Vanity (disambiguation)

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Vanity is excessive self-regard and overblown pride.

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Vanity may also refer to:

Arts

People

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Max or MAX may refer to:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lavender's Blue</span> English folk song and nursery rhyme dating to the 17th century

"Lavender's Blue" is an English folk song and nursery rhyme from the 17th century. Its Roud Folk Song Index number is 3483. It has been recorded in various forms and some pop versions have been hits in the U.S. and U.K. charts.

Style is a manner of doing or presenting things and may refer to:

Trash may refer to:

Pink is a pale red color.

Justice is the philosophical concept of the morally correct assignment of goods and evils.

A shark is a cartilaginous, usually carnivorous fish.

5 is a number, numeral, and glyph.

Air is the name given to the atmosphere of Earth.

A cuckoo is a bird of the family Cuculidae.

A jinx is a condition of bad luck possibly by way of a curse.

Ruins are the remains of man-made architecture.

"The Sweet Trinity", also known as "The Golden Vanity" or "The Golden Willow Tree", is an English folk song or sea shanty, listed as Child Ballad 286. The first surviving version, about 1635, was "Sir Walter Raleigh Sailing In The Lowlands ".

The Golden Vanity may refer to:

Freak has several meanings: a person who is physically deformed or suffers from an extraordinary disease and condition, a genetic mutation in a plant or animal, etc.

King Arthur is a legendary king of the Britons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jon Boden</span> British singer, composer and musician

Jon Boden is a singer, composer and musician, best known as lead singer and main arranger of Bellowhead. His first instrument is the fiddle and he is a proponent of "English traditional fiddle style" and also of "fiddle singing", both of which he employed in Bellowhead, in the duo Spiers & Boden, and previously as a member of Eliza Carthy’s Ratcatchers.

Hootenanny is a folk-music party.

<i>Self-Portrait</i> (Titian, Berlin) Painting by Titian

Self-Portrait is an oil on canvas self-portrait by the Venetian painter Titian, dated c. 1546–47. While he painted a number of independent self-portraits in various formats, this is one of only two painted examples to survive. The other is in Madrid, dated c. 1560. Both share a somber and reserved palette, although this example is richer in tonal variation and colour harmonisation.

The Golden Vanity is a musical setting of an adaptation by Colin Graham of a traditional folk song, also known as "The Sweet Trinity", for boys' voices and piano by the English composer Benjamin Britten (1913–76). The composer described it as a vaudeville. The boys act out parts as well as sing; Britten wrote on the score: "The Vaudeville should be given in costume but without scenery ... The action ... should be mimed in a simple way and only a few basic properties, such as telescopes and a rope, are needed ... A drum should be used for the sound of cannon fire".