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         Bronte Branwell:     more books (100)
  1. The Infernal World of Branwell Bronte by Daphne Du Maurier, 1960-01-01
  2. THE INFERNAL WORLD OF BRANWELL BRONTE by DAPHNE DU MAURIER, 1976
  3. The infernal world of Branwell Brontë
  4. The Infernal World Of Branwell Bronte by Daphne Du Maurier, 1974-01-01
  5. The Infernal World of Branwell Bronte by Daphne Du Maurier, 1961-01-01
  6. The Infernal World of Branwell Bronte
  7. The Infernal World of Branwell Bronte by Daphne Du Maurier, 1976-01-01
  8. The Young Brontes: Charlotte and Emily, Branwell and Anne by Mary Louise Jarden, 1938
  9. The Four Brontes: The Lives And Works Of Charlotte, Branwell, Emily And Anne Bronte by Lawrence Hanson, E. M. Hanson, 2010-09-10
  10. The Four Brontes: The Lives And Works Of Charlotte, Branwell, Emily And Anne Bronte by Lawrence Hanson, E. M. Hanson, 2010-09-10
  11. Patrick Branwell Bronte by Alice Law, 1977
  12. Works Of Patrick Branwell Bron (Works of Patrick Branwell Bronte) by Patrick Branwell Bronte, Victor A. Neufeldt, 1997-07-01
  13. The Shakespeare Head Bronte (Shakespeare Head Press books) by Emily Bronte, Charlotte Bronte, et all 1989-10-16
  14. A complete transcript of the Leyland manuscripts: Showing the unpublished portions from the original documents in the collection of Col. Sir Edward A. ... bart., LL.D., the Hall, Roundhay, Leeds by Patrick Branwell Bronte, 1978

81. Brontes Dance Review
Velasco has cast himself as the hapless branwell bronte, whose literaryand romantic missteps caused him (and his family) great heartache.
http://sandiegoballet.org/reviews/reviews-bronte.htm
'The Brontes' a moving portrait, passionate rumination on creativity
By Jennifer Poyen
DANCE CRITIC June 14, 1999 T he stories of 19th-century Englishwomen are everywhere, these days. Jane Austen's beloved tales have inspired a rash of films "Emma," "Persuasion" and "Clueless," to name a few. And now, a pair of ambitious stage works are bringing the Bronte sisters to the local fore, as well. In advance of next month's American debut, at La Jolla Playhouse, of the much-discussed musical of Charlotte Bronte's "Jane Eyre," a pair of long-laboring San Diego artists teamed up over the weekend to unveil with decidedly less fanfare but much artistic fervor "The Brontes (Concert Version)." Charlotte Bronte's fabled heroine has been depicted on stage and screen before, of course. But "The Brontes," seen in a too-short, two-day run at downtown's Lyceum Theatre, ventures far beyond that most famous literary character. Choreographer Javier Velasco and composer Steve Gunderson have spent nine years bringing to fruition this absorbing, passionate merging of lovely songs, sensuous dance and brilliant text, which explores the fantasy lives and real circumstances of last century's most famous literary family. The piece tackles, among other subjects, the sublimation of frustrated lives into sublime fiction; the sexual politics of a 19-century family in which the favorite son, a failed writer, is shielded from knowledge of his sisters' successes; and the operatic, early demise of all four Bronte children.

82. Literary Encyclopedia
bronte, Charlotte Maria Brontë’s sister, Aunt branwell, came from Penzance to helpPatrick care for his young family and a series of family servants provided
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=582

83. Charlotte Bronte Biography
1848 The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne bronte is published. branwell,the only son of the family dies; December 19th Emily dies.
http://www.allsands.com/Literature/charlottebronte_sjf_gn.htm
Charlotte Bronte biography
Charlotte Bronte The Brunette sisters were three British novelists, daughters of the rector of Haworth, an isolated village in Yorkshire made infamous by their great literature works, which are still as popular today as they were when they were first published. bodyOffer(1861) 1816 Charlotte Bronte is born on April 21st in Thornton, Yorkshire. 1820 Charlotte’s father is appointed the perpetual curate at Haworth. 1821 September 15th, Charlotte’s mother dies. 1824 Charlotte’s sisters Elizabeth and May Maria die. 1829 Charlotte begins to write the first draft of Glasstown and Angria. 1830 Charlotte enrols at Miss Wooler’s School. 1832 Charlotte returns home. 1835 Charlotte is given a teaching job in her old school. 1838 She resigns and returns home. 1842 While Charlotte and Emily are away at school in Brussels, Aunt Elizabeth Branwell dies and the girls return home. 1843 Charlotte returns to Brussels to teach and study. 1846 The Professor written by Charlotte is repeatedly offered to publishers but is refused. 1847 Jane Eyre is published and acclaimed; Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte is published.

84. Mybug And Branwell Bronte (LIBRARY Message #5224)
Mybug and branwell bronte. Posted by Kate on April 26, 1998 at 205633Back to the LibraryI LOLed at Flora's thought that Charlotte
http://www.pemberley.com/pemb/adaptations/groupread/archive/messages/5224.html
Mybug and Branwell Bronte Posted by Kate on April 26, 1998 at 20:56:33: I LOLed at Flora's thought that Charlotte, Emily and Anne would all have sat on Branwell's head while he wrote letters to his aunt in Ireland! Quite funny what he was deducing from three ordinary letters in terms of our recent discussion of the liberalities taken by biographers!
REPLIES:

85. Find A Grave - Browse By Cemetery The Church Of St. Michael And
bronte, Charlotte b. April 21, 1816 d. March 31, 1855 Author. The Churchof St. Michael and All Angels, Haworth, West Yorkshire, England;
http://www.findagrave.com/cemeteries/697.html

86. An Emily Bronte Chronology
1826 June, Mr. bronte brings home twelve wooden soldiers for Branwellthestart of the Btontes' oral literature and imaginative games.
http://www.lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/Bronte-Emily-Chro.html
An Emily Bronte Chronology
July 30, Emily Jane Bronte born at Thornton, near Bradford, Yorkshire.
April, the Bronte family moves to Haworth.
September, Mrs. Bronte dies.
November, Emily Bronte enrolls at the Cowan Bridge School.
May 6, Maria Bronte dies; June 1, Charlotte and Emily leave Cowan Bridge; June 15 Elizabeth Bronte dies.
June, Mr. Bronte brings home twelve wooden soldiers for Branwellthe start of the Btontes' oral literature and imaginative games.
Emily and Anne begin the Gondal saga.
November 24, the earliest dated Emily Bronte manuscriptmentions the Gondals discovering Caaldine.
JulyOctobet, a pupil in Miss Wooler's school at Roe Head; is sent home after alarming Charlotte with her physical decline.
July 12, the earliest dated poem.
September, goes to teach at Law Hill School, near Halifax; remains there for about six monthsthe exact dates of the Law Hill period are disputed.
Over half of Bronte's surviving poems written.
FebruaryNovember, at school in Brussels with Charlotte to study music and foreign languages; writes the essays in French; returns to Haworth after the death of Aunt Branwell.
Alone at Haworth with her father; a time of creativity and freedom.

87. A Charlotte Bronte Chronology
193138 The nineteen volumes of The Shakespeare Head Brontethe most completeedition of the works of Charlotte, Emily, Anne, and Branwellpublished.
http://www.lang.nagoya-u.ac.jp/~matsuoka/Bronte-Charlotte-Chro.html
A Charlotte Bronte Chronology
Charlotte Bronte born April 21 at Thornton in Yorkshire.
Charlotte's father appointed perpetual curate of Haworth.
September 15, Charlotte's mother dies.
Charlotte and sisters Maria, Elizabeth, and Emily become students at the Clergy Daughters' School, Cowan Bridge.
May, Maria dies; June, Elizabeth dies; Charlotte and Emily return home.
Charlotte begins to write the first accounts of what is to become the saga of Glasstown and Angria.
January, Charlotte enrolls at Miss Wooler's School, Roe Head.
May, completes schooling and returns home to tutor sisters.
July, returns to Roe Head as a teacher.
May, resigns position and returns home.
February, Charlotte and Emily enroll in the Pensionnat Heger , Brussels; November, Aunt Elizabeth Branwell's death brings girls home.
January, Charlotte returns to Brussels to teach English and to study.
January, leaves Brussels; Bronte sisters attempt without success to start school.
May, Poems by Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell published; The Professor completed and offered repeatedly for publication, but without success; August, Charlotte begins

88. BRONTE
From the Binns point of view by far the most important bronte wasBranwell. In a lengthy article, from the Bradford Observer on
http://www.binns.dircon.co.uk/binnsnl37.html
WITHERING HEIGHTS?
Many of you will know that the small, but famous, town of Haworth in The West Riding of Yorkshire (reduced in 1974 to West Yorkshire) was a hot bed of Binns’s. You might expect that some of them had dealing with the Bronte’s, that town’s most celebrated family, and you could be right. Irishman Patrick Bronte became the curate of Haworth in 1820 and remained so until his death in 1861. Although widowed in 1821, and losing 2 daughters, 3 of his children moved on to achieve varying degrees of fame. From the Binns point of view by far the most important Bronte was Branwell. In a lengthy article, from the Bradford Observer on 17 February 1894, entitled "One Who Knew Them", by a former Haworth resident, we learn that the informant's "...early life was spent in Haworth. His father was a tailor for many years in the moorland township, and among his clients were Patrick and his on Branwell Bronte". We need to know more - a Binns mentioned in a Bronte book!! Intriguingly the "One Who Knew Then" also tells us that his grandfather died at the battle of Waterloo which took place in 1815. Is there a connection - can Bindex help?

89. Emily Brontë
Eventually he settled in Yorkshire, the centre of his life's work. In 1812he married Maria branwell of Penzance. In 1842 Aunt branwell died.
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/ebronte.htm
Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
A
B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback - pseudonym Ellis Bell Charlotte , Emily and Anne 'Heatcliff had knelt on one knee to embrace her; he attempted to rise, but she seized his hair, and kept him down.
"I wish I could hold you," she continued bitterly, "till we were both death! I shouldn't care what you suffered. I care nothing for your sufferings. Why shouldn't you suffer? I do! Will you forget me? Will you be happy when I am in the earth? Will you say twenty years hence, 'That's the grave of Catherine Earnshaw. I loved her long ago, and was wretched to lose her; but it is past. I've loved many others since: my children are dearer to me than she was; and at death, I shall not rejoice that I am going to her: I shall be sorry that I must leave them! Will you say so, Heatcliff?"
"Don't torture me till I am as mad as yourself," cried he, wrenching his head free, and grinding his teeth."'

(from Wuthering Heights Jonathan Swift 's Gulliver's Travels (1726). Emily and Anne created their own Gondal saga, and Bramwell and Charlotte recorded their stories about the kingdom of Angria in minute notebooks. Between the years 1824 and 1825 Emily attended the school at Cowan Bridge with Charlotte, and then was largely educated at home. Her father's bookshelf offered a variety of reading: the Bible, Homer, Virgil, Shakespeare, Milton, Byron, Scott and many others. The children also read enthusiastically articles on current affairs and intellectual disputes in

90. Booklovers Match-o-Matic - Writers On Love - Emily Bronte Poem
The bronte sisters. From left to right Anne, Emily, and Charlotte. Painted by Branwellbronte. Additional Resources Books Wuthering Heights by Emily bronte.
http://www.bookloversmm.com/writers/brontes_bio.cfm/CFID/1790640/CFTOKEN/3866626
//initImgs("images/;",false) initImgs("http://www.bookloversmm.com/images/;",false)
Writer Biography: The Bronte sisters - Charlotte, Anne, and Emily - were born in England in the first part of the 19th century and lived most of their lives on the desolate English moors with their father and brother Branwell. Their mother and two oldest sisters died while they were still young children, leaving Charlotte at age 9 the mother figure to her remaining siblings. At very young ages the 3 sisters and their brother were relying deeply on each other and creating their own private worlds, collaborating on the writing and staging elaborate, passionate sagas and plays, Charlotte together with Branwell, and Emily with Anne. In the summer of 1845, Charlotte Bronte found dozens of powerful poems that Emily had written on scraps of paper and hidden away in her desk. Charlotte idolized her younger sister's singular, strong nature and literary gifts, attributing to Emily "a secret power and fire that might have informed the brain and kindled the veins of a hero", and proposed to have them published. Emily refused, regarding publication as an invasion of her private world. To overcome Emily's objections, Anne revealed her own poems and suggested that the poems of all 3 sisters be presented for publication under pseudonyms. In 1846 Charlotte secretly paid for and arranged for the publication of The Poems of Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell

91. Bronte Family: An Inventory Of Their Collection At The Harry Ransom Humanities R

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00001/00001-P.html
Non-Frames Version Frames Version Raw XML File (21k)
Bronte Family:
An Inventory of their Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
Descriptive Summary
Creator Title Dates: Abstract: Quantity: 2 boxes (.83 linear feet) Identification: Repository: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
Biographical Sketches
Charlotte attended the Clergy Daughter's School along with her older sisters but returned home upon their deaths in 1825. The next 20 years were devoted to studying, educating her siblings, and a few short terms as a governess. Meanwhile, when she was at home she enjoyed an active creative life with her sisters and brother in which they invented an imaginary world and wrote stories and poems about the people who lived there. Financial support from relatives allowed Charlotte to study for almost two years in Brussels, with the thought of opening her own school with her sisters. When the school failed to work out, she began to cast about for other ways for the family to earn a living. In 1845 she discovered some poems written by Emily and conceived the idea of the sisters publishing some of their writing. Assuming the names of Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell, their

92. Bronte Family: An Inventory Of Their Collection At The Harry Ransom Humanities R

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00001/hrc-00001.html
TARO
Frames Version Print Version Raw XML File (21k)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary Biographical Sketches Scope and Contents Restrictions ... Series II. Works and Letters by Others, 1850
Bronte Family:
An Inventory of their Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
Descriptive Summary
Creator Title Dates: Abstract: Quantity: 2 boxes (.83 linear feet) Identification: Repository: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
Biographical Sketches
Charlotte attended the Clergy Daughter's School along with her older sisters but returned home upon their deaths in 1825. The next 20 years were devoted to studying, educating her siblings, and a few short terms as a governess. Meanwhile, when she was at home she enjoyed an active creative life with her sisters and brother in which they invented an imaginary world and wrote stories and poems about the people who lived there. Financial support from relatives allowed Charlotte to study for almost two years in Brussels, with the thought of opening her own school with her sisters. When the school failed to work out, she began to cast about for other ways for the family to earn a living. In 1845 she discovered some poems written by Emily and conceived the idea of the sisters publishing some of their writing. Assuming the names of Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell, their

93. Selected Poems (Everyman Paperback Classics)
The Bront sisters won immortality through their novels,but they and their brother branwell were also outstanding poets....... Reviews Book
http://hallenglishclassics.com/classics/139.shtml
Selected Poems (Everyman Paperback Classics)
Home English Classics
by Juliet R.V. Barker (Editor), Charlotte Bronte Branwell Bronte (Contributor), Patrick Branwell Bronte Anne Bronte Emily Bronte
See More Details

Paperback Reissue edition
Everyman Paperback Classics; ISBN: 0460872826 ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.57 x 7.76 x 5.11
Reviews
Book Description
The Bront sisters won immortality through their novels, but they and their brother Branwell were also outstanding poets. This generous selection of their best poems gives readers access to the personal feelings and observations woven into their great novels, from Anne's loneliness as a governess to the thrill Emily felt on the wild moors. From the Publisher

94. Guardian Unlimited Books | Quizzes (books)
Anne. Emily. Charlotte. branwell. Which Brontë was the subject of abiography subtitled The Other One? Anne. Emily. Charlotte. branwell.
http://books.guardian.co.uk/quiz/questions/0,5957,893411,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Soulmates Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer
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Guardian Review By genre Reviews ... Help
Do you suffer from Brontitis?
Anne Emily Charlotte Branwell Anne Emily Charlotte Branwell Whose doomed affair was the inspiration for the term Mrs Robinson, meaning an older, married mistress? Anne Emily Charlotte Branwell Anne Emily Charlotte Branwell Charlotte, Branwell, Emily, Anne Branwell, Charlotte, Emily, Anne Charlotte, Emily, Anne, Branwell Anne, Emily, Charlotte, Branwell And which lasted longest? Anne Emily Charlotte Branwell Emily - Currer Bell, Charlotte - Ellis Bell, Anne - Acton Bell Charlotte - Currer Bell, Emily - Ellis Bell, Anne - Acton Bell

95. Emily Jane Bronte
1826, June, Mr. bronte brings home twelve wooden soldiers for Branwellthestart of the Btontes' oral literature and imaginative games.
http://larsthompson.8m.com/Poetry/Bronte.html
Emily Jane Bronte
July 30, Emily Jane Bronte born at Thornton, near Bradford, Yorkshire. April, the Bronte family moves to Haworth. September, Mrs. Bronte dies. November, Emily Bronte enrolls at the Cowan Bridge School. May 6, Maria Bronte dies; June 1, Charlotte and Emily leave Cowan Bridge; June 15 Elizabeth Bronte dies. June, Mr. Bronte brings home twelve wooden soldiers for Branwellthe start of the Btontes' oral literature and imaginative games. Emily and Anne begin the Gondal saga. November 24, the earliest dated Emily Bronte manuscriptmentions the Gondals discovering Caaldine. JulyOctober, a pupil in Miss Wooler's school at Roe Head; is sent home after alarming Charlotte with her physical decline. July 12, the earliest dated poem. September, goes to teach at Law Hill School, near Halifax; remains there for about six monthsthe exact dates of the Law Hill period are disputed. Until 1842 over half of Bronte's surviving poems written. FebruaryNovember, at school in Brussels with Charlotte to study music and foreign languages; writes the essays in French; returns to Haworth after the death of Aunt Branwell. Alone at Haworth with her father; a time of creativity and freedom.

96. Bronte Novella To Be Published
little books that were designed to be small enough to be read by a set of toy soldiersBranwell had been given.’ — ANN DINSDALE bronte Parsonage Museum,
http://www.msnbc.com/news/885406.asp?0sl=-23

97. Katalog - Wirtualna Polska
Serwis Katalog w Wirtualna Polska S.A. pierwszy portal w Polsce.
http://katalog.wp.pl/DMOZ/Arts/Literature/Authors/B/Bront195171%2C_Branwell
Poczta Czat SMS Pomoc Szukaj.wp.pl: -Katalog -Polskie www -¦wiatowe www -Wirtualna Polska -FTP/Pliki -Grupy dyskusyjne -Encyklopedia -Produkty wp.pl Katalog Katalog ¦wiatowy DMOZ ... Authors > B Fakty o Katalogu Pomoc Regulamin Serwis szukaj ... Ostatnio dodane
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98. MASTERPIECES By Arthur Bicknell
The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www4.plala.or.jp/hitotsuda/sub-museum/master.htm
MASTERPIECES
by Arthur Bicknell
šCharacter
Charlotte BronteFBronte‰Æ‚Ì’·—‚ÅBranwell‚ÌŽoB‚µ‚Á‚©‚è‚à‚́B
Emily BronteFBronte‰Æ‚ÌŽŸ—‚ÅBranwell‚Ì–…BT‚¦‚߂Ȑ«ŠiB
Anne BronteFBronte‰Æ‚ÌŽO—B‚¿‚á‚Á‚©‚è‚à‚Ì‚ÅŽq‹Ÿ‚Á‚Û‚¢B
Patrick BronteFBronteŽo’í–…‚Ì•ƒeBŒµŠi‚Ȑ«Ši‚Å–qŽt‚ð‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚éB
Lydia RobinsonFAnneCBranwell‚̉ƒ닳Žtæ‚Ì‹M•wlBF‚Á‚Û‚¢B
Edmund RobinsonFLydia‚Ì‘§ŽqB“‚¢”N B
šStory
@–‹‚ªã‚ª‚é‚Æ•ƒe‚Æ‚RŽo–…‚Í–Z‚µ‚­‘‚«•¨‚ð‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚éB‚»‚±‚ÖBranwell‚ªs‚Á‚Ä‚«‚āA•º‘àlŒ`‚ÌPercy‚ðŽæ‚èo‚µA‚»‚ê‚ÉŒü‚©‚Á‚Ęb‚µŽn‚ߐ̂̂±‚Æ‚ðŽv‚¢o‚·‚±‚Æ‚É‚µ‚āA¸—ì‚Ì—V‚Ñ‚ð‚Í‚¶‚ß‚éB
@•ƒe‚ª‚Sl‚ÌŽq‹Ÿ‚É‚P‘΂¸‚‚̐lŒ`‚ð‚­‚ê‚½“úABranwell‚Í“—¦ŽÒ‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŽo–…‚ɐlŒ`‚ð”z‚èA”ޏ—‚½‚¿‚͂₪‚ÄŽ©•ª‚̏¬à‚Ì“oêl•¨‚Æ‚È‚é’j‚Ì–¼‘O‚ðŽ©•ª‚Ì•º‘à‚É–¼‚‚¯‚½BBranwell‚ªŽ©•ª‚Ì•º‘à‚ðPercy‚Æ–¼‚‚¯‚é‚ƁAŽo–…‚͏΂¢o‚µA”Þ‚Í‹@Œ™‚ªˆ«‚­‚È‚Á‚Ä‚»‚̏ê–Ê‚ðI‚í‚点‚éB‚»‚ÌŒãACharlotte‚Æ‚ÌŒû˜_‚©‚畃e‚ÌŽE‚µ•û‚ɂ‚¢‚Ęb‚µ‡‚Á‚½‚±‚Æ‚ðŽv‚¢o‚·B @ÅŒã‚ɁA‘z‘œ—Í‚Ì‚©‚¯‚ç‚𗭂ߍž‚ñ‚Å‚¢‚鎩•ª‚ɑ΂·‚ém’è“I‚È‹CŽ‚¿‚ðPercy‚ɘb‚µ‚Ä•·‚©‚¹¥¥¥¥¥¥B @‚·‚é‚ƍ¡“x‚͏ê–Ê‚ª•Ï‚í‚Á‚āAEmily‚̏ёœ‰æ‚ð•`‚«‚È‚ª‚ç‚Ql‚̉ï˜b‚ªŽn‚Ü‚éBBranwell‚͉¤—§”üp‰@iThe Royal Academyj‚É—Ž‚¿‚½Œã‚Å‚ ‚Á‚½‚ªA^Œ•‚ÉŠG‚ÉŽæ‚è‘g‚Þ”Þ‚ðEmily‚͌ւè‚ÉŽv‚¤‚ƍ‚°‚éB @ˆÓŽ¯‚ðŽæ‚è–ß‚µ‚½Branwell‚ðCharlotte‚ª—@‚·B”ޏ—‚Ƃ̉ï˜b‚Ì’†‚ÅB‚ÍŽ©•ª‚ª‚·‚Å‚ÉMASTERPIECE‚ðŽc‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚é‚ÆŒ¾‚¢o‚µA‚Ù‚©‚ÌŽo–…‚ðŒÄ‚ñ‚Å‚«‚Ä‚­‚ê‚Æ‚¢‚¤B‚Sl‚ª‚»‚ë‚¢A‹vX‚̐¸—ì‚Ì‹VŽ®B‚»‚µ‚ÄBranwell‚ª”ޏ—‚½‚¿‚ÉŒ©‚¹‚½‚̂́A”Þ‚ª‚¸‚Á‚Æ‘O‚É•`‚¢‚½‚Sl‚̏ёœ‰æ‚¾‚Á‚½B‹Á‚­‚RŽo–…‚Ì‘O‚ŁABranwell‚Í‚³‚ç‚É‚Sl‚Ì‚¤‚¿Ž©•ª‚Ì‘œ‚¾‚¯‚ð”’‚­“h‚è‚‚Ԃµ‚Ä‚µ‚Ü‚¤B

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