paroxysm of despair
1Paroxysm — Par ox*ysm, n. [F. paroxysme, Gr. ?, fr. ? to sharpen, irritate; para beside, beyond + ? to sharpen, from ? sharp.] 1. (Med.) The fit, attack, or exacerbation, of a disease that occurs at intervals, or has decided remissions or intermissions.… …
2Paris in the Twentieth Century — Infobox Book | name = Paris in the Twentieth Century title orig = Paris au XXe siècle translator = Richard Howard image caption = French edition author = Jules Verne country = France language = French series = genre = Science fiction novel… …
3Herodes Atticus — bust, from his villa at Kephissia. mid 2nd century Lucius Vibullius Hipparchus Tiberius Claudius Atticus Herodes,[1] otherwise known as Herodes Atticus (Ἡρῴδης ὁ Ἀττικός, 101 …
4Darknagar Records — [[Изображение: Логотип лейбла ]|]] Основан 2005 Основатели Armand «Blackeyes» Quenteres …
5VARUS, PUBLIUS QUINTILIUS — Roman consul, appointed by Augustus governor of Germany; being attacked by Arminius and overpowered with loss of three Roman legions under his command, he committed suicide; when the news of the disaster reached Rome Augustus was overwhelmed… …
6pain — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Suffering Noun 1. pain, suffering, sufferance; hurt, cut; discomfort, painfulness; discomfort, malaise; nightmare; anguish, agony, misery, excruciation, torment, torture, rack; Weltschmerz; distress,… …
7William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham — Infobox Prime Minister | name=The Earl of Chatham order=Prime Minister of Great Britain term start =30 July 1766 term end =14 October 1768 monarch =George III predecessor =The Marquess of Rockingham successor =The Duke of Grafton birth date… …
8John Bright — (16 November 1811 ndash; 27 March 1889), Quaker, was a British Radical and Liberal statesman, associated with Richard Cobden in the formation of the Anti Corn Law League. He was one of the greatest orators of his generation, and a strong critic… …
9nightmare — Also known as ephialtes nocturnus, dream anxiety attack, REM anxiety dream, REM nightmare, and D nightmare. The term nightmare comes from the Old English noun *mare, which means hag or goblin (see also the entries Mar, Mare, and Incubus). It… …