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The Scarlet Pimpernel (like Lawn Mower Steve's domestic arrest)

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Published on 02 Dec 2021 / In Film & Animation

⁣Mark Ryan is a comedian. This is just him being funny. He did a few videos, and his domestic arrest video, has an exceedingly snappy and fast dilogue between himself and his girlfriend and the cop ⁣https://www.mgtow.tv/v/c2OLjb And this is on par with the rapid exchange between Sir Percival Blakeley and the Gentlemens Club members in The Scarlet Pimpernell . ⁣https://www.mgtow.tv/v/k57jUe

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

The Scarlet Pimpernel, was a semi-fictitious character, who was a double agent, a limp wristed dandy who had shit for brains, and in the other world, he was a cunning, dashing, daring do, wobber, who rescued the French aristocrats, from getting their heads cut off during the French revolution.

It is commonly agreed, because I said so, and admittedly having seen some of the people who played the character, that Leslie Howard, pulled a performance, that made him one of the very best...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/....The_Scarlet_Pimperne

Leslie Howard as Sir Percy Blakeney (next to Merle Oberon as Lady Blakeney) in The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934)

https://upload.wikimedia.org/w....ikipedia/commons/8/8

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

Anagallis arvensis (syn. Lysimachia arvensis), commonly known as the scarlet pimpernel, red pimpernel, red chickweed, poor man's barometer, poor man's weather-glass,[1] shepherd's weather glass or shepherd's clock, is a species of low-growing annual plant with brightly coloured flowers, most often scarlet but also bright blue and sometimes pink.

The native range of the species is Europe and Western Asia and North Africa.[2] The species has been distributed widely by humans, either deliberately as an ornamental flower or accidentally.[3] A. arvensis is now naturalised almost worldwide, with a range that encompasses the Americas, Central and East Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, Malesia, the Pacific Islands, Australasia and Southern Africa.[4][5][6]

Traditionally included in the primrose family Primulaceae, the genus Anagallis was placed in the family Myrsinaceae[7] until that family in turn was included in Primulaceae in the APG III system. The genus Anagallis is included in Lysimachia by some authors.[8]

This common European plant is generally considered a weed and is an indicator of light soils, though it grows opportunistically in clay soils as well. The origin of the name pimpernel comes from late Middle English pympernele [1400–50], derived from Middle French pimprenelle, from Old French piprenelle, and ultimately from Vulgar Latin *piperīnella (piper 'pepper' + -īn- '-ine' + -ella diminutive suffix).

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bigintol03
bigintol03 2 years ago

lol

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