Fabrication of evidence is a reason why Laurence Keating's point of view about Mary Celeste is unbelievable. In 1929, Laurence J. Keating of Liverpool, England, published The Great Mary Celeste Hoax, a book based upon the Chambers's Journal-published story of Mary Celeste Survivor John Pemberton as told to writer Lee Kaye. The book was followed rapidly by:
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If you're SMU in the 2010 season, the answer is an unbelievable 56%.
The narrator, a young girl whose detective father believes that clues survive for even the most stubbornly unsolvable mysteries, describes the point of view of The Mary Celeste by Manhattan-born author Jane Yolen. The book is aimed at readers 6 through 10 years in age and students in grades 1 through 5. It pulls together what is fact, fiction and unknown in one of the world's greatest maritime mysteries, the disappearance without a trace of the hermaphrodite brig Mary Celeste's captain with two family members, three officers and four seamen.
Friar Laurence means that madmen won't listen to what sane people have to say. In other words, he accuses Romeo of not listening to what he, from an outside point of view, has to say about his proposal to Juliet.
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seeing is believing. not too much else you can do. if your crafty with words you could probably get your point across. in the end show them and they will believe.
Confederate General Laurence Simmons Baker graduated from West Point in 1851. Baker was ranked last in his graduating class of 42 cadets. Baker saw extensive service in the Eastern Theater of the US Civil War. He participated in the Peninsula campaign followed by the battles of the Second Bull Run and Gettysburg.
the Tuskegee airmen were a black American fighter squadron in ww2. Laurence fishbourne was in a film about it...a good starting point.
He is a character (and the narrator) in a novel by Laurence Sterne, which is named after him. The novel is of a satirical and comedic nature. One of the distinctive things about Shandy is that he cannot keep to the point when telling a story, but digresses and never gets back to his original point.
Alcoholism, imagination and the desperation of poverty are reasons why people might not believe Billy Foyle's viewpoint about the half brig Mary Celeste. William Foyle claimed to have fallen asleep aboard the hermaphrodite brig and to have severed the lifeboat's 330-yard (301.75-meter) tether when the Mary Celeste Ten (of captain with daughter and wife, three officers and four seamen) abandoned ship because of the volatile cargo of 1,701 industrial alcohol-filled barrels marking sounds prefatory to mass explosions. He purported that Captain David Reed Morehouse of Dei Gratia secreted him to Gibraltar, for subsequent passage to England, in order to claim salvage on the derelict, yawing part barkentine part schooner Mary Celeste.
The famous mystery of the Mary Celeste revolves around the unexplained disappearance of its crew without signs of struggle or distress. Some theories suggest piracy, mutiny, or sabotage, while others point to natural disasters like water spouts or seaquakes. The case remains unsolved to this day, fueling speculation and debate among historians and maritime experts.
"Ludicrously comical" describes something that is extremely absurd, ridiculous, or laughably funny to the point that it seems almost unbelievable or exaggerated in its humor. It often involves situations, events, or stories that are so exaggerated or implausible that they provoke laughter or disbelief.