| I curled up with Nash's couplets, quatrains, limericks and occasional jeremiads. |
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| But their antiintellectual jeremiads, not the professors they vilify, are the real threat to academic freedom today. |
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| Waves of immigrants from Canada and Europe provoked jeremiads bemoaning the demise of New England's Anglo-Puritan colonial heritage. |
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| Indeed, there is not only irony but danger in offering such a public jeremiad against jeremiads. |
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| Their jeremiads yearn for an airbrushed 50's America that never really existed. |
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| Her Book of the City of Ladies was conceived as a direct riposte to Jean de Meung's jeremiads. |
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| Eminem may fit into that tradition of lyrical catharsis and boulevard jeremiads, but he certainly didn't create it. |
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| The sign-up deadline for the Affordable Care Act has triggered a predictable series of jeremiads from the right. |
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| Republicans are rallying their religious base with jeremiads about stem-cell research and gay marriage. |
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| This special report will argue that today's jeremiads are both dubious and dangerous. |
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| But one thing is certain: black America's future will remain dim unless it begins to take Mr Cosby's jeremiads to heart. |
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| Between 1950 and 1974 it was held by Enoch Powell, a cerebral right-winger whose jeremiads against immigration gave comfort to many, less cerebral, opponents of racial mixing. |
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