He took a few hours out of his precious time on the eve of going on holiday to compose the valediction. |
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Instead, more than two years after it was recorded, the album turns out to be their valediction. |
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He had just heard the huntmaster mark the occasion with a sombre valediction, but pledge to continue the tradition of hunting. |
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Late as ever, I offer my valediction to people who, though most of them didn't know me, had a lot to do with stocking my fondest memories. |
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This evening will be a valediction from his peers, a tribute to the man who changed the game. |
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Otto simply raised a hand in valediction and spurred his horse on. |
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If Shinseki had given the same speech three weeks ago, it might have been a campaign plan instead of a valediction. |
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In 1947 he made a wonderful picture which, though he continued to photograph for many more years, we might read as a valediction to his younger, splenetic self. |
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We then leap forward to Esther's valediction, written seven years later. |
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In the disfigured street He left me, with a kind of valediction, And faded on the blowing of the horn. |
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Is this transformation meant to be valediction or a malediction? |
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Its serene tone contrasted with the stormy Fourth, and led some commentators to think it a symphonic valediction. |
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We feel that this valediction fits us well. |
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What follows is, in many ways, a valediction against mourning, and in its wit, courage and kindliness it often brings tears to the eyes. |
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The steamer itself had vanished, but the great scroll of smoke still hung in the air and drooped like a flag mournfully in valediction. |
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After that came the valediction as they undertook the slowest lap of honour in history, selflessly posing for selfies with, it seemed, everyone who wanted them. |
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I GOODBYE TO LANGUAGE Godard's thrilling valediction bids farewell to the word and the world, its 3-0 effects evoking both the antic and the antique. |
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