Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Waxing While On Accutane 2010

Any self-respecting Pololora is Marianne Elinor or more? .






Lady Mari Cari bloomers, say:

pololeras Dear friends,


celebrate the 200 years since the publication of Sense and Sensibility !
was the first work of a great writer who needs no introduction, suffice to say your name, Jane Austen , so that in this Club bloomers petticoat rise in honor and our beautiful bloomers are in sight.

If
200 years ago, a brilliant woman and she needed to be his brother who did the printing business for his first novel, now surely would have asked our dear Lady Wendy bloomers, our beautiful hostess, who did a beautiful dance card and their boyfriends because they would not have wanted to miss even one of our meetings.

Pololeras all, here's Sense and Sensibility reflected in this work and I ask you, Wendy join us for a servant, to read the grace and the salt that our dear writer be squandered in pursuit of clear that reflection of the sense and sensitivity in two of its main characters, the older sisters Dashwood, Elionor y Marianne.



No necesitan haber leído la obra, ni visto la película, sólo como muestra sobran unos botoncitos, por supuestos de Regencia…


Características principales :




Elinor lleva la economía de la casa, cuida del jardín y dibuja.

Elinor, this eldest daughter whose recommendation had been so effective, had a strength of understanding and serenity of the qualified opinion, though only nineteen, to advise his mother, and often allowed him to counter, for the benefit the whole family, such vehemence of spirit in Mrs. Dashwood which could take many times to recklessness. It was big-hearted, affectionate nature and deep feelings. But he knew how to govern, something that her mother had yet to learn, and that one of her sisters had resolved never to teach him.


Marianne is declined by the poetry and music.

Marianne's qualities were, in many ways on par with those of Elinor. He had intelligence and wisdom, but was vehement in all, nor his sorrows and their joys knew moderation. She was generous, kind, attractive, was anything but prudent. The resemblance between her and her mother was striking.

I speak of the beloved:


Edwards Ferrars Elinor Dashwood on


's not my intention to deny, "he said," I have a high opinion of him that I believe deeply that I like.
Before this, Marianne broke out indignantly.
- dear! Like it! Elinor, what heart so cold. Oh, worse than cold! Not daring to be otherwise. Use those words again, and I leave this part immediately.
Elinor could not help laughing.

Marianne with Willoughby


Gradually Willoughby's company became the most exquisite pleasure of Marianne. Read together, talking, singing, musical talent he showed were considerable, and read with all the sensitivity and enthusiasm that was so sadly lacking Edward.

At times he feared that there was never part of any serious decision Willoughby, and then some unfortunate had happened dispute between him and his sister, the anguish felt by Marianne at the time he was leaving the room was so great that a serious dispute could well explain it, but when I thought about how he loved her, a fight seemed almost impossible.

But, whatever the circumstances of their separation, her sister's affliction was indubitable, and Elinor thought with the tenderest of mercies in that heartbreaking penalty to which Marianne not only was giving way as a form of relief but also nourishes and stimulates as if it were a duty.

Saving appearances:

"Well," said Elinor Marianne immediately after his departure, "I think for a morning you have done quite well. You've learned the opinion of Mr. Willoughby in almost all matters of importance. You are aware of what he thinks of Cowper and Scott, you have total certainty that appreciates its charms as it should be, and have received all necessary assurances, on Pope admires not beyond appropriate. But how can you continue your relationship with him after so extraordinary dispatch of all possible topics of conversation! Will soon have exhausted all favorite topics. Another meeting will suffice for him to explain his sentiments on picturesque beauty and second marriages, and then you have nothing else to ask ...

- Elinor! "Cried Marianne. Are you being fair? Are you being fair? Is that my ideas are so scarce? But I understand what you say. I felt too comfortable, too happy, I've been too frank. I have missed common to all sites relating to decorum. I've been open and sincere where I should be quiet, dull, listless and false. If only I had talked about the weather and roads, and if I had only spoken once in ten minutes, I would have saved this reproach.

- oOo -

- Often I have found myself making that kind of mistakes, "said Elinor, with completely false ideas about the character of someone at some point or another, imagining people much more joyful or serious, more ingenious or stupid than it really is, and it's hard to say why, or what the deception originated. Sometimes one is guided by what people say about themselves, and very often what others say of them, without taking time to deliberate and discern.

"But I thought was right, Elinor," said Marianne, be guided overall by the views of others. I thought that gave us the insight simply subordinate to that of our neighbors. I'm sure this has always been your doctrine.

"No, Marianne, never. My doctrine has never aimed at the subjection of the understanding.

The behavior is the only thing I wanted to influence. You should not confuse the meaning of what I say. I plead guilty of having often wished you to try our acquaintances in general with utmost courtesy, but when I advised you to take your feelings or settle in their own way of judging things on serious issues?
- oOo -

E Linor could not feel surprised at the attachment between the young. Just wanted to show it less openly, and once or twice ventured to suggest to Marianne the convenience of a self-control same. But Marianne abhorred all concealment where openness would not lead to real evil, and strive to repress feelings that were not in themselves objectionable seemed an effort not only unnecessary but also an unfortunate subject of reason and vulgar misconceptions . Willoughby thought the same thing at all times, the behavior of the two was a perfect illustration of their views.

- -oOo -

Elinor's compassion for him became every day more, because he had reason to suspect that he had already met las miserias de un amor desengañado. Se originó esta sospecha en algunas palabras que accidentalmente salieron de su boca una tarde en Barton Park, cuando por propia elección estaban sentados juntos mientras los otros bailaban. Miraba él fijamente a Marianne y, tras un silencio de algunos minutos, dijo con una casi imperceptible sonrisa:
-Su hermana, entiendo, no aprueba las segundas uniones.
-No -replicó Elinor-; sus opiniones son completamente románticas.
-O más bien, según creo, considera imposible su existencia.
-Así I think so. But how he manages to do without thinking about the character of his own father, who had two wives, is something I do not know. Few years, however, lay their views on the reasonable basis of common sense and observation, and maybe then they can define and defend better than today, when only she does.
"Probably what will happen," he replied, but there is something so sweet in the prejudices of a young mind, that one comes to feel pain to see how to give and I give way to common views.
"I can not agree with you on that," said Elinor. Feelings Marianne and the drawbacks that not all the charms of enthusiasm and ignorance have incurred and can be redeemed. All your rules have an unfortunate tendency to completely ignore the social standards and I hope that a better understanding of the world is of great benefit to her.

- oOo -


- Why you'd think, Elinor, that we were not there or you did not see the house? Is not that what you have often wanted to do it yourself?

"Yes, Marianne, but I would not while Mrs. Smith was there, and no other company that Mr. Willoughby.

"Mr. Willoughby, however, is the only person who may be entitled to show that house as it was in an open carriage, it was impossible to have another companion. I have never spent a morning so nice in my life.

-Temo "said Elinor," that the pleasantness of an occupation is not always proof of its correctness.

"On the contrary, nothing could be further evidence -Blunt about it, Elinor, for if I did somehow have been wrong, I would have been feeling all the time, because I always know when we act badly, and with such conviction could not have enjoyed. - "But, my dear Marianne, as it already has exposed you to some very impertinent remarks, do not now begin to doubt the discretion of your behavior?

"If the impertinent remarks of Mrs. Jennings will be proof of the impropriety of conduct, we are all at fault in every moment of our life. I do not value their censorship more than I would appreciate your praise. I have no conscience have done nothing wrong to walk in the gardens of Mrs. Smith or visit their home. One day be Mr. Willoughby, y. ..
"If a day were to be yours, Marianne, it does not justify what you did.

Marianne blushed at this suggestion, but even I saw it was gratifying for her, and after a lapse of ten minutes of intense meditation, he went back to his sister and said, quite a good mood :

"Perhaps, Elinor, was unwise of me to go to Allenham, but Mr. Willoughby wanted to show very special place and it is a lovely house, I assure you. There is an extremely cute little room above a very nice size and comfortable, which can be used throughout the whole year, and with modern furniture would be fine. It is located in a corner with windows on both sides.

On one side, through a field planted with grass where bowls, behind the house, you see a beautiful forest slope to the other, you have a view of the church and the village and beyond, those beautiful hills so steep that Sometimes we have admired. I saw this little room in the best of circumstances, because nothing could be left to the furniture ... but if you fix it with new things ... a couple of hundred pounds, Willoughby says, transform it into one of the nicest rooms summer in England.

If Elinor would have been heard without interruption from others, would have described every room in the house with the same enthusiasm.






This dichotomy of Aristotle spoke Sense and Sensibility, is possible that our Jane Austen read it, fell into his hands the book entitled "From Sense and Sensitivity of Memory and Remembrance" I read, what online ojee http:/ / es.scribd.com/doc/3817149/aristoteles-del-sentido-y-lo-sensible-de-la-memoria-y-el-recuerdo and after seeing the mess in my mind was the colors, smells, tastes and what not over the sensitive and so and so and so ... I went crazy looking for the summary of the author and found myself stuck squarely in the second treaty, memory and remembrance, and ... I do not remember, no, I do not remember because I did not find abstract and a treaty on the meaning and sensible about this part or two and end up talking about "People who have excessively long limbs that are dwarf and memory is poorer than their opposites, because they carry great weight in their organ of perception, and their impulses or movements from the beginning can not keep his address, but are impediments to this, and can not easily move straight into his memorial process. " It follows, according to my headache, my dear friends, several things, including that already dwarfs its time and second and more important, if read by Jane Austen was a shame to say that has not yet invented the toilet! And you had to manage without Aristotle to do a good job on the Sense and Sensibility through its two heroines, as now we, Pololeras Dear all, we also have to spend it entirely, and much to say that Socrates stands for Sense, on these issues ... Let the classics!





And now my dear pololeras up to you to say whether in fact our Jane Austen gets put distance between sense and sensibility.


Based on what all of this, we would like to relevant invitations to attend the dance to be held next Wednesday June 1 in this room too flirty. Give us time to prepare the bloomers as befits a triumphant occasion like that awaits us and we request all the pololeras attend with a representative contribution or determination by the Sense or its fizz by the sensitivity .


Our dear host presents us with some examples from each group to guide protocol Club bloomers ...

* today If we chose 18 in our comments, belong to Group Sense Pololero can contribute via email our beloved host wendulina@gmail.com with SYMBOLS on the issue of sanity, wisdom, responsibility, temperance, refinement, caution, good sense or common sense, as examples, include: DRAWINGS small STORIES no more than 5 lines including riddles, fables and stories, small PHOTOS Work, Paintings, Sense films, animate and inanimate characters, real or literary. In a word ... REFLECT THE SENSE OBJECTS (A rod that is screwed into the snake, the symbol itself pharmacist), who sit with the Brain .

* If our discussion today is about 18 our inclination to join the group Pololero Sensitivity, SYMBOLS contributions received on the topic of friendliness, kindness, benevolence, kindness, goodness , gentleness, mercy, or condescension: small poems, photographs of bouquets of flowers, picture frames del amado, de mechones de cabellos, MÚSICA y partituras, Películas sobre la Sensibilidad, Personajes animados e inanimados, reales o literarios. EN UNA PALABRA… OBJETOS QUE REFLEJEN LA BELLEZA, que se sientan con el Corazón .


Hagan su comentario ofreciendo su participación en el grupo del Sentido o en el de la Sensibilidad y remítanselo a Wendy con tiempo suficiente para que ella lo prepare y pueda publicarlo el día 1 de Junio, nuestra siguiente reunión pololera… Y ahora…

¡¡¡¡Yiiiiiuuuuujjjuuuuu enaguas arriiiibaa!!!!!


Lady Pololos Wendy, say:


La elección musical ha corrido de mi cuenta y tras mucho cavilar y alguna que otra sugerencia (Thanks, Aglaia) me he decantado por este tema de Sting, es un perfecto caballero y me gusta cuando dice:   If I ever lose my faith in you aunque yo ¡creo en todas vosotras!




0 comments:

Post a Comment