obstacle on the road to peace - définition. Qu'est-ce que obstacle on the road to peace
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est obstacle on the road to peace - définition

POEM BY RUDYARD KIPLING
On The Road To Mandalay; On the Road to Mandalay
  • "Where the old flotilla lay". British soldiers disembarking from paddle steamers in Mandalay on 28 November 1885 during the [[Third Anglo-Burmese War]].
  • John Collier]]
  • On the Road to Mandalay]]", 1907
  • ''Moulmein from the Great Pagoda'', [[Samuel Bourne]], 1870
  • First sheet of Oley Speaks's setting of "On the Road to Mandalay", 1907
  • The British at the palace in Mandalay in the [[Third Anglo-Burmese War]], ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'', 1887
  • An "[[old Moulmein pagoda]]", a Buddhist [[stupa]] on a hilltop at [[Mawlamyine]]

On the Great Road         
CHINESE PATRIOTIC SONG
We Walk on the Great Road; On The Great Road
"On the Great Road" (), commonly known as We Walk on the Great Road, is a Chinese patriotic song written and composed by Li Jiefeng in 1962 and published the following year. The song alludes to the metaphorical road to development for the Chinese people and state after the Great Leap Forward, as well as to the Long March undertaken by Mao Zedong and the Chinese Communist Party in 1934. We Walk on the Great Road was a popular patriotic songs during the Cultural Revolution, and its optimistic tone and simple lyrics cemented it as one of the most popular and enduring patriotic songs of the era, being ranked by the Chinese National Culture Promotion Association as one of the 124 greatest Chinese musical works. Notably, the song was sung extensively during the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong, and featured prominently in the 50th Anniversary of the People's Republic Parade in 1999.
The Road to Memphis         
2004 DOCUMENTARY FILM BY RICHARD PEARCE
The Road To Memphis
The Road To Memphis is a documentary directed by Richard Pearce. The film is part of The Blues, a seven part PBS series, with Martin Scorsese as the executive producer.
obstacle race         
  • A mud run participant climbs over a typical obstacle: the horizontal beam.
  • A pair competing at the [[Wife-carrying]] World Championships in [[Sonkajärvi]], Finland.
  • 1900 Olympics Obstacle Swim
  • Icy watermoat at Getting Tough - The Race
  • OCR Asian Championship Podium
  • Spartan Winter Race
  • [[Rugged Maniac]] 2015. Four men offer a helping hand up the Warped Wall in Rugged Maniac.
  • Tough Mudder Funky Monkey
  • Military obstacle course in Canada c. 1917
SPORTS DISCIPLINE
Obstacle Racing; Obstacle race; Obstacle racing; Obstacle Course racing; Obstacle Course Racing
¦ noun a race in which various obstacles, such as fences and pits, have to be negotiated.

Wikipédia

Mandalay (poem)

"Mandalay" is a poem by Rudyard Kipling, written and published in 1890, and first collected in Barrack-Room Ballads, and Other Verses in 1892. The poem is set in colonial Burma, then part of British India. The protagonist is a Cockney working-class soldier, back in grey restrictive London, recalling the time he felt free and had a Burmese girlfriend, now unattainably far away.

The poem became well known, especially after it was set to music by Oley Speaks in 1907, and was admired by Kipling's contemporaries, though some of them objected to its muddled geography. It has been criticised as a "vehicle for imperial thought", but more recently has been defended by Kipling's biographer David Gilmour and others. Other critics have identified a variety of themes in the poem, including exotic erotica, Victorian prudishness, romanticism, class, power, and gender.

The song, with Speaks's music, was sung by Frank Sinatra with alterations to the text, such as "broad" for "girl", which were disliked by Kipling's family. Bertolt Brecht's Mandalay Song, set to music by Kurt Weill, alludes to the poem.