The true gods are fickle and capricious and care little for the affairs of men, but the piper was different. |
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The opening ceremony included a procession down the High Street by the society's fleet of funeral vehicles to the sound of a piper major. |
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During the offertory, he played the trumpet, and the piper piped during the communion. |
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They are contradicted by the old adage that he who pays the piper calls the tune. |
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Her Majesty's piper, Mackay, had orders to play a pibroch under her windows every morning at seven o'clock. |
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I passed out of the library and as I did, I thought I heard from the other side of Arthur's Seat a lone piper playing a pibroch. |
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At a hand signal from a Metro Police officer the piper took his position in front of the procession. |
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In the Communist world, there was always another bureaucrat to pay the piper, so long as he played the right propaganda tune for the time. |
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I do understand the contrary view that he who pays the piper calls the tune. |
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Ponting seems to suggest that he is a lone piper skirling on a distant hill. |
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Since he who pays the piper calls the tune, it was suggested that it was a propaganda vehicle for pro-American views. |
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Then the MV Pharos cast off, sailing away from the pier for the last time, with the piper playing on deck. |
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Well, you can fall you back on the axiom that he who pays the piper calls the tune. |
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The afternoon's celebrations included a march down to the ferry launching site, the walking group led by piper Bill Jackson. |
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Virtuoso piper Jarlath has fused world music and traditional music to create a mesmeric and powerful sound. |
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There is also an album from Dublin-born uillean piper and tin whistle player, Ronan Browne. |
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The sitar player is like a pied piper leading the dinner guests as if they were rats. |
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A lone piper played for the wedding party while it waited for Rachel's arrival. |
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Below a big art nouveau mirror there's a gas fire with a magnetic piper stuck to it, an indication of his Scottish roots. |
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Now I dance to my own piper and if I want to sleep in I have no master to gainsay me. |
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Now the party will have to pay the piper for doing the expedient thing instead of the right thing. |
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The band, consisting of a drummer, a piper and a fiddler, was playing a Torrencian song she knew, and she couldn't resist trying to join in. |
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A Scottish piper will play a lament from the control tower at Elvington Airfield during the funeral service in the hangar tomorrow at 12.30 pm. |
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Having started out as a piper himself, Jock loves to languish in the tunes of glory, the marches and reels of the standard Scottish songbook. |
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It is awarded to a piper doing exactly what pipers in Scottish regiments are best known for which is encouraging the men into an attack. |
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Prior to the Mass the First Communion and Confirmation children, along with the priest, marched in procession into the field headed by a piper. |
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A lone piper played the lament before the crowd dispersed from the quayside following the ceremony. |
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Their grandfather played the fiddle, and their father is a piper and singer of Gaelic songs. |
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An armed company of the kerne, carrying halberds and pikes and led by a piper, attack and burn a farmhouse and drive off the horses and cattle. |
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The piper children are expert pickpockets and thieves, they have amassed countless treasures yet rarely sell them or spend any money. |
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During the offertory, Michael Delaney played the trumpet, and the piper piped during the communion. |
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Also present at the procession, led by a piper, were two police horses from Greater Manchester Police's mounted section. |
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Although he feared her, she could see he thought he had played her as a piper plays his pipe. |
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The wall is part of the castle fortifications and if the weather is warm enough to use the terrace you can hear the piper on the ramparts. |
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When Jock discovers his daughter with the piper, a skirmish ensues and an official inquest is called. |
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Their opera is the mysterious and darkly moving tale of what happened after the pied piper left Hamelin. |
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But more importantly, you are the last direct descendant of the Jester's piper son, Nathaniel. |
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If it can't provide the unique experience it promises, it will have to pay the piper. |
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But what happens when they have to pay the piper later on is anyone's guess. |
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But if we keep doing what we've been doing, we'll ultimately have to pay the piper. |
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Simply put, if one does not pay the piper, one will not be able to call the tune. |
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Like anything else, if we cannot pay the piper we will not have much of a tune. |
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The government let the cupboards get bare and now it is time to try and pay the piper. |
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Can it be assumed that we have deliberately chosen to pay the piper without insisting on calling the tune? |
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I think that it's very short-sighted and that we pay the piper down the road. |
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When we find ones that don't, we make a point of making sure that they pay the piper. |
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You have too many people with too many needs to fix this now and you will pay the piper. |
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The long pepper is called the piper largum, it also comes from a liana but is cultivated especially in India and in Indonesia. |
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In the end, the exasperated adults were compelled to employ the services of a piper, who bewitched the children with music and led them into a hollow mountain. |
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He was piped in like the chieftains of old by Sligo piper Eugene Conlon. |
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He gave us the Byron who enjoyed playing the role of pie-eyed piper to the village youths. |
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Although her age is never explicitly stated, Nancy is not considerably older than piper. |
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Certainly the most popular person of Hameln is the pied piper and the saga about the rats and the children disappearing in a mountain. |
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When our piper played a pibroch, the music of the waves drowned or softened down the harsh sound of the bagpipe, which discoursed most excellent music. |
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But he who pays the piper must dictate the tune, and the delta has been paying the piper for so very long. |
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But he who pays the piper calls the tune, and the biggest piper-payer is the American Treasury. |
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I think we also have to keep in mind that whoever pays the piper calls the tune. |
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In Kandahar City, however, the piper has to deal with an entirely different bag. |
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Sgt James Douglas, a piper with the Royal Canadian Artillery Band from CFB Edmonton, Alta. |
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It is said that one child was left behind when the mysterious piper lured all the children away from their homes. |
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However, if a piper is used, the host should be prepared to recognize him by offering a toast in recognition of the piper's efforts. |
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My host used a live piper fish as bait and within moments a kingie struck. |
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Unfortunately, such considerations of purpose tend to be drowned out by the alluring, sweet-sounding tune of a pied piper. |
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The taxpayer pays the piper, but the sponsor calls the tune. |
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In The Flutist, an Orphic piper with a mother-of-pearl face charms fossilized rocks, which rise from the grassy ground to assemble a ziggurat ascending to the ether. |
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Outside the hotel a piper is being photographed by a South African rugby player as he plays a welcoming tune for a coachload of Scottish tourists. |
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After word of Banks' presence spread, he became a modern-day pied piper. |
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I have always believed he who pays the piper calls the tune. |
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Whoever pays the piper calls the tune, so the saying goes. |
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The regiment's pipes and drums wear the MacDuff Ancient Tartan and doublets of piper green with white facings. |
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The terrorism touches the country which hasn't breathed yet after the war and which continues to pay the piper of a peace which doesn't really exist in several arabic countries. |
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When WO1 Stuart Bowie, himself a piper, became the RSM in April 2016, he began laying the ground to raise a new Regimental Pipes and Drums. |
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Inception Even a skilled thief must eventually pay the piper. |
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When you pay the piper, you call the tune. |
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Today is a particularly poignant day because Charles was due to be joining me at a farewell party for my brother Donald, who is retiring from his role as official piper at Glasgow University where Charles was once rector. |
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The piper is asked to step forward to the host's position. |
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In the gala there were captivating moments, like those of Belgians Pantha Rhei and the Galician piper and singer Mercedes Peon, and of flamenco guitarist Niño Josele and Hungarian singer Márta Sebestyén. |
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A twentieth-century master uilleann piper and mentor of many of today's finest pipers. |
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Master uilleann piper and Planxty stalwart Liam O'Flynn will be playing alongside Dublin-born fiddler Paddy Glackin. |
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The pair had been due to meet on Friday to mark the retirement of Campbell's brother as the piper at Glasgow University, where Kennedy previously served as rector. |
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A piper generally greets the guests, who gather and mix as at any informal party. |
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In particular, a closing number that featured a solo piper and a prominent role for the horn section showed a sweeter, very musical side of the bagpipe. |
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Two padres and a bugler travelled from Canada. The piper, firing party and bearers were Canadian Forces personnel based in Geilenkirchen, Germany. |
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I wanted to restore the essence of this story by conserving the ambiguity and mystery surrounding the pied piper, without trying to impose my personal interpretation of the character. |
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Each attacking company was led by a piper, playing tunes that would allow other units to recognise which Highland regiment they belonged to. |
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He needs a piper to play the highland pipes when he performs his 1967 hit Sky Pilot. |
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George was a member of the Worcester Kiltie Pipe Band and was a piper for the Westborough Police Department. |
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If a piper, bugler or other musical group is participating in the ceremony they should stand behind the Cross of Sacrifice or monument or off to one side. |
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Probably the most influential piper at that time was Billy Pigg. |
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Starting on Monday the children will hear performances from varying musical styles including a Scottish piper, a Caribbean steel drum band and a mandolin player. |
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A piper led a parade to the churchyard where the Branch donated a Sweet Gum Tree, requested by the church board, to replace aged Carolinian trees. |
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Even a streaker couldn't disturb their massive concentration, nor could the dirgeful piper who'd earlier given the match its air of untimely triumphalism. |
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Brigadier Simon Fraser, 15th Lord Lovat and his 1st Special Service Brigade arrived in the second wave, piped ashore by Private Bill Millin, Lovat's personal piper. |
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Now Hollywood's top piper Eric Rigler, who has played on a string of hit movies, has defended the use of the uilleann pipes in Mel Gibson's Oscar-winning blockbuster. |
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For those serving with the 1st Battalion, the Scots Guards, there was also a distinctly Scottish wake-up call, with a piper blasting out We Wish You A Merry Christmas. |
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It is usually brought in by the cook on a large dish, generally while a piper plays the bagpipe and leads the way to the host's table, where the haggis is laid down. |
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She was said to have appeared there in the form of a calf one evening when a piper, Laurence Hoolahan, would not stop annoying her with his ceaseless drunken tweetings. |
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Uilleann bagpipes in Ireland differ from Scottish pipes in that the uilleann piper uses bellows under the arm to keep the bag full rather than blowing into the bag. |
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He wanted to get rich too quickly I suppose.... He's got to pay the piper. |
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Tradition holds that seven years learning, seven years practising and seven years playing is required before a piper could be said to have mastered his instrument. |
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But since productivity is a factor when individual physicians' salaries are being allotted, the internists too are earnestly dancing to the VMPS piper. |
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