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Another theory sees the rhyme as connected to Mary, Queen of Scots (1542–1587), with "how does your garden grow" referring to her reign over her realm, "silver bells" referring to cathedral bells, "cockle shells" insinuating that her husband was not faithful to her, and "pretty maids all in a row" referring to her ladies-in-waiting – "The ...
'The Summer I Turned Pretty' was filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina. Set decorator Beth Robinson shares details on the beach house's coastal interiors.
Picture book adaptations include Susan Jeffers' All The Pretty Horses (1974) and Lisa Saport's All the Pretty Little Horses: A Traditional Lullaby (1999). The song provided the title of Cormac McCarthy's 1992 novel All the Pretty Horses. It inspired a short story [specify] in Jane Yolen's 1998 collection Here There Be Ghosts.
Back in England during 1944, the Countess of Ranfurly records in her diary, "We paid a short visit to General Neame and his wife in their pretty house in Kent and he and Dan (Ranfurly, Neame's ADC since 1940) talked of their escapes." [35] Neame served as Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey from 1945 to 1953. Philip Neame was the nephew of a ...
The rental house came semi-furnished. - Glenda Tuminello The two-bedroom house has an office, spacious dining room, balcony, front porch with a little garden, and another covered terrace area ...
A modern country-house hotel, 10 minutes from Windermere’s lakeshore, it has expanded from the original Edwardian house at its core to offer a variety of rooms and suites across its 21 acres.
The back of no 19 York Street (1848). In 1651, Milton moved into a "pretty garden-house" in Petty France, Westminster. He lived there until the Restoration. Later it became No. 19 York Street, belonged to Jeremy Bentham, was occupied successively by James Mill and William Hazlitt, and finally was demolished in 1877. [39]
The poem identifies “Paradise” with the time when “man there walked without a mate.” [18] [19] As critic Nicholas Murray comments, the Edenic state in "The Garden" is a "state of unsexual bliss where pleasure was solitary.” [20] Critic Jonathan Crewe argues that the phrase "garden-state" "captures the tendency of Renaissance pastoral ...