby and the Two Solitudes Derby is a soccer rivalry between Canadian clubs, Toronto FC and the Montreal Impact. The rivalry gets the "401" nickname from Ontario Highway 401, which forms most of the standard driving route between the two cities (with the remainder being Quebec Autoroute 20), as well as the Two Solitudes book and cultural phenomenon. It is a tense rivalry, stemming from other sporting rivalries between Toronto and Montreal.
After Garneau's death, his unpublished poems were collected by Élie under the title Les Solitudes, and published in 1949 together with Regards... as Poésies complètes: Regards et jeux dans l'espace, Les solitudes. Garneau's "influence only became apparent after the publication of his Poésies complètes in 1949," says the Dictionary of Literary Biography. "Since that time the number of studies on his life and work has multiplied considerably.... Perhaps only Emile Nelligan has been the object of so much critical attention" in Quebec.
Foran, Charles. "No More Solitudes". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin & North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific, pp 350–361.
"Beautiful partnership: La Beaute de Pandore fifth collaboration for Biname, Richard". Montreal Gazette, June 28, 1999. It premiered on February 17, 2000 at the Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois."Two solitudes, one busy lady".
D'une nation à l'autre: des deux solitudes à la cohabitation. Montreal: Éditions Alain Stanké, 1997. Some commentators, inside and outside Quebec, think that the reaction to Richler was excessive, and sometimes bordered on racist.Khouri, Nadia.
Vaduz, Liechstenstein: H.-P. Gassner Verlag, 1989. Traduction (inégale) en allemand d’un chapitre de Solitudes (1989). • “Sans mot dire,” in Autour de Etre et Temps de Heidegger: Questions de méthode et voies de recherche, ed.
A more controversial figure is Pierre Trudeau, who is often praised for his handling of the October Crisis (also known as the FLQ Crisis) and the process of constitutional reform that implemented the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms but who also caused considerable Western Alienation and has been criticised for the critical failure to bring Quebec into the 1982 agreement on constitutional reform. Trudeau was nevertheless ranked 3rd in the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's contest to choose The Greatest Canadian. Most recently, Haitian- born Francophone Michaëlle Jean, the current Governor-General, has overcome some initial misgivings regarding her appointment. The motto chosen for her arms, Briser les solitudes (break down the solitudes), echoes one of the significant works of early English Canadian fiction, Hugh MacLennan's Two Solitudes which describes the sometimes painful separateness dividing Canada's English and French-speaking populations.
"No More Solitudes". 2000. In Broughton, Simon and Ellingham, Mark with McConnachie, James and Duane, Orla (Ed.), World Music, Vol. 2: Latin & North America, Caribbean, India, Asia and Pacific, pp 350–361. Rough Guides Ltd, Penguin Books.
She has also written several plays, including the bilingual musical Beautiful Deeds/De beaux gestes"Love bridges two solitudes in Deeds". The Gazette, March 15, 1990. and the drama White Weddings."A spunky play for the age".
Mathilde Marie Constance Ménétrier was born in 1846. In 1869, she married Anatole-Théodore-Marie Huot, the editor of the leftist Parisian review, L'Encyclopédie Contemporaine Illustrée. She was a close friend of the Swedish anarchist, impressionist painter Ivan Aguéli, whom she indirectly introduced to Sufism and dedicated her collection of symbolism poems Le Missel de Notre-Dame des Solitudes ("The Missal of Our Lady of Solitudes"). Huot was an advocate for animal rights and member of the Parisian animal protection society, founder of the Popular League against Vivisection and France's first hospice for animals.
The Concordian, November 17, 2009. and originally from Ottawa, Ontario,"Leif Vollebekk’s Twin Solitudes, a track-by-track journey through space, time, and Florida". Ottawa Magazine, April 7, 2017. he learned to play violin, guitar and piano in childhood.
Empire, Inc. is a six-episode Canadian television miniseries, which aired on CBC Television in English and Télévision de Radio-Canada in French in 1983.Carole Corbeil, "Empire built on two solitudes". The Globe and Mail, February 13, 1982.
Ultimately, this candidacy did not occur. He did not seek re-election to city council in the 2005 election, in part because of lingering opposition to amalgamation among his electorate.David Johnston, "New 'two solitudes' emerge," Montreal Gazette, 15 October 2005, A7.
Les hautes solitudes is a 1974 French experimental film written, directed and produced by Philippe Garrel. It stars Jean Seberg with Nico, Tina Aumont and Laurent Terzieff. Originally released in France in 1974, it was screened in New York's Metrograph in 2017.
"LA VOIX 3 : KEVIN BAZINET EST LA NOUVELLE VOIX DU QUÉBEC". Showbizz, 12 April 2015. He released his second album, Solitudes, in 2016 on Audiogram, and has supported the album with extensive touring in Quebec,"Matt Holubowski grandit et apprend". Le Journal de Québec, 28 June 2017.
Article dédié à la mémoire de Catherine Zahou. Repris dans Solitudes I. • “Moderne, Absolument,” “Le Maximum du minimum,” “Le Grand Emballage,” Le Temps de la réflexion, VI, 1985. • “Qu'est-ce que Dieu?” in La Nouvelle Revue de Psychanalyse, 30, 1984. Reprinted in Analyse ordinaire, Analyse extraordinaire, ed.
Two Solitudes is a Canadian drama film, written and directed by Lionel Chetwynd and released in 1978.Charles-Henri Ramond, "Two Solitudes – Film de Lionel Chetwynd". Films du Québec, April 12, 2009. An adaptation of the 1945 novel by Hugh MacLennan, the film depicts French-English relations in Quebec during WW1 and 1919 through the story of Jean-Claude Tallard (Jean-Pierre Aumont), a Member of Parliament who is trying to pursue economic development opportunities for his impoverished rural riding in conjunction with wealthy Montreal industrialist Huntley McQueen (Stacy Keach), against the backdrop of the deep lingering mistrust between English Canadians and French Canadians in the aftermath of the Conscription Crisis of 1917.
Bill Brownstein, "Two solitudes ignite when lovers cross linguistic divide". Montreal Gazette, January 22, 1993. The film's cast also includes Gabriel Gascon, Rita Lafontaine and Élise Guilbault. The film premiered at the 1992 Montreal World Film Festival,Noel Taylor, "Canadian entries at Montreal festival easier to get into than foreign films".
James Shavick (born 1950) is a Canadian film and television producer, currently the CEO of Shavick Entertainment. His films include Two of Hearts and Two Solitudes, while his television series have included The New Addams Family and Breaker High.McNamara, Lynne (April 12, 2004). "Producer James Shavick rides highs and lows of film scene".
Love & Sleep is a 1994 modern fantasy novel by John Crowley. It is the second novel in Crowley's Ægypt Sequence and a sequel to Crowley's 1987 novel The Solitudes. In it, the protagonist Pierce Moffett continues his book project begun in The Solitudes, exploring especially the relevance of systems of thought, even those magical and supposedly obsolete in writing a non-fiction book about the Renaissance and Hermeticism. Like the previous novel, Love & Sleep has four main strands, one occurring in the present day generally following Pierce or Rosie Mucho in their artistic works, and two occurring in the Renaissance following the historical fictional activities of John Dee, Edward Kelley and Giordano Bruno as written by fictional novelist Fellowes Kraft.
"Faut arrêter de freaker" by Pierre Foglia, La Presse, December 16, 2000 Cotler eventually issued a written apology to Lévesque of the PQ. Richler also apologized for the incident and called it an "embarrassing gaffe".Smith, Donald. D'une nation à l'autre: des deux solitudes à la cohabitation. Montreal: Éditions Alain Stanké, 1997. p. 56.
In 1973 the biographical drama Giordano Bruno was released, an Italian/French movie directed by Giuliano Montaldo, starring Gian Maria Volonté as Bruno. Bruno is a central character, and his philosophy a central theme, in John Crowley’s “Aegypt” (1987), renamed “The Solitudes”, and the ensuing series of novels: “Love and Sleep” (1994), “Daemonomania” (2000), and “Endless Things” (2007).
Some of his early recordings of the 1950s and 1960s were released on LP Records, and start his Solitudes series, which was introduced in 1981. In 1994, Dan was awarded The Order of Canada for his environmental works. In 1997, Dan was awarded the Walt Grealis Special Achievement Award at the Juno Awards ceremony in Hamilton, Ontario.
Basilières, the son of a Québécois father and an English Canadian mother, grew up as an anglophone despite his French surname."Alone between two solitudes". The Globe and Mail, May 5, 2003. He studied creative writing at Concordia University, but dropped out before graduating, and spent much of his adult life working in bookstores in both Montreal and Toronto.
Two Solitudes was selected as one of the five novels to be discussed in the 2013 Canada Reads "battle of the books", broadcast by CBC Radio. It was defended by Canadian actor Jay Baruchel but it lost to Lisa Moore's February. In 1978 it was made into a motion picture, written and directed by Lionel Chetwynd.
Catherine Major (born February 18, 1980) is a Canadian pop singer and songwriter from Quebec.Élise Jetté, "Catherine Major within herself". Words and Music, May 15, 2020. She is most noted for her 2011 album Le désert des solitudes, which was a Juno Award nominee for Francophone Album of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2012.
In 2007 she composed music for Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette's film The Ring (Le Ring), for which she won the Jutra Award for Best Original Music at the 10th Jutra Awards. The following year she released her second album, Rose sang. Le désert des solitudes was released in 2011.Geneviève Bouchard, "Catherine Major : entre confiance et fébrilité".
This new way of seeing was initially expressed in his Solitudes series shown in his first solo exhibition in 1955. Ascendente no. 2, his first sculpture, appeared in 1954. In 1962 that his exploration of the qualities of space through his metal sculpture began in earnest, and his two-dimensional drawings became transformed into their three-dimensional counterparts.
In 2002, Guenther appeared in the documentary film Stone Reader by Mark Moskowitz. The film chronicled the director's attempt to revive and have republished the acclaimed book of seemingly vanished author Dow Mossman, a lifelong friend of Dan Guenther. The revival was successful. High Country Solitudes (Grand River, 1997) is Dan Guenther's first book of poetry.
Title page of Eikon Basilike. The Eikon Basilike (Greek: Εἰκὼν Βασιλική, the "Royal Portrait"), The Pourtrature of His Sacred Majestie in His Solitudes and Sufferings, is a purported spiritual autobiography attributed to King Charles I of England. It was published on 9 February 1649, ten days after the King was beheaded by Parliament in the aftermath of the English Civil War in 1649.
British Civil Wars Charles, Prince of Wales, (later Charles II), 1630–85 He was involved in the approval by Charles I of the manuscript of Eikon Basilike, reading it to the King in Carisbrooke Castle.Jim Daems, Holly Faith, Eikon Basilike: The Portraiture of His Sacred Majesty in His Solitudes and Sufferings (2006), p. 20. Duppa was made Bishop of Chichester (1638).
Clive Wake is a critic, editor and translator of modern African and French literature. Born in Cape Town, Clive Wake studied at Cape Town University and the Sorbonne. He taught at the University of Rhodesia, and the University of Kent at Canterbury, where he is Emeritus Professor of French and African Literature.Sony Lab'Ou Tansi, The Seven Solitudes of Lorsa Lopez , 1995, p. 1.
Nearby the Resort Municipality of Whistler, the icefield is popular with back-country skiers heli-skiing operations, summer heli-hiking, and onscreen entertainment. Pemberton stands in for Antarctica or the Arctic in films and TV, including the X-Files movie and Stargate: SG-1, "Solitudes" episode,Stargate SG-1 (season 1) and Stargate: Atlantis long-running Stargate set of series.
During the BKS days, Bekker continued to work with Dan and Gordon Gibson - putting out a further five albums in the Solitudes series. Having established himself as an environmental and new age composer, he also composed, arranged and produced a number of a number of albums of soothing, meditative, nature-inspired albums that were distributed by Holborne Distributing Co. Bekker incorporated his interpretations of familiar classics, carols and lullabies on various albums including Lullabies. Albums in the "Classical Tapestries" series, Relaxing Pachelbel, Bekker's own rendition of "Vivaldi's Four Seasons" and "The Classics" built on the success of the Classical-based "Solitudes - Exploring Nature with Music" albums, including the million-plus selling The Classics. Many of the albums distributed by Holborne were sub-licensed to Northword Press (NatureQuest/Northsound) and released under different names, including several of the Tranquility albums.
By the mid-20th century, Canadian writers were exploring national themes for Canadian readers. Authors were trying to find a distinctly Canadian voice, rather than merely emulating British or American writers. Canadian identity is closely tied to its literature. The question of national identity recurs as a theme in much of Canada's literature, from Hugh MacLennan's Two Solitudes (1945) to Alistair MacLeod's No Great Mischief (1999).
Juvet returned to Paris in 1991 and to his roots as a singer-songwriter with the album, Solitudes. The disc featured more personal, emotional songs with Juvet being accompanied by French-language performers, Françoise Hardy, Luc Plamondon, and Marc Lavoine. In 2005, Juvet released his autobiography Les bleus au cœur: Souvenirs ("Bruises on My Heart: Memories"), in which he talks about his career and his bisexuality.
All but two of the songs on the album were written by Nico: the cover of the Doors' "The End" and a version of the German national anthem "Das Lied der Deutschen". Brian Eno plays synthesizer on "It Has Not Taken Long", "You Forget to Answer" and "Innocent and Vain". The front and back covers feature stills from the Philippe Garrel film Les hautes solitudes (1974) in which Nico appears.
Milton believed, certainly, that the Eikon Basilike created a false idol and he wanted to destroy it with truth.Raymond 2003 p. 206 Eikonoklastes, titled Eikonolastes in Answer to a Book Intitl'd Eikon Basilike, The Portrature of his Sacred Majesty in his Solitudes and Sufferings, was issued in two versions in October 1649, in English, and was enlarged in 1650. It was quite soon translated into Latin and French.
There has long been a recognition by scholars that English and French Canada have divergent views of the nation, often referred to as the Two Solitudes, from the title of a 1945 novel. The existence of multiple strains of nationalism within nineteenth century English-speaking Canada was first explored by historian Carl Berger in his 1971 book The Sense of Power and his article in The Journal of British Studies.
Doug Isaac, "The Film as Political Actor: Two Solitudes". Cinema Canada, Issue 52 (Jan/Feb 1979). The film was marketed around the theme that it would provide Canadians with insight into the victory of the Parti Québécois in the 1976 Quebec general election,Robert Martin, "Success after the right kind of failure: After a background of dropping out, Chetwynd's life in film seems stable". The Globe and Mail, January 23, 1978.
Derek Seguin (born 1972) is a Canadian stand-up comedian."Standing together through standup; Derek Seguin is among a host of Quebec comics who have built bridges with bilingual performances". Montreal Gazette, March 13, 2014. Of mixed French Canadian and Irish descent, he is best known for comedy which plays on the cultural differences between English Canada and French Canada,"Laughter unites two solitudes". Montreal Gazette, March 7, 2012.
Solitudes is a brand of music created by Dan Gibson, a Canadian photographer, cinematographer and sound recordist. During the late 1940s, he took photographs and made nature films, including Audubon Wildlife Theatre. He produced many films and television series. It was through this film-making that Dan learned how to record wildlife sound. He pioneered techniques of recording, and also helped design equipment to optimize results, including the “Dan Gibson Parabolic Microphone”.
She also donated significant pieces of antique silver and gold church furnishings, chalices and patens to Welsh Catholic churches.George Eley Halladay, Llandaff Church Plate (Bemrose & Sons 1901): 44. Commented a contemporary, "Her memory is revered by multitudes of worshippers in churches restored at her sole cost, in many mountain solitudes and busy industrial vales."William Riley, "Intrenchments and Camps on Mynydd Baidan and Mynydd Margam," Cardiff Naturalists' Society Reports and Transactions 27(2)(1895): 84.
760-774, Institute of Historical Research, British History Online, british-history.ac.uk Famous frontispiece of the Eikon Basilike, The Pourtrature of His Sacred Majestie in His Solitudes and Sufferings. Later editions carried sworn statement by courtier Levett Two of his infant children born during his Wiltshire residence are buried within Holyrood Church in Swindon.The Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, Wiltshire Archaeological and History Society, H. Bull, Devizes, 1887 Levett's daughter Catherine married Rev.
He is best known for his longtime role as a television pitchman in Canadian commercials for Esso on Hockey Night in Canada in the 1950s and 1960s, and also for his roles in Blue City Slammers, for which he garnered a Genie Award nomination as Best Supporting Actor at the 9th Genie Awards in 1988; and in the film adaptation of Two Solitudes, as the Prime Minister of Canada."Westgate, Murray (1918- )". Canadian Communications Foundation, November 2002.
A review in Vancouver Magazine states that Missing "lays the foundation for a bridge between two cultural solitudes that must work together... to give birth to a new Canada".Roberta Staley (1 November 2017), 'Missing' Turns Tragedy Into Art, Vancouver Magazine According to Opera Canada, "As an opera, Missing is under-written. As an important piece of theatre that builds over its short 80 minutes to a shatteringly emotional conclusion... [it] is something every Canadian should see".
"The First Commandment" was the first Stargate SG-1 episode written by Robert C. Cooper, who would later become an executive producer and co-creator of the spin-off series Stargate Atlantis. Paul McGillion, who played young Ernest Littlefield in "Torment of Tantalus", would go on to play the recurring and later main character Dr. Carson Beckett in Stargate Atlantis. The outside scenes of "Solitudes" were filmed at Pemberton Icefield.Gibson, Thomasina (2001) Stargate SG-1 The Illustrated Companion Seasons 1 and 2.
Wayne Archer (Allan Royal) and Jean-Claude Archambeault (Robert Lalonde) are two military officers from Canada's "two solitudes," an Anglophone and a Francophone. A barracks room fight breaks out between the two young servicemen over whether to watch Kojak or the elections in Quebec. Shortly thereafter, they are assigned together to a remote northern radio outpost north of Goose Bay, Labrador, for three months, much to their mutual displeasure. En route, their plane crashes in a severe snow storm, killing the pilot.
His general history Colony to Nation first published in 1946 was refreshingly opinionated. In this and other works, Lower influenced many English Canadians with his view of Canada's two nations - notably novelist Hugh MacLennan, the author of Two Solitudes. He also enjoyed poking fun at English Canadian "schooling" which he believed fell well short of "education". although he admired the quality Arianism generated by the frontier, he admitted it encouraged a careless and exploitative attitude toward natural resources, which angered him.
Nico's first acting appearance with Garrel occurred in his 1972 film, La Cicatrice Intérieure. Nico also supplied the music for this film and collaborated closely with the director. She also appeared in the Garrel films Anathor (1972); the silent Jean Seberg feature Les Hautes Solitudes, released in 1974; Un ange passe (1975); Le Berceau de cristal (1976), starring Pierre Clémenti, Nico and Anita Pallenberg; and Voyage au jardin des morts (1978). His 1991 film J'entends Plus la Guitare is dedicated to Nico.
He was a member of the Association des éditeurs canadiens, serving several terms as president. Tisseyre founded several other Quebec publishing houses: Le Cercle du livre romanesque in 1952, Les Messageries du Saint-Laurent in 1960, Les Éditions du Renouveau pédagogique in 1965 and Les Éditions Mirabel in 1971. In 1973, he launched the Two solitudes collection, which consisted of works by English Canadian authors translated into French. In 1987, Le Cercle du livre de France was renamed Éditions Pierre Tisseyre.
During the production of "Solitudes", a joke was played on Richard Dean Anderson. Whilst filming, when O'Neill asks how Carter is getting along with unearthing the Stargate's DHD, Carter starts ranting at O'Neill for being completely "MacUseless" even though he spent seven years on MacGyver, referring to Richard Dean Anderson's role in both shows. The prank was organized by Tapping in cooperation with the director. Similarly, in the first episode, "Children of the Gods" Carter speaks of "MacGyvering" the Stargate into operation while O'Neill rolls his eyes.
The work proved so popular that there were 35 editions produced that year. Milton's approach was different from that of Eikon Basilike, which may have in fact been a composite work with John Gauden involved in ghostwriting: instead of appealing to popular sentiment, Milton's work was closely argued and tried to meet each of the points in the Eikon.Dobranski 1999 p. 15Holly Faith Nelson, Jim Daems, Eikon Basilike: The Portraiture of His Sacred Majesty in His Solitudes and Sufferings: with Selections from Eikonoklastes. 2006. pp. 19–20.
English-speaking minorities who immigrated to Canada struggled for economic and government influence, including large numbers of Roman Catholic Irish and later Ukrainians, Poles, and other European immigrants. French-Canadians remained largely culturally isolated from English-speaking Canadians (a situation later described in Two Solitudes by Hugh MacLennan). Visible minority groups, such as indigenous First Nations and Chinese labourers, were marginalised and suffered profound discrimination. Women's status was thus heavily dependent upon their ethnic identity as well as their place within the dominant British class structure.
Jacques Belin, a famous TV gameshow host, awaits his fiancée on New Year's Eve in the café of the Gare de l'Est in Paris. When she fails to show up, he meets a woman named Frède, a charmless and rather vulgar woman, just out of prison, who is drinking the night away while waiting for her morning train to Metz where she is going to live with her sister. Complete opposites, Jacques and Frède's respective solitudes bring them together as they talk and drink. An eventful and unforgettable evening follows ...
First buildings were established in the valley of the Porubka river, a left tributary of the Odra River. Settlement continued to expand in all directions with the years and also solitudes were established, one of them lies right next to Odra River. First mention appeared in written document by bishop of Olomouc, Bruno von Schauenburg, in 1265, described as monastery village of the Cistercian monastery in Velehrad. In 1936, Svinov was promoted to a town, and since 1957 is one of administrative districts of the city of Ostrava.
In 2009, he traveled to Caracas in Venezuela with the staging of La Casa de Bernarda Alba and Flamenco Puro, in two presentations at the Teresa Carreño Theater. Also, he was a special guest for the Madrid 2009 Dance Marathon. In 2010, Antonio Canales traveled to Guanajuato when he was invited to participate in the Exhibition for the Bicentennial of the Independence of Mexico, with the show Solitudes of stone and sky. In November of the same year he participated as guest artist in the gala of the FEHR awards.
French- Canadians remained largely culturally isolated from English-speaking Canadians (a situation later described in Two Solitudes by Hugh MacLennan). English- speaking Canadian writers became popular, especially Catharine Parr Traill and her sister Susanna Moodie, middle-class English settlers who published memoirs of their demanding lives as pioneers. Traill published The Backwoods of Canada (1836) and Canadian Crusoes (1852), and Moodie published Roughing it in the Bush (1852) and Life in the Clearings (1853). Their memoirs recount the harshness of life as women settlers but were nonetheless popular.
He later made expeditions to the Ukraine, as he was familiar with the language and literature. In 1883, he travelled to the lower part of the Congo, east Africa, and the Baku oil region of Caucasia. Morgan put is translating skills to work in 1876, and translated Colonel Nikolay Przhevalsky’s Mongolia, the Tangut Country and the Solitudes of Northern Tibet from Russian, edited by Sir Henry Yule. In 1879, he translated From Kulja across the Tien Shan (TianShan) to Lobnor by Przevalsky, now edited by Sir Thomas Douglas Forsyth.
Bekker composed, arranged (in the case of the public domain classical works), and performed the soft melodies and the nature-driven environmental music on the first 14 albums of Dan Gibson's Solitudes - Exploring Nature With Music series, including the 1989 best- selling, quadruple-platinum Harmony. He was named "one of the most prolific and successful figures in contemporary Canadian pop music" by Billboard. Over a period of more than sixty years, Bekker has recorded over 60 albums, most recently on his own Toronto, Ontario-based Abbeywood Records label.
The 2007 film Inside the Great Magazines was about the first international media. Angelico also produced and wrote many documentaries including the 1992 Entre Solitudes about the Anglos of Quebec; The Love Prophet and the Children of God about a sex for salvation cult; She Got Game; Vendetta Song, about an honour killing in Turkey; Canadaville, USA; about the town Franck Stonach built for Katrina Surviivors and Unbreakable Minds, a film that explores mental illness. Angelico was one of the founding chairs of the Canadian Independent Film Caucus Montreal (CIFC), now known as DOC.
The Solitudes (originally titled Ægypt contrary to Crowley's wishes) is a 1987 modern fantasy novel by John Crowley. It is Crowley's fifth published novel and the first novel in the four-volume Ægypt series. The novel follows Pierce Moffett, a college history professor in his retreat from ordinary, academic life to pastoral life of Faraway Hills. While in the area, Pierce comes up with a plan to write a book about Hermeticism, in the process finding several parallels with his own project and that of the nearly-forgotten local novelist Fellowes Kraft.
Tracks 7 through 12 are piano sonatas; the first one, "Innocent World", is playful and up-tempo while the rest are calmer, meditative pieces similar to "Solitudes" from the first album. Track 14 "Writes herself" was used for episode 19, as was track 16 "Second Sorrow", which is a version of the ending theme "Yume no Tamago". Track 15 "Reverse Point" is a piece performed by a double string quartet (an octet) and used for the planning scene in episode 21. "Object Float" is used in the "tuning", along with "My Soundscape", which also appears in some "eyecatches" (commercial bumpers) in previous episodes.
This essentially meant that the creation of the two solitudes led to the bisecting of the Algonquin Nation. Upper Canada had its own legislature and was administered by a lieutenant-governor (starting with John Graves Simcoe). Its capital was settled by 1796 in York (present-day Toronto), a choice which was influenced by the threat of attack by the Americans, which also was a factor initiating the construction of the Rideau Canal. By the time British settlement started near Ottawa, there were two principal local areas, Nepean Township west of the Rideau River and Gloucester Township to the east.
The term Desert of Wales has been used to describe the area since before 1860 when the following was written by John Henry Cliffe: > The locality we were now traversing is one of the most untamed and desolate > in either division of the Principality; it has indeed with perfect truth > been called the "great desert of Wales." Vast sweeping ranges of hills with > round tops, add to the dreary aspect of this nearly unpeopled > region...Solitudes of Wales Travel is limited to narrow roads, forestry tracks, footpaths and bridleways. It is a sparsely populated area, consisting largely of rolling hills, gorges and steep valleys with ancient native Welsh oak forest.
During the ensuing years from 1980 onward, Jackson has been writing in all genres, including major works for chorus and orchestra, a Piano Concerto, a Harp Concerto, an Organ Concerto, and many works for small chamber ensemble. Greatly inspired by the work of Phillip Erklen and his International Music Syndicate, Berkey has written numerous solo piano works inspired the East Coast of the U.S. including Cape May Preludes, Cape May Solitudes and Atlantic Fantasy; and others inspired by the West Coast (Olympic Peninsula). Following in the footsteps of J.S.Bach, Frederic Chopin, and Dimitri Shostakovitch, he has written 24 Nocturnes, one in each major and minor key. Also Four Nocturnes for Orchestra.
First page of Las soledades (Chacon Manuscript, I, 193). Las Soledades (Solitudes) is a poem by Luis de Góngora, composed in 1613 in silva (Spanish strophe) in hendecasyllables (lines of eleven syllables) and heptasyllables (seven syllables). Góngora intended to divide the poem in four parts that were to be called "Soledad de los campos" (Solitude of the fields), "Soledad de las riberas" (Solitude of the riverbanks), "Soledad de las selvas" (Solitude of the forests), and "Soledad del yermo" (Solitude of the wasteland). However, Góngora only wrote the "dedicatoria al Duque de Béjar" (dedication to the Duke of Béjar) and the first two Soledades, the second of which remained unfinished.
Some of his early recordings of the 1950s and 1960s were released on LP records, and started his Solitudes series, which was introduced in 1981. Gibson is well regarded for his contributions to the Friends of Algonquin Park, and his dedication to the Algonquin Park Residents Association. Having a lease of land in Algonquin Provincial Park gave Gibson and his family (wife: Helen, children: Mary-Jane or "Kirkie," Holly, Dan, and Gordon) a unique opportunity to connect with nature, and it certainly fueled his passion for the study, preservation and interaction with wildlife. In 1994, Gibson was awarded The Order of Canada for his environmental works.
Retrieved on March, 2004. and the Canada Council Art Bank. Solo exhibitions include Opener, Simon Patrich Gallery 2004, The Art of Staying Afloat, Gallery O Contemporary 2007, Water Born, Petley Jones Gallery 2012 Accompanied with the limited edition publication, Water Born , Solitudes Petley Jones Gallery 2014 , and recently at a public art museum with The Ripple Effect, The Reach Gallery Museum 2016. Her work has been included in group exhibitions in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Toronto, and New York and featured in Identity, TEDx Vancouver Art Exhibition Alcock-White donates art to non-profit organisations including Shanti Uganda, Vancouver Aquarium, Art for life, and the David Suzuki Foundation.
All that tread The globe are but a handful to the tribes That slumber in its bosom.—Take the wings Of morning, pierce the Barcan wilderness, Or lose thyself in the continuous woods Where rolls the Oregon, and hears no sound, Save his own dashings—yet the dead are there: And millions in those solitudes, since first The flight of years began, have laid them down In their last sleep—the dead reign there alone. So shalt thou rest, and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure? All that breathe Will share thy destiny.
Cardwell offered his own warning of the possible consequences of excessive confiscation: "The original power, the Maori, (would) be driven back to the forest and morass (and) the sense of injustice, combined with the pressure of want, would convert the native population into a desperate banditti, taking refuge in the solitudes of the interior from the pursuit of the police or military, and descending, when opportunity might occur, into the cultivated plain to destroy the peaceful fruits of industry." Despite his reservations, Cardwell opted not to disallow the Act and later passed on an opinion of Crown law officers that it was not repugnant to the laws of England.
Her words were usually written, chanted, and spoken in rhythmic repetition that resembled the intricate, tactile language of African and Caribbean drumming. Most of her work from the early 1970s onwards was issued by Bola Press, the publishing company she founded. One of these early works, Festivals and Funerals(1971), while not as well-known as Pissstained stairs and the Monkey Man's Wares, is considered significant from how much it derives from Cortez's personal experiences, as well as featuring "the voices of ordinary working people confronting social issues and weighing their role in fighting for change."[3] She cut her first album, Celebrations and Solitudes, at White Plains, New York, in 1974.
A French-speaking Regular Force armoured regiment, 12e Régiment blindé du Canada, and artillery regiment, 5e Régiment d'artillerie légère du Canada, were created, and the policy of bilingualism was supported by the first Chief of the Defence Staff, General J.V. Allard. To improve bilingualism, a "Francotrain" programme was established to teach English- Canadian officers French and to train French-Canadian recruits in specialist skills. Morton wrote that: "From being a virtual anglophone monopoly, the Canadian armed forces came, for a time, to resemble the county they served: two mutually resentful solitudes. Despite Cadieux's hopeful promise that he would not "divide the force on an unilingual or geographical basis," he had done so".
The sights and sounds of the new American frontier inspired some of the most original, if not strange, program music of the nineteenth century. Settling in a log cabin near Bardstown, Kentucky (1818),Gibbons, William, "The Musical Audubon: Ornithology and Nationalism in the Symphonies of Anthony Philip Heinrich," Journal of the Society for American Music 3 (2009), 470 he began to produce a body of work unlike anything being written in Europe at the time. Some of his works include: The Dawning of Music in Kentucky, or the Pleasures of Harmony in the Solitudes of Nature (Philadelphia, 1820); The Columbiad, or Migration of American Wild Passenger Pigeons (1858);Ed. Andrew Stiller, Philadelphia: Kallisti Music Press, 2007.
Daemonomania is a 2000 Modern Fantasy novel by John Crowley. It is Crowley's seventh novel, and as the third novel in Crowley's Ægypt Sequence, a sequel to Crowley's 1994 novel Love & Sleep. The novel follows protagonist Pierce Moffett as he continues his book project begun in The Solitudes about the Renaissance and Hermeticism, while dealing with a stormy relationship with his girlfriend Rosie Ryder. Like the previous novels, the novel has four main narrative strands, one occurring in the present day generally following Pierce or Rosie Mucho in their artistic works, and two occurring in the Renaissance following the historical fictional activities of John Dee, Edward Kelley and Giordano Bruno as written by fictional novelist Fellowes Kraft.
Kipling has described her practice as follows, "When I am drawing from the figure or the landscape, I am fascinated by the change, movement, energy and transformation of form in a seemingly static situation" (Ann Kipling, 2003, For the Record, Drawing Contemporary Life). She has shown regularly in group and solo shows in Canada from the 1970s to the present day. In 2009 she made 141 drawings, mostly of the mountains around Falkland, BC, which were the focus of her 2011 exhibition at the Burnaby Art Gallery (Burnaby, BC), The Solitudes of Place: Recent Drawings by Ann Kipling. Her common tools of the trade are a drawing board, graphite, coloured pencils, pens and BFK Rives paper.
She continued to act in different roles for theatres in Montréal, between 1949 and 1970; the plays she acted in were: as Armande in Les femmes savantes (1949), Elmire in Tartuffe by the playwright Molière (1952) and Noëlle in La facture of Françoise Dorin (1970). Tisseyre took up the career of a translator after she left CBC in 1970. She associated with her husband to do translation work at Les Éditions Pierre Tisseyre, her husband's publishing house. As editor, she translated a number of French-language books such as: La Collection des deux Solitudes — a series of novels by English Canadians like Winter by Morley Callaghan, Margaret Laurence, W. O. Mitchell and Robertson Davies.
TEI has tags for marking up verse. This example (taken from the French translation of the TEI Guidelines) shows a sonnet Les amoureux fervents et les savants austères Aiment également, dans leur mûre saison, Les chats puissants et doux, orgueil de la maison, Qui comme eux sont frileux et comme eux sédentaires. Amis de la science et de la volupté Ils cherchent le silence et l'horreur des ténèbres ; L'Érèbe les eût pris pour ses coursiers funèbres, S'ils pouvaient au servage incliner leur fierté. Ils prennent en songeant les nobles attitudes Des grands sphinx allongés au fond des solitudes, Qui semblent s'endormir dans un rêve sans fin ; Leurs reins féconds sont pleins d'étincelles magiques, Et des parcelles d'or, ainsi qu'un sable fin, Étoilent vaguement leurs prunelles mystiques.
At the Restoration he was made bishop of Exeter. He immediately began to complain to Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, of the poverty of the see, and based claims for a better benefice on a certain secret service, which he explained in January 1661 to be the sole invention of the Eikon Basilike, The Pourtraicture of his sacred Majestie in his Solitudes and Sufferings, put forth within a few hours after the execution of Charles I as written by the king himself. To which Clarendon replied that he had been before acquainted with the secret and had often wished he had remained ignorant of it. Gauden was advanced in 1662, not as he had wished to the see of Winchester, but to Worcester.
This exhibition was curated by the artist and educator Richard Lou and coordinated by Rebecca Nevarez. In the accompanying catalog, Lou’s essay, "The Secularization of the Chicano Visual Idiom: Diversifying the Iconography", Antón is quoted, "Art for me are the things that were kept next to your Santos in your house, they were the pictures that meant the most; the galleries that are the most significant are the ones that we keep in our back pockets." A major retrospective of his work, entitled The Total Sum of Solitudes: Thirty Years of Photography by Don Gregorio Antón, was presented at HSU’s First Street Gallery in 2004. Accompanying this exhibition was a survey of Antón’s former and current students titled, From Whom I’ve Studied, From Whom I’ve Learned.
From the time of their composition, Soledades inspired a great debate regarding the difficulty of its language and its mythological and erudite references. It was attacked by the Count of Salinas and Juan Martínez de Jáuregui y Aguilar (who composed an Antidote against the Soledades). The work, however, was defended by Salcedo Coronel, José Pellicer, Francisco Fernández de Córdoba (Abad de Rute), the Count of Villamediana, Gabriel Bocángel, and overseas, Juan de Espinosa Medrano y Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz. Rafael Alberti would later add his own Soledad tercera (Paráfrasis incompleta)Argos 16/ Ensayo/ Guadalupe Mercado The first novel of John Crowley's Aegypt series is named The Solitudes and the Góngora poem is read by the protagonist, and is referenced throughout the plot.
Sailors used to capture the birds for their long wing bones, from which they made tobacco-pipe stems. The early explorers of the great Southern Sea cheered themselves with the companionship of the albatross in their dreary solitudes; and the evil fate of him who shot with his cross-bow the "bird of good omen" is familiar to readers of Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. The metaphor of "an albatross around his neck" also comes from the poem and indicates an unwanted burden causing anxiety or hindrance. In the days of sail the bird often accompanied ships for days, not merely following it, but wheeling in wide circles around it without ever being observed to land on the water.
Frances Jenkins Olcott's 1942 anthology Good Stories For Great Holidays included a version of Charlotte S. Burne's "The King of the Cats" adapted by Ernest Rhys. Barbara Sleigh's 1954 children's book Carbonel: The King of the Cats is inspired in part by this tale, as are its two sequels, The Kingdom of Carbonel and Carbonel and Callidor, which make up the Carbonel series.The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folktales and Fairy Tales by Donald Haase Paul Galdone published a children's picture book in 1980 titled King of the Cats. In John Crowley's 1987 novel The Solitudes, "The King of the Cats" is explicitly related to "the Death of Pan" as recorded by Plutarch and interpreted by St. Augustine of Hippo as a shift in World Ages.
In the first years of the twentieth century, Milosz travelled widely in Europe and North Africa and explored many foreign literatures. A European poet of the French language, Milosz was an excellent linguist and was fluent in French, Polish, Russian, English, German, Italian, and Spanish as well as being able to read Latin and Hebrew. Later in life, he would also learn Lithuanian and Basque. Milosz published his second poetry collection, the more accomplished Les Sept Solitudes, in 1906. He then entered into a phase of literary experimentation during which he tried his hand at a novel, L'Amoureuse Initiation, published in 1910, and three "mystery dramas," the most popular of these plays being Miguel Mañara (1913), a reworking of the Don Juan myth.
Master Sergeant Sylvester "Sly" Siler, (played by Dan Shea, seasons 1-10) - A sergeant at the SGC and one of its primary technicians and engineers. First appearing in season 1's "Solitudes", he remains a background character throughout the run of Stargate SG-1 and also occasionally appears in Earth-based episodes of Stargate Atlantis. Dan Shea is primarily the stunt co-ordinator for Stargate SG-1, responsible for the budgets and locations of stunts, and the hiring of stunt people before co-ordinating all stunt action. Siler is subsequently shown to be involved in many accidents at the SGC, which is parodied in dialogue and action in several SG-1 episodes such as season 4's "Window of Opportunity", season 7's "Heroes" and the milestone episode "200".
Bagnold wrote, "Never in our peacetime travels had we imagined that war could ever reach the enormous empty solitudes of the inner desert, walled off by sheer distance, lack of water, and impassable seas of sand dunes. Little did we dream that any of the special equipment and techniques we had evolved for very long-distance travel, and for navigation, would ever be put to serious use." On 10 June 1940, Italy declared war on the United Kingdom in alliance with Germany while Bagnold was in Cairo due to an accident involving a troopship collision that he was on interrupting his journey elsewhere. Upon hearing the news and realizing that North Africa was about to become a theatre of war, he requested an interview with General General Wavell, Commander-in-Chief Middle East.
The short story includes the theme of memory which pervades a great deal of Crowley's work, notably Ariel Hawksquill's "magic" in Little, Big and the Pierce's quest in The Solitudes. By the end of the story, the narrator prefers involuntary memory to that which is either significantly detailed, or technologically preserved. An additional major theme relates to the human grieving process, and the tendency of a person who has experienced a great loss to repeatedly ruminate over the painful memories, and by doing so, gradually alter those memories to be less attractive, until they can no longer command the attention that they once did. In an interview, Crowley revealed that the story also parallels Greek myth dealing with those who have died, especially Orpheus and Eurydice and Aeneas' being required to give blood to hear the shades in Hades.
For example, consider Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's "The Sound of the Sea": :The sea awoke at midnight from its sleep, :And round the pebbly beaches far and wide :I heard the first wave of the rising tide :Rush onward with uninterrupted sweep; :A voice out of the silence of the deep, :A sound mysteriously multiplied :As of a cataract from the mountain's side, :Or roar of winds upon a wooded steep. :So comes to us at times, from the unknown :And inaccessible solitudes of being, :The rushing of the sea-tides of the soul; :And inspirations, that we deem our own, :Are some divine foreshadowing and foreseeing :Of things beyond our reason or control. The octave presents the speaker's experience of the sound of the sea, coming to him from some distance. In the sestet, this experience mutates into a meditation on the nature of inspiration and man's connection to creation and his experience of the numinous.
His findings were widely accepted by the scientific community and were bolstered by other scientific figures of the time. David Page (1814–1879), a respected geologist, confounded the theory by stating that "according to experiment, water at the depth of 1000 feet is compressed th of its own bulk; and at this rate of compression we know that at great depths animal and vegetable life as known to us cannot possibly exist – the extreme depressions of seas being thus, like the extreme elevations of the land, barren and lifeless solitudes." Crinoids have been found at depths of up to , far deeper than the maximum depth of Forbes's theory The theory was not disproven until the late 1860s when biologist Michael Sars, Professor of Zoology at Christiania (now Oslo) University, discovered life at a depth greater than 300 fathoms. Sars listed 427 animal species which had been found along the Norwegian coast at a depth of 450 fathoms, and gave a description of a crinoid Rhizocrinus lofotensis which his son had recovered from a depth of 300 fathoms in Lofoten.
Las islas invitadas y otros poemas (“The Invited Isle and Other Poems”) (Málaga: Imprenta Sur, 1926); also Las islas invitadas (Madrid: Viriato/Altolaguirre, 1936; revised edition, Madrid: Castalia, 1973) Ejemplo ("Example") (Malaga: Imprenta Sur, 1927) Soledades juntas ("Joint Solitudes") (Madrid: Plutarco, 1931) La lenta libertad ("The Slow Freedom") (Madrid: Héroe, 1936) Nube temporal ("Temporary Clouds") (Havana: Veronica/Altolaguirre, 1939) Nuevas poemas de las islas invitadas ("New Poems of the Invited Islees") (Mexico city: Isla, 1946) Fin de una amor ("End of a Love") (Mexico City, Isla, 1949) Poemas en América ("Poems in America") (Málaga: Dardo, 1955) Altolaguirre also wrote a propaganda play El triunfo de las germanías ("The Triumph of the Brotherhood of the Guilds") with José Bergamín in 1937, and screenplays for six motion pictures from 1951-1959. He edited and was responsible for publishing Antología de la poesía romántica española ("Anthology of Spanish Romantic Poetry") in 1933, Poemas escogidos de Federico Garćia Lorca in 1939, Presente de las lírica mexicana in 1946, and Gerardo Diego's Poemas in 1948.
With the script complete, Chetwynd moved to New York City, where the 1974 release of The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz saw his career get a big boost when he won the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Comedy Adapted from Another Medium and a nomination for the Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay. In 1975 he wrote and produced Goldenrod starring his wife Gloria Carlin and Tony LoBianco, and in that same year wrote and produced Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye (A Christopher Award winner), the story of John Kennedy's first run for congress, based on the book by Dave Powers and Kenny O'Donnell. In 1977, he was hired by Marlo Thomas to pen a gender- reversal made-for-television version of It's a Wonderful Life entitled It Happened One Christmas, in which Thomas played the lead role portrayed by James Stewart in the original. Hired to write scripts for CBS (Love of Life) and PBS television networks, Chetwynd soon turned to directing his own screenplays, meeting with success for his 1978 film Two Solitudes.
In this law, as the Emperor explicitly admits that Pagan sacrifices were still being openly celebrated: > Hence our clemency perceives the need of keeping watch over the pagans and > their heathen enormities, since by natural depravity and stubborn > lawlessness, they forsake the path of true religion. They disdain in any way > to perform the nefarious rites of sacrifice and the false errors of their > baleful superstition by some means or other in the hidden solitudes, unless > their crimes are made public by the profession of their crimes to insult > divine majesty and to show scorn to our age. Not the thousand terrors of > laws already promulgated nor the penalty of exile pronounced upon them deter > these men, whereby, if they cannot reform, at least they might learn to > abstain from their mass of their crimes and the multitude of their > sacrifices. But their insane audacity transgresses continually; our patience > is exhausted by their wicked behavior so that if we desired to forget them, > we could not disregard them.
Born in London, England, and raised in Canada, Negin, most prominently a stage actor, had his earliest film and television roles in the 1950s Canadian dramatic anthology series First Performance, and as a chorus member in Tyrone Guthrie's 1957 film of the Stratford Festival production of Oedipus Rex. He appeared in the Stratford Festival production of Tamburlaine, which had a run on Broadway in 1956,Louis Negin at the Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia. and later appeared in London productions of Fortune and Men's Eyes and his own play Love and Maple Syrup; in Fortune and Men's Eyes, he became one of the first actors ever to appear fully nude on stage in England. He later appeared in films including The Ernie Game (1967), Can Heironymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Humppe and Find True Happiness? (1969), Ooh… You Are Awful (1972), Barry McKenzie Holds His Own (1974), Rabid (1977), Two Solitudes (1978) and Highpoint (1982), as well as TV series such as Brett, Mousey and The Zoo Gang and episodes of King of Kensington and The Littlest Hobo.
Tradition names as first apostles of the future Diocese of Rennes, but of an uncertain date: Saint Maximinus, who was reported to have been a disciple and friend of Saint Paul (died AD 65),Gallia christiana XIV, p. 739. Saint Clarus, and Saint Justus.This tradition is rejected, inter alios by Besse, pp. 202–203. On the other hand, when in the fifth and sixth centuries bands of Christian Britons emigrated from Great Britain to Armorica and formed on its northern coast the small Kingdom of Domnonée, the Gospel was preached for the first time in the future Diocese of Dol and Diocese of Aleth. Among these missionaries were St. Armel, who, according to the legend, founded in the sixth century the town of Ploermel in the Diocese of Vannes and then retired into the forests of Chateaugiron and Janzé and attacked Druidism on the very site of the Dolmen of the Fairy Rocks (La Roche aux Fées); St. Méen (Mevennus) who retired to the solitudes around Pontrecoët and founded the monastery of Gael (550), known afterwards as St. Méen's; and St. Samson and St. Malo.

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