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Tread Softly is a 1952 British second feature ('B') [3] crime film with musical overtones, directed by David MacDonald and starring Frances Day, Patricia Dainton and John Bentley. [4] [5] It was written by Gerald Verner based on his novel The Show Must Go On. A chorus girl investigates a series of mysterious happenings at a derelict theatre.
"Tread Softly" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter Two: Eileen Laverty "He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven" W. B. Yeats [51] "The Trooper" Piece of Mind: Iron Maiden "The Charge of the Light Brigade" Alfred, Lord Tennyson [201] [175] "Turn! Turn! Turn!" Pete Seeger: The Book of Ecclesiastes from the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament
Tread softly or tread-softly may refer to: Cnidoscolus stimulosus, bull nettle or tread-softly, a perennial herb covered with stinging hairs; Solanum carolinense, Carolina horsenettle or tread-softly, a perennial herbaceous plant with spines; Tread Softly, a British crime film; Tread Softly, or The Violin Case Murders a German thriller
Tread Softly in this Place is a novel set in the town of Ross, located in a remote part of rural Ireland, and written over the course of 1970/71 by the Irish-based author, Brian Cleeve. The narrative takes place over four days and charts the interconnecting lives and loves of a disparate collection of characters.
Tread Softly Stranger is a 1958 British crime drama film directed by Gordon Parry and starring Diana Dors, George Baker and Terence Morgan. The screenplay was written by George Minter adapted from the stage play Blind Alley (1953) by Jack Popplewell .
Tready Softly/The Violin Case Murders (German title:Schüsse aus dem Geigenkasten) is a 1965 German thriller film directed by Fritz Umgelter and starring George Nader, Heinz Weiss and Sylvia Pascal. [1]
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Rose died in police custody on 19 June 1849, imprisoned after a drinking spree. He was 43 years old. He was buried in Manchester General Cemetery on 21 June 1849. [1] His fellow poet John Bolton Rogerson, who was the cemetery's registrar, read a specially composed service over the grave. Lines of Rose's own verse were inscribed on his gravestone: