Amazing animated pride & prejudice confession scene!
Mort
MORIOR
[verb]
1. to die, wither away, decay.
2. I die.
3. I wither; I decay.
Etymology: Latin, from Proto-Indo-European *mer- “to die”.
[noiaillustration]
Objects of Desire ( Nécessaire )
1. A Silver-Gilt and cut glass travel nécessaire circa 1890 ; Boin Taburet
2. A Fine Ladies Antique Vanity Case (England) ca.1890
3. A Silver Gilt Ladies Dressing Case by Jenner Knewstub circa 1868 UK
4. Antique Boulle Travel Vanity Chest English Sterling and Gold Vermeil Crown Crest
5. Crown 19th c. Antique French Palais Royal Dressing or Travel Vanity Set, Sterling Silver 18k Vermeil, Garnesson
6. Napoleon’s exquisite brass inlaid Necessaire de Voyage
7. A toilet service was commissioned by Sir Nicholas and given to the Duke of Norfolk as part of his 16 year old daughter Maria’s dowry in 1708
8. Toilet set in original leather case [Germany (Augsburg)
9. Victorian rosewood, silver gilt and cut glass ladies traveling cosmetic case and dressing table, contents complete – bound in a brass, coromandel case with sunken brass handles.
10. A 19th century French Palais Royale ormolu mounted tortoiseshell combined scent/sewing casket, with floral enameled set lid and fall front revealing fitted interior containing two enamel and ormolu mounted glass scent bottles and eleven (ex 12) sewing implements
For more influential women’s response to the Hobby Lobby ruling go here.
jacobyverger
Scott Prior
ILLUMINANCE
[noun]
1. an act or instance of illuminating; to supply or brighten with light.
2. intellectual or spiritual enlightenment.
3. Photometry: the total luminous flux, i.e. the measure of the perceived power of light incident on a surface, per unit area.
Etymology: from Latin illuminatus, past participle of illūmināre, “to light up, brighten”.
[Amanda Sage]
I could more easily forgive his vanity had he not wounded mine.
PRIDE & PREJUDICE (2005) >> Filming Locations, part I dir. Joe Wright
Chawton House Library, Chawton, Hampshire. The house was the home of Jane Austen’s brother, Edward Austen Knight. The library contains the private collection of the Knight family, which was used by Austen, and a collection of early women’s writing (1600-1830), including works by Aphra Behn, Ann Radcliffe, Mary Shelley, and Mary Wollstonecraft. The manuscript in the picture is of Jane Austen’s play Sir Charles Grandison (c. 1800), which parodied the Samuel Richardson novel. The library’s website provides access to a large number of full-text transcripts of rare late 18th-early 19th century novels.