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The Good Life

Episode 8 of the Heir Flow Podcast podcast, hosted by Rickey Thomas, titled "The Good Life" was published on August 27, 2021 and runs 84 minutes.

August 27, 2021 ·84m · Heir Flow Podcast

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In this episode, Rickey discusses items that can be connected with living "The Good Life." Listeners will be challenged to reflect on each item to see where they are in their lives. Some will be better than they thought. Others will have some room for improvement. The may thing is that with each day you wake up, you can work towards achieving the life you were created to live. Support the show

In this episode, Rickey discusses items that can be connected with living "The Good Life."  Listeners will be challenged to reflect on each item to see where they are in their lives.  Some will be better than they thought.  Others will have some room for improvement.  The may thing is that with each day you wake up, you can work towards achieving the life you were created to live.

Support the show

On Heir On Heir Podcast Hello and welcome to On Heir, the only independent podcast covering royals from every corner of the world. Join co-hosts Jessica and Grace - who have more than 25 years’ royal watching experience between them - for an unorthodox, cynical, and humorous take on royal podcasting. Whether dissecting the latest headlines or exploring stories from centuries past, On Heir cuts through the noise to bring you fair, factual and fun takes on everything royal. The Heir of Redclyffe Charlotte Mary Yonge The Heir of Redclyffe (1853) was the first of Charlotte M. Yonge's bestselling romantic novels. Its religious tone derives from the High Church background of her family and from her friendship with a leading figure in the Oxford Movement, John Keble, who closely supervised the writing of the book. The germ of its plot was suggested by her friend Marianne Dyson. (Summary from Wikipedia) Ralph the Heir by Anthony Trollope Loyal Books As usual, Trollope creates a nice variety of characters of different English classes, sentiments and positions. The primary themes are the inheritance of property, extravagance or reason in the spending of assets, the mating of young people, and the electoral practices of the time. The election chapters are based on Trollope's own experiences when he ran for Parliament.There are, of course, many subplots which allow Trollope to express, through dialog, his opinions about greed, snobbery, work ethics and dandyism. Trollope probably regretted the duplicative naming of his characters after a while; we have two Gregory Newtons, uncle (and present Squire of Newton) and one of his nephews. Then there are several Ralphs: the (deceased) father, Ralph his son (the heir), and Ralph (not the heir) the son of the uncle Gregory! As they appear, Trollope has to interject "not the heir", or "the other Ralph". Ralph the heir is an extravagant, easy living young man who has spent himself into deb Cousin Henry by Anthony Trollope Loyal Books Indefer Jones struggles to name an heir to his estate. Will he choose his favorite niece, Isabel, or a male heir? The story turns on the trouble that arises when Indefer fails to tell anyone his final decision before passing away.
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