Xaverian vs Duxbury | 2014 MIAA South D1 Semi
Getting Started with Duxbury Braille Translator - Statewide Vision Resource Centre
2014 Duxbury HS Prom
Duxbury High School Prom 2013
Great White Shark Sighting off Duxbury Coast
Demo: Duxbury High School Animation
Lacrosse: Lincoln Sudbury earns elusive first win over Duxbury
Football, Needham vs. Duxbury, 11-1-13
HS Football: Holliston 34, Duxbury 20
Webinar Duxbury braille translator
Longboarding Duxbury
Duxbury High School Music Department Carnegie Hall Documentary 2014
Duxbury Lacrosse : Season Highlights 2011
'13 Lacrosse - Duxbury at Lincoln-Sudbury - Highlights
Plot
A young British clerk in a gloomy North Country undertaker's office, Billy is bombarded daily by the propaganda of the media that all things are for the asking. This transparently false doctrine, coupled with the humdrum job and his wild imagination, leads him on frequent flights to "Ambrosia," a mythical kingdom where he is crowned king, general, lover or any idealized hero the real situation of the moment makes him desire. His vacillating commitment and post-adolescent immaturity have created situations which make Ambrosia all the more attractive. He's succeeded in becoming engaged to two different girls, simultaneously, while in love with a third, Liz. He's in hot water with his employer, having spent a rather large sum of postage money on his personal frivolities. And last, but not least, his dream of becoming a highly-paid, famous scriptwriter in London seems doomed to failure. The only person in his life capable of bringing him down to earth is Liz, and she's having a difficult time of it. Finally, he gets his life sufficiently in order to leave for London with his true love. Billy still hasn't come to grips with the real world by the end of the film. He leaves the train to buy milk from a vending machine and watches the train slowly pull out for London with Liz aboard. He returns to the more comfortable shelter of his parents home, Ambrosia and his imagination.
Keywords: 1960s, ambrosia, apartment-building, aphrodisiac, army-officer, arrest, bagpipes, band, based-on-novel, based-on-play
William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: [daydreaming] It was a big for us, we had won the war in Ambrosia. Democracy was back once more in our beloved country.
William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: Today's a day of big decisions - going to start writing me novel - 2000 words every day, going to start getting up in the morning. [Looks at his overgrown thumb nail] I'll cut that for a start. Yes... today's a day of big decisions.
William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: [wearning a monocle and speaking in a posh voice] Cabinet change imminent I see.::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: You'll be bloody imminent if you don't start getting up in the morning.
William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: You've start coming in at night, I'm not having you gallivanting about all hours!::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: Who are you having gallivanting about?
Arthur Crabtree: Hey, I got those things for you.::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: What? What things?::Arthur Crabtree: Passion pills - what I said I'd get you.::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: Let's have a look. Where'd you get them?::Arthur Crabtree: This mate of mine fetched them from Singapore.::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: I bet they're bloody aspirins.::Arthur Crabtree: What?::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: [Billy swallows some] Eh, steady on! They'll give yuh the screamin' abdabs. One of these, two two-and-nines at the Regal, bag of chips and you're away!
Emanuel Shadrack: So that's your ambition, is it? Scriptwriting?::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: Oh, yes, it always has been.::Emanuel Shadrack: Do you get a salary each week then, or do you get paid by the joke?
Rita: [after Billy reopens the door] You rotten. lying, crossed-eyed git. You're nothing else.::William Terrence 'Billy' Fisher: [clearly not wanting her to come inside] Hello, Rita. Sorry, I can't ask you in. We're havin' our chimney swept.::Rita: They'll be havin' you swept before I finish.
Alice Fisher: If you're in any more trouble, Billy, it's not something you can leave behind you, you know. You put it in your suitcase, and you take it with you.
Xaverian vs Duxbury | 2014 MIAA South D1 Semi
Getting Started with Duxbury Braille Translator - Statewide Vision Resource Centre
2014 Duxbury HS Prom
Duxbury High School Prom 2013
Great White Shark Sighting off Duxbury Coast
Demo: Duxbury High School Animation
Lacrosse: Lincoln Sudbury earns elusive first win over Duxbury
Football, Needham vs. Duxbury, 11-1-13
HS Football: Holliston 34, Duxbury 20
Webinar Duxbury braille translator
Longboarding Duxbury
Duxbury High School Music Department Carnegie Hall Documentary 2014
Duxbury Lacrosse : Season Highlights 2011
'13 Lacrosse - Duxbury at Lincoln-Sudbury - Highlights
Duxbury Football Highlight Film Intro 2012
Duxbury beach will be open after shark scare
Brendan Burke- Duxbury High School 2014 Attackman
14 - Hockey Highlights - Duxbury vs BC High - Buddy Ferreira Classic Championship
Brahmin Large Duxbury Satchel Video
Great White shark spotted off shore of Duxbury Beach
Needham vs. Duxbury, Boys Lacrosse, May 13, 2013
Linda Duxbury on the Changing Face of Public Service
Large Shark Spotted in Duxbury
Duxbury is a coastal town in Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States. Duxbury is a suburb of Boston, located on the South Shore approximately 35 miles (56 km) to the south of the city. The population was 15,059 at the 2010 census.
Geographic and demographic information on the specific parts of the town of Duxbury is available in articles Cedar Crest, Duxbury (CDP), Duxbury Beach, and South Duxbury, respectively.
The area now known as Duxbury was inhabited by people as early as 12,000 to 9,000 B.C. By the time European settlers arrived here, the region was inhabited by the Wampanoags, who called this place Mattakeesett, meaning “place of many fish.”
In 1620, the English settlers known as the Pilgrims established their colony in Plymouth. Per the terms of their contract with financial backers in London, they were required to live together in a tight community for seven years. At the end of that term in 1627, land along the coast was allotted to settlers for farming. Thus, the coastline from Plymouth to Marshfield was parceled out, and many settlers began moving away from Plymouth.