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  • #REDIRECT [[The Dead Lights]]
    29 bytes (4 words) - 08:31, 4 January 2021

Page text matches

  • ...talent disparaged in passing in the 2016 fantasy novel ''Fall of Light'', the second book in Steven Erikson's Kharkanas Trilogy. ...b this wretched trench? Ah, know you this one? 'Love is a dog rolling on a dead fish.'"
    1,000 bytes (166 words) - 13:15, 15 January 2019
  • ...talent disparaged in passing in the 2016 fantasy novel ''Fall of Light'', the second book in Steven Erikson's Kharkanas Trilogy. ...b this wretched trench? Ah, know you this one? 'Love is a dog rolling on a dead fish.'"
    996 bytes (166 words) - 13:09, 15 January 2019
  • ...s://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_Is_a_Light_That_Never_Goes_Out "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out"] were created by guitarist Johnny Marr on an E-mu Emul *[http://smiths.wikia.com/wiki/Hated_Salford_Ensemble The Smiths Wiki entry]
    616 bytes (98 words) - 19:22, 26 May 2018
  • ...s ago, from the "Curse of the Midnight Piper" story of horror comic book ''The Beyond'' (October 1952). ...s up Malcolm in a passageway to starve to death. Bloody Angus MacNorn, aka the Black Duke, (so evil he gets TWO nicknames!), thinks his victory is complet
    2 KB (268 words) - 06:24, 6 May 2019
  • ...talent disparaged in passing in the 2016 fantasy novel ''Fall of Light'', the second book in Steven Erikson's Kharkanas Trilogy. "Lye to die, dead by suds, quick to the slick and slip away no time for a quip."
    2 KB (295 words) - 13:42, 15 January 2019
  • ...talent disparaged in passing in the 2016 fantasy novel ''Fall of Light'', the second book in Steven Erikson's Kharkanas Trilogy. "Lye to die, dead by suds, quick to the slick and slip away no time for a quip."
    2 KB (296 words) - 13:43, 15 January 2019
  • ...Galaxy_Science_Fiction.jpg|right|300px]]Fictional electronic instrument of the future in [https://books.google.com/books?id=BJcgLVibkrEC&pg=PA150#v=onepag It was the inspiration for another fictional instrument, ''Futurama's'' [[holophonor]]
    16 KB (2,684 words) - 07:48, 12 May 2022
  • ...the organist is trying to play. The organist has a lot of complaints, and the poem was probably some high-brow funny for 1855. Saxe-Gotha is the area real composer Johann Sebastian Bach was from, but Browning made clear
    8 KB (1,227 words) - 05:19, 30 August 2017