Harry Potter Morning Light

Chapter 2019 lunar ideals

There is an unwritten rule of thumb that it is always her husband who kills a woman, but Bolton had an alibi when Anne died.

It was the hottest July on record, and when the sweltering, overcast weather made staying indoors unbearable, Anne Bolton crossed the gravel road to her gardens in Soho. Bolton took great care of his garden, complete with vegetation, grottoes and fountains, and, as suggested by the gardener, built a waterfall that ran from a pond on the hillside to the lake below.

There are boathouses on the island in the lake, and a mill, which is still in use. The small pond above has a small greenhouse. People in this era like to collect plants. In 1778, Boulton also decorated the small pond with a huge shell, which is purely decorative.

But it was cool to enjoy the shade under the dense trees. A woman went to the hay field with a beer and saw Anne walking by the pond. Ten minutes later she found Anne lying face down in a shallow piece of water. Bolton was in Coventry at the time, although He claimed that "my heart is at home" and he did not return until late in the evening.

It is impossible for him to commit the crime himself, and it is also not believed that Mr. Bolton murdered his second wife. He did not write poems for her and put her in the coffin like he did for Mary, nor did he place a tombstone in the garden. But after Anne died his health was in trouble, like Anne took away all his joy and happiness.

With an alibi and no evidence, who would doubt a poor fellow like that?

Before Katie Bell touched the cursed necklace, Harry directly accused Draco of doing it. Although it was finally proved that the necklace was indeed put by Draco, his accusation had no evidence. If Harry wanted to accuse anyone , whoever is found guilty, then there is no need for the existence of the human justice system.

So there must be proof, the accusation without proof is a false accusation, and Mr. Bolton can definitely ask a lawyer to sue that nonsense person for defamation.

By the beginning of the 16th century, Paris had replaced Venice as the center of printing art. A person who often reads will find that there is a big difference between handwritten characters and printed characters. At the beginning of the 16th century, those old typefaces were influenced by quill typefaces, which were called roman scripts, which looked more rounded, while the typefaces were cut, and the serifs became sharper and less rounded. At the beginning of the Enlightenment, Louis XIII, King of France at the time, asked Richelieu to design a new set of typefaces for use by the Royal Printing Office. So a chess and card game designer led the French Academy to set up a committee to engage in the research and development of geometric letters, and then started a new career-type designer, John Bascoville is engaged in this profession, he His portrait still hangs in Birmingham Museum.

As Bascoville experimented with new printing techniques, typefaces, he developed brighter woven papers and richer black inks. His first work was the Virgil series, followed by nearly 50 classics, and in 1758 he became a printer for Cambridge University Press, but unfortunately no matter what innovations he brought to printing in the 18th century , Baskerville was mostly admired abroad, and Benjamin Franklin returned to America with a small number of Baskerville books.

John Baskerville died in January 1775, leaving a will directing that he be buried "in a lead coffin in the vault under the conical building hitherto used as a mill, which I have lately raised and painted" , After the house was sold in 1788, the small conical tomb was dismantled, and the workers accidentally hit the shovel on the lead coffin, and then hurriedly covered it up.

The year before the coffin was exhumed, in 1787, the Darwin family had been bitten by a dog and panicked at the threat of rabies. Also in that year, the English-French Commercial Treaty came into force, for which Wedgwood produced a medal.

Then a Scottish antique dealer decided to auction off a vase. Wedgwood was very interested in this vase. The original owner of this vase was the Duchess of Portland. She was a simple woman, but only an empty vase could make her fully awake and intoxicated.

A year after her death, the vase was auctioned along with a large collection, and the beneficiary of the auction was her son, the third Duke of Portland, who seemed to want to sell his mother's collection of "things" quickly up.

There are various rumors about the vase, with some suggesting that she was made of onyx, not glass, and that it was an urn that once held the ashes of Emperor Alexander Severus and his mother.

At that time Wedgwood was trying to emboss on a ceramic he named "berryl", and this Portland vase has the story of Peleleus and Thetis, the two men who fought in the Trojan War. The parents of the famous hero Achilles, also Thetis carried Achilles upside down and immersed him in the River Styx.

Wedgwood was very interested in this mysterious subject, but when he received the news that the auction had ended and the vase had arrived in Etruria, Wedgwood immediately wrote to him, hoping to borrow the vase, and he would use the best Good sculptors, made of beryl, which is harder than glass, and cut like agate.

Maybe Wedgwood was sincerely moved. He borrowed the vase, but the vase was as unsettling as the legend said. Did not achieve the original flavor he wanted. At this point the artists suggested reducing the opacity of the white relief bolide, allowing the dark blue base color to appear as a shadow.

Wedgwood's final product was dark blue, not black, and the Portland vase is said to have been returned, perhaps because of this, Wedgwood came into contact with Etruscan civilization.

Archaeological revival jewelry was once popular in the Victorian era, with Mycenaean civilization and Cyprus, but in fact archaeology had already begun to sprout in the Napoleonic era. Napoleon's youngest sister, Caroline, once wore jewelry excavated from the ruins of Pompeii at a ball, and Georgiana also wore a Celtic shoulder clip at the welcome party of the Rouen Art Museum. To be precise, this is not archaeology Revival, but to wear archaeological objects on the body, as long as the wearer is not afraid of being haunted by ghosts.

Napoleon was such a person, he wanted to look good when he was outside, and he had this purpose in taking Georgiana out instead of Josephine. However, her act of burning clothes in the yard just now made him disgraceful. If it was a different man, the belt would probably have been taken off to whip her.

It would be even more disgraceful if it happened like that. Josephine stayed in Paris when Napoleon went on an expedition to Egypt, and got mixed up with a handsome cavalryman named Charles, who had won many military contracts.

Keep ambiguous between men and women, if you are not careful, there will be problems. Josephine is an aristocratic woman in the old days, she is easy to be tricked, and even Matilda may be deceived.

Georgiana gave Matilda's shopping list to Stanley and asked him to verify how much Matilda spent. Of course, she didn't just give this list to Stanley, and Mr. Martin also had it. If she spent too much, she would spend money to buy a lesson.

Matilda is inferior to Sophie in all aspects, but isn't Sophie married by Godin and taken to Madrid?

A good maid needs to be taught slowly, whether it is Matilda or Georgiana is the first time. But neither Bonaparte nor Georgiana are married for the first time, and that kind of excitement is not conducive to communication. Anyway, he was pouring wine normally, and he poured two glasses. It seems that he intends to talk to her calmly. .

Should she be acting hysterical? Or bland and indifferent?

It is also possible that she was found drowned by the sea the next day, like Anne, either a suicide or an accident, and the trip was interrupted by her death, where the others turned back to Paris.

He put a glass of wine in front of her.

But he didn't talk to her, and walked to the window with the wine to watch the scenery outside.

Bonaparte's stature is really not tall, and his back cannot be described as stalwart, but his standing posture is very straight, and he looks extraordinary.

"Tell me what you think now." He said without looking back.

"The crux of the matter is that the stewards of the diocese who manage the orphans sold those children like slaves to those factories. I remember you let the Protestant community set up a committee to manage things in their own jurisdiction. You can't let these people use these innocent people under the guise of charity. Children without parents make money."

He didn't speak, still looking at the distant skyline dyed red by the setting sun.

"There was a boy, his mother gave birth to him in the orphanage, and she died soon after, that boy was never loved, and he later became a big devil who affected the whole wizarding world, but his environment was much worse than The orphanage is much better now, I can't..." She choked with pain, "Weaving is a woman's job, I can't work with my hands, and I can wear clothes made by children with peace of mind. I remember that many children didn't Can’t get up, oh my god, those factory kids only sleep for a few hours, they still can’t get enough to eat, and they have to compete with the pigs raised in the factory for food.”

"Get to the point." He said impatiently.

"It's better to find something for the church and let Caprara take care of this business than to ask the priest who swore the constitution to confess." Georgiana said.

He let out a heavy breath and turned to look at her.

"Women cannot interfere in politics." She looked at Bonaparte's angry "little face" and spoke for him.

"During the Middle Ages, the right to brew beer in big cities was a privilege only for members of the big guilds. Later, some small guilds also began to compete." Bonaparte said, "In 1783, Queen Ekaterina issued a decision No matter how large or small the guild in Tartu can monopolize the beer trade, the widows and orphans should be allowed to brew beer in the future."

"What?" she asked in surprise.

"Didn't you start the beer trade in Belgium with that in mind?" he asked again.

"I have to tell you honestly, I don't." She stood up. "I just find a market for the farmers' grain."

"Paul I canceled Ekaterina's reforms, but no one in Tartu dared to directly suggest that the orphans and widows fend for themselves. They came up with a way to lease out the right to brew wine, and the orphans and widows continued to make wine in name. But they can lease the official license to a private company, and the rental income from the brewing rights bears the basic livelihood of the orphans and widows. They can also find other jobs, and the income of the brewing company flows into the hands of low-income urban residents as social subsidies , what do you think of this mechanism?" asked Bonaparte.

She has nothing to say.

"You can find a city for a trial run." He said gently, "I know you're very angry..."

"I can't say that I value education while ignoring the existence of this phenomenon. I am such a person. You may not be able to bear it. Now I wear a skirt without tights. Women have gained freedom, but if this freedom is It is based on making children suffer..." She suppressed her anger and said, "I know a woman who died to protect her children. The man I fell in love with was also a student who protected her. Even you, Hortans and Eugene likes you, sometimes you are a little childish..."

"Calm down alone," said Bonaparte.

She curtseyed to him and left.

As he said, she has no way to think now, so if she wants to continue communicating, she should wait until she calms down.

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