Alphabet associations - I
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Northender
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostCali - the only answer - not tonight!
I thought "the only answer" meant that it was the correct one.
I'd love it if the 'cryptic' quotient - both in questions and answers - went down a notch, and the 'clarity' nudged up just a little bit. That's 20 minutes looking for Northern Irish Josephines I'll never see again"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Northender
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Originally posted by Northender View PostOh dear...I've been working on a cryptic(ish) 'K'.....
Do your worst! Just tell me straight if I'm barking up the wrong tree later!!
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Northender
OK
How might Ena Harkness, Beelzebub and Erik lead you to uses of 'K', on-screen in all three cases and also on-stage in the third?
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amateur51
Originally posted by Northender View PostOK
How might Ena Harkness, Beelzebub and Erik lead you to uses of 'K', on-screen in all three cases and also on-stage in the third?
Make of that what you will
K?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostOooh even without googling I know that Ena Harkness is a lovely, scented dark red rose - my father, a keen rose grower, had a bed of them
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My father, an austere aesthete, thought they were a bit vulgar. But then he allowed no bright coloured flowers in the gardens - only white and green, with the occasional very dark iris.
A few years after he died my mother timidly introduced a few old roses, Rosa moyesii and the like.
Not Ena H, tho'...
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amateur51
Originally posted by vinteuil View Postwiki tells us "Harkness Roses (a trading name of R. Harkness & Co. Ltd) are rose breeders based at Hitchin, Hertfordshire in England. The nursery was founded in 1879 in Yorkshire. Early varieties included a sport of 'Heinrich Schultheis' introduced in 1893 as 'Mrs. Harkness'. In the 1950s, Harkness popularized 'Frensham' and 'Ena Harkness', both developed by amateur Albert Norman, and for a time 'Ena Harkness' was the most popular red Hybrid Tea in the world."
Still nowhere near a K I'm afraid
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Northender
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Northender
Erik has been around since 1910. And remember, you're looking for uses of 'K' on stage and screen.
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