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Arcanum (also known as Arcanum Divinae) is an encyclical issued on 10 February 1880 by Pope Leo XIII, on the topic of Christian marriage. The encyclical was considered the forerunner to Pope Pius XI 's 1930 Casti connubii and Pope Paul VI 's 1968 Humanae vitae . [ 1 ]
Arcanum divinae: The hidden design of the divine wisdom: On Christian Marriage: 10 February 1880 5. Grande munus: On Saints Cyril and Methodius: 30 September 1880 6. Sancta Dei civitas: The Holy City of God: On Mission Societies: 3 December 1880 7. Diuturnum: On the Origin of Civil Power: 29 June 1881 8. Licet multa: On Catholics in Belgium: 3 ...
On one occasion there was "quite a scene when the Pope energetically refused to have the writings of Mons. D'Hulst of Paris put on the Index of Forbidden Books". [42] Providentissimus Deus, "On the Study of Holy Scripture", was an encyclical issued by Leo XIII on 18 November 1893 on the interpretation of Scripture.
"SNL50: The Anniversary Special" aired on Sunday to celebrate 50 years of "Saturday Night Live." The star-studded event featured live performances, sketches, and references to current events.
The Countess and Silvertongue have retired to the Turk's Head after the masquerade. On the floor can be seen their masques and fancy dress. The young Earl has followed them and has clearly burst into the room as the staple of the door lock has been ripped out and thrown onto the floor where it can be seen along with the door key.
As she once wrote to him in a letter published alongside Oppenheim's in 2014's The Leonard Bernstein Letters, their marriage was "a bloody mess." Still, they two stayed married for over 25 years ...
Dove sono" (Where are [those happy moments]) [1] is an aria in Italian for lyric soprano from the third act of Mozart's 1786 opera Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro). Countess Almaviva laments , in an initial recitative, that her husband has become a philanderer, and that she must rely on assistance from her maid to manipulate him.
An earlier version of the story appears as "The Wyfe of Bayths Tale" ("The Wife of Bath's Tale") in Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, [1] and the later ballad "The Marriage of Sir Gawain" is essentially a retelling, though its relationship to the medieval poem is uncertain. [2]