59 résultats pour "harpie"
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bretonne, littérature.
s’exprimer en breton comme Prosper Proux (1812-1873), auteur de Poèmes d’un homme de Cornouailles (1839), qui devient l’un des écrivains les plus populaires du début du XIXe siècle. 5 LE « BRETON MODERNE » (DEPUIS LA FIN DU XIX E SIÈCLE) La période « moderne » (Ar Brezhoneg Kempenn) voit la langue se fixer et la littérature devenir en grande partie écrite. L’élan initié par Hersart de La Villemarqué se poursuit à travers la poésie, notamment celle de Julien Pélaze Auguste Brizeux (1803-...
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Wordsworth/Coleridge: Lyrical Ballads (Sprache & Litteratur).
And how she wept and clasp’d his kneesAnd how she tended him in vain –And ever strove to expiate The Scorn, that craz’d his Brain. And that she nurs’d him in a Cave;And how his Madness went awayWhen on the yellow forest leaves A dying Man he lay; His dying words – but when I reach’dThat tenderest strain of all the Ditty,My falt’ring Voice and pausing Harp Disturb’d her Soul with Pity! All Impulses of Soul and SenseHad thrill’d my guileless Genevieve,The Music, and the doleful Tale, T...
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ANTILLES — GUYANE, SESSION DE JUIN 1995 LANGUE VIVANTE 1- SÉRIES L ET ES/S
courage, lustiness, the natural grasp of things. It would never corne 30 back. 1 would end up in the psychiatrie ward of the country hospi tal, screarning that the bridges, ail the bridges in the world, were falling down. Then a young girl opened the doorof the car and got in. "1 didn 't think anyone would pick me up on the bridge," she said. She car- 35 ried a cardboard suitcase and -believe me - a small harp in a crac ked waterproof. Her str...
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Santa Claus
I
INTRODUCTION
Santa Claus, legendary bringer of gifts at Christmas.
included such details as the names of the reindeer; Santa Claus's laughs, winks, and nods; and the method by which Saint Nicholas, referred to as an elf, returns up thechimney. (Moore's phrase “lays his finger aside of his nose” was drawn directly from Irving's 1809 description.) The American image of Santa Claus was further elaborated by illustrator Thomas Nast, who depicted a rotund Santa for Christmas issues of Harper's magazine from the 1860s to the 1880s. Nast added such details as Santa'...
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voltaire
qui lui fit une pension de 20 000 livres ; les soupers du roi et du philosophe sont célèbres. Il se retira ensuite dans un exil volontaire à Ferney en 1758, où il resta vingt ans. Quoique éloigné de l'Académie, il ne cessa pas de s'en occuper dans la correspondance qu'il entretenait avec tous les philosophes et les littérateurs de son temps ; son influence se fit sentir, avec des alternatives de réussite et d'échecs, en faveur de Duclos, Ma...
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Les Personnages Dans Les Liaisons Dangereuses
lettres, toutefois elle accepte qu'il lui écrive quand il sera parti et quand le vicomte fouillera chez elle il trouvera des larmes sur seslettres. Elle lui demande quand même de partir. Elle dit une fois ou l'autre ceci est ma dernière lettre, mais écrit à nouveau par lasuite. Elle dit aussi notamment « Je dois être heureuse » (Elle parle de son mari), on ne la sent pas insensible au vicomte maistente de s'en protéger. S'ensuit toute une série de lettres où elle le conjure d'arrêter de lui écri...
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Seal (mammal) - biology.
remote lakes by swimming thousands of kilometers up rivers from the Arctic Ocean. A few other species such as ringed seals and harbor seals have been found livingyear-round in lakes and rivers near the coasts of Russia, Canada, and Alaska. IV DIET OF SEALS Most seals eat fish and sometimes squid. The leopard seal, an Antarctic species, may have the most diverse diet of all, commonly hunting penguins and other seabirds,smaller seals, as well as fish, squid, krill (small shrimplike crustaceans),...
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Newfoundland and Labrador - Geography.
Precipitation averages about 1,120 mm (about 44 in) yearly in Newfoundland. In Labrador precipitation varies from about 1,020 mm (about 40 in) in the southeast toabout 510 mm (about 20 in) in the extreme north. Heavy winter snowfalls are common, especially in Newfoundland. D Plant Life About one-third of Newfoundland is forested, and most of the rest of the island is made up of barren areas of reindeer moss and lichens. The forests consist almostentirely of conifers. The most important species...
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Newfoundland and Labrador - Canadian History.
Precipitation averages about 1,120 mm (about 44 in) yearly in Newfoundland. In Labrador precipitation varies from about 1,020 mm (about 40 in) in the southeast toabout 510 mm (about 20 in) in the extreme north. Heavy winter snowfalls are common, especially in Newfoundland. D Plant Life About one-third of Newfoundland is forested, and most of the rest of the island is made up of barren areas of reindeer moss and lichens. The forests consist almostentirely of conifers. The most important species...