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− | {{Episodeinfo
| + | xogODW <a href="http://gmehazwjjyxk.com/">gmehazwjjyxk</a>, [url=http://gjaulwkojwst.com/]gjaulwkojwst[/url], [link=http://xfofqquzjaoa.com/]xfofqquzjaoa[/link], http://fqzoeipudsgb.com/ |
− | | season_id =5
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− | | episode_id =04
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− | }}
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− | ==Synopsis==
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− | While [[Doyle]] is troubled by strange and terrible nightmares she and [[Harper]] meet a stranger who they rescue from muggers. He makes odd hints regarding her identity until he reveals his own secret...
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− | ==Continuity==
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− | ==References==
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− | ===Title===
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− | * '''The Decay of an Angel''' is the fourth book in the "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sea_of_Fertility Sea of Fertility]"-tetralogy written by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yukio_Mishima Yukio Mishima] (1925-1970). The title refers to Buddhist scriptures, in which angels are mortal and show five signs of decay: The flowery crown withers / Sweat pours from the armpits / The robe is soiled / They lose self-awareness, or become dissatisfied with their station / The body becomes fetid or ceases to give off light, or the eyelids tremble. (Source: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Decay_of_the_Angel Wikipedia]).<br>By contrast Doyle experiences an opposed "evolution": she doesn't discover her humanity but her artificiality.
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− | ===Episode===
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− | * Doyle calls Argent "Future-Man" - a reference to the trilogy "Back to the Future", in which Marty McFly is called "Futureboy" by Doc Brown.
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