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Klinik Pengobatan Alat Vital Balikpapan AA Adam 085669044498

Author: AA_Adamx
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What is Klinik Pengobatan Alat Vital Balikpapan AA Adam 085669044498

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MR. AND MRS. STUDY FREAKS

+18 Being the best is one thing that all students want and dream of. But to get it is not as easy as turning the palm. All of them is wanting perfect grades and to get that perfect grade, they only have to do one way... Study. Yes! That's what they have to do. As always done by one of the students from Erix Senior High School. Lilac, that's the name of a female student who spends almost all of her time studying. She always gets good grades even perfect, which makes her have many friends and often get compliments. She was given the nickname of a study freak. But what will happen if another study freak appears? The man suddenly gets perfect grades which makes the students in their class start comparing the two of them. And because of that, hatred rose from inside Lilac's heart and thought the man was her enemy. The hostility only got worse because of the man who had beaten Lilac's perfect grades several times. But what happened that night changed everything... Who would have thought, that the hostility between the two of them tucked into a feeling of love? Came from the man who confessed his feelings to Lilac. Very unexpected. But the question is, does Lilac have the same feelings as those men? Or would the two of them continue to be enemies, as Lilac had thought all along? I don't know if you want to know the answer then find out the answer... *** Hello, this is my first time writing in English, so I'm really sorry if there are many shortcomings. p.s: the cover is not mine, so the credit belongs to the owner.

Blueside · Teen
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Prince eli

My life IT is with a kind of fear that I begin to write the history of my life. I have, as it were, a superstitious hesitation in lifting the veil that clings about my childhood like a golden mist. The task of writing an autobiography is a difficult one. When I try to classify my earliest impressions, I find that fact and fancy look alike across the years that link the past with the present. The woman paints the child's experiences in her own fantasy. A few impressions stand out vividly from the first years of my life; but "the shadows of the prison-house are on the rest." Besides, many of the joys and sorrows of childhood have lost their poignancy; and many incidents of vital importance in my early education have been forgotten in the excitement of great discoveries. In order, therefore, not to be tedious I shall try to present in a series of sketches only the episodes that seem to me to be the most interesting and important. I was born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia, a little town of northern Alabama. The family on my father's side is descended from Caspar Keller, a native of Switzerland, who settled in Maryland. One of my Swiss ancestors was the first teacher of the deaf in Zurich and wrote a book on the subject of their education–rather a singular coincidence; though it is true that there is no king who has not had a slave among his ancestors, and no slave who has not had a king among his. My grandfather, Caspar Keller's son, "entered" large tracts of land in Alabama and finally settled there. I have been told that once a year he went from Tuscumbia to Philadelphia on horseback to purchase supplies for the plantation, and my aunt has in her possession many of the letters to his family, which give charming and vivid accounts of these trips. My Grandmother Keller was a daughter of one of Lafayette's aides, Alexander Moore, and granddaughter of Alexander Spotswood, an early Colonial Governor of Virginia. She was also second cousin to Robert E. Lee. My father, Arthur H. Keller, was a captain in the Confederate Army, and my mother, Kate Adams, was his second wife and many years younger. Her grandfather, Benjamin Adams, married Susanna E. Goodhue, and lived in Newbury, Massachusetts, for many years. Their son, Charles Adams, was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts, and moved to Helena, Arkansas. When the Civil War broke out, he fought on the side of the South and became a brigadier-general. He married Lucy Helen Everett, who belonged to the same family of Everetts as Edward Everett and Dr. Edward Everett Hale. After the war was over the family moved to Memphis, Tennessee. I lived, up to the time of the illness that deprived me of my sight and hearing, in a tiny house consisting of a large square room and a small one, in which the servant slept. It is a custom in the South to build a small house near the homestead as an annex to be used on occasion. Such a house my father built after the Civil War, and when he married my mother they went to live in it. It was completely covered with vines, climbing roses and honeysuckles. From the garden it looked like an arbour. The little porch was hidden from view by a screen of yellow roses and Southern smilax. It was the favourite haunt of humming-birds and bees.

Elisha_Victor · Urban
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