- The
Mourning Bride is a
tragedy written by
English playwright William Congreve. It
premiered in 1697 at Betterton's Co., Lincoln's Inn Fields. The play...
-
Bachelor (1693), The
Double Dealer (1693), Love for Love (1695), and The
Mourning Bride (1697), all of
which helped establish him as a
great writer in the genre...
-
Scabiosa atropurpurea (syn.
Sixalix atropurpurea), the mourningbride,
mournful widow,
pincushion flower, or
sweet scabious, is an
ornamental plant of the...
-
symbolizes mourning and death. Red, on the
other hand,
represents vibrancy and
health and is
commonly worn by
brides in many
Asian cultures.
Brides may also...
- A
Woman Scorned may
refer to: A line from the 1697 play The
Mourning Bride by
William Congreve: "Heaven has no rage like love to
hatred turned, Nor ****...
- a
stretch of the
Andarax Almeria, a
character in the 1697 play The
Mourning Bride This
disambiguation page
lists articles ****ociated with the
title Almeria...
- deprensa—Ibid. B. Potter,
Elmer (December 1943). "The
Paradox of Congreve's
Mourning Bride".
Proceedings of the
Modern Language ****ociation of
America (PMLA)....
- fury", an
interpreted line
based on a
quotation from the 1697 play The
Mourning Bride by
William Congreve **** Hath No Fury, a 1951
novel by
Sydney James...
- turn'd, Nor **** a Fury, like a
Woman scorn'd –
William Congreve, The
Mourning Bride, Act III
scene viii
Hindsight is
always twenty-twenty[a]
History repeats...
-
Grumble Boadicea,
Queen of
Britain (1697)
Charles Hopkins Boadicea The
Mourning Bride (1697)
William Congreve Zara The
Innocent Mistress (1697) Mary Pix Bellinda...