The Constitution, hence, attempts to pitch out this unceasing unpropitious circle, and promotes the politicians, whose heart and hands are so devoted, to participate in bringing about the advantages to the Country . }}
22.
In 1048 BC, Fa marched down the Yellow River to the King Wen and placed it on a chariot in the middle of the host; considering the timing unpropitious, though, he did not yet attack Shang.
23.
The earliest of the mature soliloquies occur in " Julius Caesar " where Shakespeare develops Brutus as a forerunner of Hamlet : the self-critical and honest man struggling to do what s right in unpropitious circumstances.
24.
Ovid shows how her mythology weaves together themes of " violence, sexuality, pleasure, marriage, and agriculture . " The Romans considered May an unpropitious month for weddings, a postponement that contributed to the popularity of June as a bridal month.
25.
In the unpropitious environment of Angoul�me Mme de Bargeton is an absurd bluestocking; transplanted to Paris, she undergoes an immediate " metamorphosis ", becoming a true denizen of high society and rightfully, in Part III, the occupant of the " pr�fecture " at Angoul�me.
26.
Cibber's follow-up comedy " Woman's Wit " ( 1697 ) was produced under hasty and unpropitious circumstances and had no discernible theme; Cibber, not usually shy about any of his plays, even elided its name in the " Apology ".
27.
Despite the longstanding intention of Canadian governments to indigenise the office and appoint Canadian nationals as governors general Australia had already done so with the appointment of Sir Isaac Isaacs as its governor general in 1931 wartime seemed an unpropitious time for constitutional tinkering; the Royal Family had garnered vast public support during the Royal Tour of 1939; as Queen Mary's brother and a former governor general of another of His Majesty's Dominions ( as they were then styled ), Lord Athlone seemed a satisfactory candidate notwithstanding considerations of talent, and Mackenzie King advised the King to appoint him.