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Try this water for weekly weight loss

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Metabolic Water)
Sat Dec 28 08:29:24 2024

Date: Sat, 28 Dec 2024 14:14:24 +0100
From: "Metabolic Water" <AvoidLemonWater@instantenence.ru.com>
Reply-To: Metabolic Water <MetabolicWater@instantenence.ru.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

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Try this water for weekly weight loss

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http://instantenence.ru.com/fcKBFKtVhp9WTt-0gmblgL1DtSOF7hrklAS59hq73jC_egGm4Q

ned to leave his own country alone for a while, sought elsewhere for a subject suitable to his peculiar humour. A trifling accident inspired him with an idea. One day an old Japanese sword that, for years, had been hanging on the wall of his study, fell from its place. This incident directed his attention to Japan. Just at that time a company of Japanese had arrived in England and set up a little village of their own in Knightsbridge.

The story is an appealing one, but it is largely fictional. Gilbert was interviewed twice about his inspiration for The Mikado. In both interviews the sword was mentioned, and in one of them he said it was the inspiration for the opera, though he never said the sword had fallen. What puts the entire story in doubt is Cellier and Bridgeman's error concerning the Japanese Village exhibition in Knightsbridge: it did not open until 10 January 1885, eight months after Gilbert sent the outline of the plot to Sullivan and almost two months after Gilbert had completed Act I. Gilbert scholar Brian Jones, in his article "The Sword that Never Fell", notes that "the further removed in time the writer is from the incident, the more graphically it is recalled." Leslie Baily, for instance, told it this way in 1952:

A day or so later Gilbert was striding up and down his librar

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<div style="color:#ffffff; font-size:5px;">ned to leave his own country alone for a while, sought elsewhere for a subject suitable to his peculiar humour. A trifling accident inspired him with an idea. One day an old Japanese sword that, for years, had been hanging on the wall of his study, fell from its place. This incident directed his attention to Japan. Just at that time a company of Japanese had arrived in England and set up a little village of their own in Knightsbridge. The story is an appealing one, but it is largely fictional. Gilbert was interviewed twice about his inspiration for The Mikado. In both interviews the sword was mentioned, and in one of them he said it was the inspiration for the opera, though he never said the sword had fallen. What puts the entire story in doubt is Cellier and Bridgeman&#39;s error concerning the Japanese Village exhibition in Knightsbridge: it did not open until 10 January 1885, eight months after Gilbert sent the outline of the plot to Sullivan and almost two months after Gilbert had completed Act I. Gilbert scholar Brian Jones, in his article &quot;The Sword that Never Fell&quot;, notes that &quot;the further removed in time the writer is from the incident, the more graphically it is recalled.&quot; Leslie Baily, for instance, told it this way in 1952: A day or so later Gilbert was striding up and down his librar</div>
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