Fashionable Victorians flocked to promenade through this new underwater marvel, an amazing twin-bore arched corridor lit by flickering gaslight. |
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Perrault's fables were much reprinted and adapted by the Victorians into children's picture books, burlesque, and pantomime. |
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The reader gawps, in turns amused and appalled, at an enthralling variety bill of Victorians and Social Gospellers. |
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Victorians sought to create respectable personal habits in societies where the vast majority of inhabitants can be described only as crude. |
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He uses light and shadows, natural vegetation and bright colors of the tropics to paint Caribbean Victorians and palms. |
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But he will know that the Victorians had their own idols, especially among the heroes and martyrs of the Empire. |
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The Victorians rose to this challenge with a characteristic determination that seems daunting to us today. |
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It's a right of all Victorians to be able to sack their legal representation. |
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The assumptions are made by the collection of Victorians and New Zealanders who have long dominated radio in the harbour city. |
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Victorians who wish to subscribe will simply give addresses in New South Wales. |
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A huge proportion of London is taken up with Victorian buildings, but we are not the Victorians. |
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The Victorians hid their rotten teeth when sitting for portraits and photographs. |
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Anyone who has read the Bronte Sisters knows the kind of high-flown passion the Victorians held dear. |
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The Victorians really went to town on their Valentine cards, and the production of Valentine cards commenced in earnest in those times. |
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Thus is the tone set early on, and it's decidedly at odds with our notions today of the prim and proper Victorians. |
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The state government has been attempting to muddy the waters by accusing the Commonwealth of dudding Victorians. |
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Even by the standards of the Victorians, who had a pretty high tolerance level for toadying, this is slimy stuff. |
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Giving gifts was only de-emphasized by the Scrooge-like Victorians who tried to cut down on expenses. |
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Well-to-do Victorians used to pay to tour lunatic asylums, deriving great amusement from the inmates. |
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Unlike the prudish Victorians, Lady Mary adopted the Middle Eastern language of flowers to express decidedly carnal desires. |
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Those Victorians who rejoiced in statistics could relish the expansion of the system. |
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Today, in a scene the Victorians would have recognised, kites can be seen flying 50 ft above villages in the Chilterns. |
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Considering how much they ate, it is a wonder wealthy Victorians were not all huge. |
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The Victorians had a dream that Whitby could match the gilded splendour of Harrogate, and the thermal spring waters of Bath. |
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We look back at the stiff-necked Victorians with a smug sense of superiority. |
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The Victorians adored sweets and ate far more fruit preserves than we do today. |
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He got away with it, as so many other Victorians got away with pederasty and nympholepsy. |
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When the Victorians planted them the only problem was sheep muck and cow muck. |
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Why not get kids studying the Victorians to learn songs from Oliver! or Gilbert and Sullivan musicals? |
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All of this came neatly together in the rituals the Victorians developed for Christmas. |
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Today we tend to dismiss the moralizing of the late Victorians who insisted that the unemployed were lazy, intemperate, or thriftless. |
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The squints, or hagioscopes, were originally angled but were unfortunately straightened by the Victorians. |
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Nor was eighteenth-century society as lax in its sexual morality as the Victorians often supposed. |
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Measure for Measure disgusted the Victorians, but appealed to 20th-century audiences. |
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One might say that the Victorians are not so much the origin of our present as we are a continuation of theirs. |
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The existing tiles span different periods of the Abbey's history and were re-laid by the Victorians. |
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For the Victorians, as for many of their successors, morality was a matter of highest importance. |
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In fact, some of the feminine qualities celebrated by many Victorians were increasingly cast in a negative light for both boys and girls. |
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What she has to say about the Victorians, or Bloomsbury, Yates, the Pre-Raphaelites, or more modern writers has at times an oracular quality. |
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He had been asked by the Victorians to look for suitable properties in South Australia for their investment. |
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If a tiny minority of Victorians have Gambling problems, banning pokies won't cure them. |
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I think the Victorians had it right on this one when they made everyone wear full length swimming costumes. |
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This has enabled the Federation Celebrations to reach and engage all Victorians. |
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It was with hearts in their mouths that they faced the Victorians in the opening match. |
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Nevertheless, a century later many Victorians were taking a nightly dose of blue pill, aloes, colocynth, and castor and croton oils to purge their bowels. |
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As proper Victorians, the commissioners always noticed when particular bands could be distinguished for their cleanliness or godliness. |
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In England, porter, originally the beer favoured by porters at the market, became the health drink of the Victorians, often prescribed by doctors for convalescent ladies. |
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This document proposes a statewide land justice settlement to break the deadlock and actually produce some substantial benefits for many indigenous Victorians. |
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What I fail to remember, she counters with a sparkle, is how modern the Victorians were. |
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The Victorians refused to start their days without first grazing on fish, cold meats, pies, kedgeree, eggs, toast and jams. |
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Some Victorians may have seen romance in the wild blue yonder, but most people are not romantics in that sense. |
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For the Victorians, the dame represented a rare opportunity to manhandle a lady on stage, for comic and licentious effect. |
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The idea of counter-cyclical policy was anathema to the Victorians. |
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She's got colonials with painted shutters and Victorians covered in snow. |
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There is a fullness and passion to the Victorians that made them put their grandest thoughts and kinkiest fantasies on the same canvas. |
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On the seafront, paint peels off the boarding houses where Victorians once summered. |
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The Victorians were still very much under the Romantic sway. |
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Parts of the pantomime come directly from the parlour games which the Victorians, who have given us so much of our current-day celebration, absolutely loved. |
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Wealthy Victorians turned to historical styles for inspiration and championed many different architectural revivals for their homes. |
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Victorians used to pursue it for hat feathers – its legacy is as a founding reason for why the RSPB was created. |
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Wildcards were awarded to West Australian teenager Storm Sanders and Victorians Jarmila Gajdosova and Olivia Rogowska. |
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The Victorians have halved their road deaths and serious injuries and reduced all classes of injury crash by over a third. |
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The vibrant colours preferred by the Victorians were covered with white paint, and much of the clutter was removed. |
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Papier-mâché is one of the more unusual materials out of which the Victorians made furniture and other smaller items. |
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Victorians wore black for a year and pulled down their blinds until the funeral was over. |
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Pay tribute to the Victorians who died in World War I at the Shrine of Remembrance. |
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The Victorians had a passion for finding exotic plants overseas and then displaying them as dramatically as possible. |
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It was the Victorians who made Llangollen popular with tourists, when the rising population turned it from a small village to a town. |
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In 1871 a group of 32 burly Victorians met at the Pall Mall restaurant on cockspur Street and started the Rugby Football Union. |
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We may need the illusion of nature more than the Victorians needed the exotica of it. |
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Artists in both movements were social realists, with the Romantics known for recovering older forms and the Victorians known for highly elaborate language. |
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The Victorians usually used the Fahrenheit scale to measure temperature. |
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Japanese knotweed, for all its invasive attributes, was an ornamental plant for the Victorians. |
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The bright, clear light in his paintings appears like an Arts and Crafts article of faith, casting aside the heavily shadowed tonalities of the Victorians. |
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On the contrary much of what is taken to be so distinctive about the Victorians can be traced back to eighteenth-century developments that have featured in this volume. |
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It's such a fascinating world and as soon as people can stop thinking of the Victorians as stuffy moralists then they can see that they were very sensual and rich. |
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At best Victorians could float, dog-paddle, or thrash about a bit. |
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They had a premier who promised to govern for all Victorians. |
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The Victorians among the promoters were all members of parliament. |
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The womanly woman and the manly man, those ideals of the Victorians, crumbled before the attack of the Ibsenites, Strindbergians, and Shavians in the nineties. |
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The decorative theme of the room is the legend of King Arthur, considered by many Victorians the source of their nationhood. |
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And in a fading corner of their cultural memory, haunted by self-righteous but upstanding Victorians such as Harris, is perhaps a small feeling that the creators of cricket should hold India to a higher standard. |
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Whether it be the Anglo-Saxons, the Tudors or the Victorians, children can get an understanding of what life was really like in a way the classroom can not provide. |
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Among the t'othersider teachers Victorians predominated, as they did among newcomers in general. |
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The wreck was extensively salvaged by Victorians shortly after the disaster. |
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Bunyan's reputation was further enhanced by the evangelical revival and he became a favourite author of the Victorians. |
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We went away firmly British and we went away as Queenslanders and Victorians and we came back – at least those who did – came back with a greater sense of being Australian. |
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The new dictionaries of the Old Norse language enabled the Victorians to grapple with the primary Icelandic sagas. |
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In Vile Victorians, meanwhile, you will find out what a baby farmer did and get the dirt on the filthy factories, the slums and the sewers. |
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The Victorians were impressed by science and progress and felt that they could improve society in the same way as they were improving technology. |
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The Victorians, as usual, were spoilsports, arguing that women would ruin their reproductive potential or otherwise compromise their femininity if they engaged in vigorous exercise. |
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Over the course of IFR activities, which lasted from June 9-14, more than 8,000 sailors were welcomed by Victorians as they lined the streets enjoying the sights in town. |
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Where other period dramas seem to spend less and less time actually accepting they're set in the past, Ripper's characters sound like Victorians, albeit profoundly poetic and imaginatively dexterous ones. |
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Yet away from the two-ups, two-downs, the middle class Victorians enjoyed life on a far grander scale. |
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The difference, he would say, is that even the most prudish Victorians saw sexuality largely as a private matter, which the state should neither judge nor attempt to regulate. |
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Throughout the afternoon and well on into the evening, many Victorians and a number of the people visiting this city took the street cars to the naval town to look over what may be the scene of an engagement. |
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Like other wealthy Victorians, the McDougall men were recreational photographers, for it was fashionable to be considered a man of science who could master the careful art of photography. |
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Seven thousand Victorians have signed a petition and many attended a harbourfront rally last Saturday, organized by the Save Victoria Harbour citizens group. |
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Finally it should be noted that in 1989, 70 per cent of Victorians supported treatment for all waste water coming out of Victoria's capital regional district. |
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The Victorians collected CP for their strange beauty and to keep flies off botanical treasures in the orchid houses, but many CP live unnoticed in our turfy bogs and forests. |
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New dictionaries of the Old Norse language enabled more Victorians to read the Icelandic Sagas. |
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Other influential Victorians such as Sir Henry Tate, Sir Henry Doulton and Baron de Reuters are buried within the same cemetery. |
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Botany was a passion for most Victorians and nature study was a popular enthusiasm. |
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The Victorians produced his plays as lavish spectacles on a grand scale. |
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In Vile Victorians, you will discover what exactly a baby farmer did and whether you can escape the misery of the mines or the filth of the factories. |
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This was not, as the Victorians asserted, the birth of the English Navy. |
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For example, the Victorians grew over 120 different varieties of tall garden pea providing a continuous picking of freshly shelled peas throughout the summer months. |
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The Victorians changed in a bathing machine before paddling in the sea. |
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The museum is about our heritage and our culture from the Romans to the Luddites, the Victorians to the nuclear age and its rooms and exhibits bring our history to life. |
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Players When it comes to the Vile Victorians, what did a baby farmer do? |
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