Aleksandra Billewiczówna

Aleksandra Billewicz (Oleńka, Aleksandra Billewiczówna, later Kmicicowa) is a fictional character created by Henryk Sienkiewicz, appearing in the novel The Deluge as the main female protagonist. She is a wise Lithuanian noblewoman, by the will of her grandfather engaged to Andrzej Kmicic.

Aleksandra Billewiczówna
The Trilogy character
First appearanceThe Deluge
Last appearanceFire in the Steppe
Created byHenryk Sienkiewicz
Portrayed byMałgorzata Braunek
In-universe information
NicknameOleńka
GenderFemale
FamilyHerakliusz Billewicz (grandfather)
SpouseAndrzej Kmicic
RelativesTomasz Billewicz
ReligionChristian
NationalityLithuanian

In 1974 film she is portrayed by Małgorzata Braunek.

Description

Panna Aleksandra raised her head, as if roused by the silence which followed the exclamations of the man; then the blaze lighted up her face and her serious blue eyes looking from beneath black brows. She was a comely lady, with flaxen hair, pale complexion, and delicate features. She had the beauty of a white flower. The mourning robes added to her dignity. Sitting before the chimney, she seemed buried in thought, as in a dream; doubtless she was meditating over her own lot, for her fates were in the balance.[1]

gollark: I've heard of that and vaguely looked at using it, but the server stuff still seems very WIP.
gollark: Although Discord has giant servers now, so good luck leaving without missing tons of stuff!
gollark: If you want to move off Facebook you'll probably worry about losing contact with 293848 people you don't have anywhere else, if you want to move off Skype you might just have something like 5 people in a group with you.
gollark: It mostly doesn't happen unless the existing stuff is also very bad. I suspect it's also easier for somewhat purpose-specific instant messaging than for general social network stuff because the group which has to move with you is smaller and you don't have to migrate giant friend lists or something.
gollark: Even if better services *do* exist, people generally don't move to something they don't have stuff/people they know on.

References

  1. Sienkiewicz, H., , Chapter 2


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