They didn't have the presence or savoir faire that Mr Carlyle brought to the part. |
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Foster was to plead his innocence and Carlyle has indicated that the club would appeal if he is banned. |
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Despite looking the spit of Robert Carlyle, McCardie is faultless, while Roeves, as a man living on borrowed time, is completely believable. |
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However, Carlyle notched the decisive final try with 13 minutes left and Carling's fifth goal made the game safe. |
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Great Alardyce is indeed of the same generation as Carlyle, Harriet Martineau numbering as a member of both eminent men's circles. |
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The story line has Carlyle fighting for survival in MI5 after a row with her oppo in France. |
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If Carlyle eventually succeeded in avoiding these consequences, it was only by sacrificing most of what was best in the work of his youth. |
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Mr Carlyle said he was touring Scotland on holiday, and that he was pleased to be in Orkney. |
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On the East Coast, book a room in the Carlyle Hotel on Manhattan's swanky Madison Avenue. |
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A more didactic type of prose, designed to inform and convince, was practised by Arnold, Carlyle, Macaulay, and others. |
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Flustered, she declines, and the whole thing is seen by Henderson's ex-boyfriend, a ratty bad-boy type played by Robert Carlyle. |
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Thomas Carlyle was perhaps the first to anatomize the note of division that in part defines the cultural crisis inherited by Howards End. |
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Carlyle rubbished talk of retirement immediately after suffering the injury, and he has reiterated his eagerness to return to action. |
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He lived in the Hotel Carlyle in San Francisco, bought his suits from the finest tailor in town, and kept a box at the opera. |
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In Hard Times he seems not to be directing his attack against machinery but against what Carlyle would have seen as a machine-like mentality. |
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He's one of these instantly noticeable Brit actors, like Robert Carlyle. |
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Carlyle was forthright, to say the least, in questioning Cosgrove's view, using the same swear word at an impressive rate of one time every 15 words. |
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What does it mean that the new CEO of GM is Daniel F. Akerson, a managing director at the Carlyle Group? |
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The Chartist movement was criticised by Thomas Carlyle in his 1840 book Chartism. |
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Influential commentators included Walter Bagehot, Thomas Carlyle, Anthony Trollope, Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill. |
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However, for Carlyle, unlike Aristotle, the world was filled with contradictions with which the hero had to deal. |
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Carlyle called this 'valetism', from the expression 'no man is a hero to his valet. |
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Marx and Engels agreed with Carlyle as far as his criticism of the hereditary aristocracy. |
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In later writings, Carlyle sought to examine instances of heroic leadership in history. |
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Carlyle set up rival Governor Eyre Defense and Aid Committee for the defence, arguing that Eyre had acted decisively to restore order. |
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In this Carlyle tried to show how a heroic leader can forge a state, and help create a new moral culture for a nation. |
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Carlyle circles have been used to develop ruler-and-compass constructions of regular polygons. |
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He soon found that he disliked London, in spite of the friendship of Thomas Carlyle and his wife Jane Welsh Carlyle. |
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Eventually Carlyle invited Jewsbury out to Cheyne Row, where Carlyle and Jane resided. |
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Jewsbury and Jane from then on had a tight friendship and Carlyle also helped Jewsbury get on to the English literary scene. |
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I am glad to see, in your account of miscellaneous reading, authors of such inoppugnable orthodoxy as Coleridge and Carlyle. |
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It was very good of God to let Carlyle and Mrs Carlyle marry one another, and so make only two people miserable and not four. |
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After Jane Carlyle's death in 1866, Thomas Carlyle partly retired from active society. |
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Froude's work was attacked by Carlyle's family, especially his nephew, Alexander Carlyle and his niece, Margaret Aitken Carlyle. |
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Carlyle is also important for helping to introduce German Romantic literature to Britain. |
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For Carlyle, chaotic events demanded what he called 'heroes' to take control over the competing forces erupting within society. |
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Their publishing lists eventually included Coleridge, Hazlitt, Clare, Hogg, Carlyle and Lamb. |
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Carlyle also worried that a more truthful kind of dance would clash with the stylization of the show's black-and-white-movie palette. |
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Kennedy International Airport and were whisked away in Manhattan's Upper East Side swankiest hotel, Carlyle Hotel. |
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Warren Carlyle could hire dancers of any age for the plotless revue After Midnight, and he cast mostly seasoned performers. |
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Many critics in the 20th century identified Carlyle as an influence on fascism and Nazism. |
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By 1821, Carlyle abandoned the clergy as a career and focused on making a life as a writer. |
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A bust of Carlyle is in the Hall of Heroes of the National Wallace Monument in Stirling. |
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The Full Monty stars Robert Carlyle, the psychopathic Begbie in Trainspotting, as the leader of a motley crew of would-be exotic dancers. |
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Carlyle had quite a few unusual definitions at hand, which were collected by the Nuttall Encyclopedia. |
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Mark Addy, who starred alongside Robert Carlyle in Britain's biggest ever box office hit, is to be the new Fred Flintstone. |
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No doubt Carlyle enjoys a cozy relationship with the corridors of power. |
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In the Enchanted Forest, Carlyle plays the Grimms' creation Rumplestiltskin and in Storybrooke, Maine, he plays the enigmatic Mr Gold. |
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In 1834, Carlyle moved to London from Craigenputtock and began to move among celebrated company. |
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Half of them came to quarterbacks Carlyle Holiday of Notre Dame, Ell Roberson of Kansas State, Reggie Robertson of California and Vince Young of Texas. |
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The kindergarchy was alive and well in the Carlyle household, with Alice centre stage and Mum and Dad both fretting about being reduced to the role of indentured servants. |
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However, the actual phrase was coined by Carlyle in the context of a debate with John Stuart Mill on slavery, in which Carlyle argued for slavery, while Mill opposed it. |
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These features were influenced by the writings of John Ruskin and Thomas Carlyle, according to whom the world itself should be read as a system of visual signs. |
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Carlyle was a masterer of language, even more than a master of it. |
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Coleridge remained in Highgate for the rest of his life, and the house became a place of literary pilgrimage for writers including Carlyle and Emerson. |
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Carlyle presented the history as dramatic events unfolding in the present as though he and the reader were participants on the streets of Paris at the famous events. |
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Notable visitors included Richard Cobden and Thomas and Jane Carlyle. |
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In 1826, Thomas Carlyle married fellow intellectual Jane Baillie Welsh, whom he had met through Edmund Irving during his period of German studies. |
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Carlyle moved towards his later thinking during the 1840s, leading to a break with many old friends and allies, such as Mill and, to a lesser extent, Emerson. |
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The French Revolution had brought Carlyle fame, but little money. |
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Between 1837 and 1840, Carlyle delivered four such courses of lectures. |
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The effort involved in the writing of the book took its toll on Carlyle, who became increasingly depressed, and subject to various probably psychosomatic ailments. |
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William Dalrymple, author of White Mughals, suggests that feelings were mutual, but social circumstances made the marriage impossible, as Carlyle was then poor. |
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Over 9000 letters between Carlyle and his wife have been published showing the couple had an affection for each other marred by frequent and angry quarrels. |
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Essentially a Romantic, Carlyle attempted to reconcile Romantic affirmations of feeling and freedom with respect for historical and political fact. |
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Set in California in 1847, this is a real curiosity, not least because it stars Robert Carlyle as a beady-eyed psycho in a terrifying beard and an even scarier hat. |
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And, because of singing commitments, he has also refused parts in There's Only One Jimmy Grimble with Robert Carlyle, and Kathy Burke's new film Tosspot. |
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Scott Ellis directs, Laura Benanti stars and Warren Carlyle choreographs. |
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And Thomas Carlyle is nine. They call him Carl, and he has a regular mania for collecting toads and bugs and frogs and bringing them into the house. |
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