When Koff unearths the body of a child who has a pocket full of marbles, she muses over the tragedy of the situation. |
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He muses that this need to participate confuses some people into mistaking positive pro-action for repression. |
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With the dust now settled on him, he muses that this push for the local may, ironically, have precipitated its downfall. |
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Anna muses, looking at a photograph of herself in a navy blue dress and palest blue pashmina. |
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Although it is true that Southwell does not use muses as a device very often, she construes Neoplatonism too narrowly. |
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Male artists have often seen women as not only sexual objects but simultaneously as their inspirations and muses. |
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Over the past several months I've maintained correspondence with a few people whom I now regard as valued muses and kindred spirits. |
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Richard Avedon considered Hepburn one of his muses in the 50s and the two maintained a close professional relationship. |
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Instead, he muses, why not regulate as if all people need guns, everywhere? |
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And how amorous you become when your courtship with the muses is going strong. |
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Three exceptional perfumes, each of which is a tribute to one of the muses who inspired Mr Dior. |
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To some extent the poems in his seventh collection continue in that vein, but in many of them the poet takes a somber turn as he muses over old age and death. |
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He muses about the formation of a national committee of Mennonite high schools in Paraguay and maybe an exchange program between them. |
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It is a form that sets store by its use of the demotic, its willingness to locate the sources of poetry defiantly far from the spring on Mount Helicon sacred to the muses. |
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It would mean that women would have a central part in the culture, as muses and inspirers certainly, but also as honourable beings in their own right. |
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If he can live in New York, he muses, why can't others enjoy the right to circulate freely? |
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Though Rabinowitz muses that something like this would not only be impractical but also incite severe backlash. |
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Cosmetics and herbal remedies will be huge with soccer moms, muses another attender. |
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Ken muses that during the siege of Paris in 1870, fifty pigeons carrying microphotographs of letters delivered a million messages. |
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Many elegists question whether they have the strength to accomplish their purpose, often calling for help from the muses or from a sympathetically grief-stricken nature. |
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In Greek mythology, Mnemosyne, the mother of the muses, was also the goddess of memory. |
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He muses about raising the GST, and he openly admits that he will raise taxes. |
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If only, one muses on such occasions, vengeance could be wrought on the pesky gubbins. |
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It's a fabulous tale of kaftans, muses, mannequins and, um, leisure drug-taking, which details Saint Laurent's passion for Marrakesh. |
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Academia was, he muses, once a haven for oddballs – it was one of the reasons he went into it. |
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Now Trudeau muses about ending capitalism in the automotive capital of Canada, built by capitalists like Ford and Chrysler. |
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Polidori lovingly recalls such fittings among the stock of the skylit Atelier Feau, whose inventory includes a painted boiserie portraying the muses of poetry and music. |
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She and Balanchine parted ways in the early 50s, and he would have other muses, but Tallchief was the template for them all. |
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From Lewis Carroll to Vladimir Nabokov, a distinguished lepidopterist as well as a novelist, these winged muses have inspired generations of writers, painters and poets. |
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The muses are not firm believers in the equality principle. |
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From the traditional duties of lover, empowerer and admirer, some of the great muses have expanded the repertory to become phobia alleviators, spin doctors and lockers of husbands in rooms. |
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Allegorical narrative subjects might exalt the sensuous arts, as in the symbolic muses portrayed by Poussin and Luca Signorelli and the paradisiac gardens of 15th-century French illuminated manuscripts. |
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As he trains for the race, Mr Murakami muses on his tragic efforts to outpace ageing, in a doomed bid to reduce his rising race times. A self-confessed oddball, Mr Murakami is a peculiar memoirist. |
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I think we might have stumbled on the follow-up to the much-missed comedy series Twenty Twelve and W1A, set in a designer store where muses offer scented candles and read your chakra. |
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The final section looks at the kinds of incentives that parliamentarians face in exercising political leadership and improving parliamentary performance and also muses about ways these might be enhanced. |
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Entreat the heavenes to send ther muses hether, To helpe your soules to write of sacred thinges. |
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The sitter, depicted in what is widely overinterpreted as a masturbatory reverie, enjoys a prominent place in Picasso's long succession of muses. |
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Maillot chose a cinematic score by Danny Elfman for the work, which features longtime Les Ballets de Monte-Carlo dancer Gaetan Morlotti alongside Maillot's two muses. |
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Issues discussed include the coolship effect, kraeusen balls, hop powder, hot wort filtration, lauter tun run off as well as muses on yeast and trub management. |
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Later, Pooh muses about the creative process as he composes the song. |
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In ancient Greek mythology, Muses were goddesses of science and art who inspired creative endeavors. |
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In the lower half of the frontispiece, the Muses adorn the monument with attributes of their respective arts. |
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Muses of the moment, they have always known that the instant of illumination is that point of equilibrium between being and becoming. |
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The narrator's invocation of loss is as strategic as his conflation of genders in his vision of his Muses. |
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The heron is sacred to the Muses and is related to priesthood. |
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The Muses are the daughters of hope and the stepdaughters of memory. |
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He was an unfeigned lover of the Muses, and writ much upon poesy, whether antient or modern, heroick, lyrick, or symbolicall. |
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The word music derives from the name of the Muses, the daughters of Zeus who were patron goddesses of the arts. |
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The Histories was at some point divided into the nine books that appear in modern editions, conventionally named after the nine Muses. |
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The Aonian fount stood at the foot of Mount Helicon, not far from Thebes, and was sacred to the Muses. |
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The islets of Lefkai were the result of a musical contest between the Sirens and the Muses. |
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Byrd wrote the musical elegy Ye Sacred Muses on Tallis's death. |
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Yet, although The Ballets Muses and Beyond shares its name with the latter, Caddy's monograph does not partake in the Coliseum's lionization of the Russian troupe. |
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But where's the use of invoking the Muses, when they are provoked by droppings of inspiration from a stone, in which the measure and the meaning are most happily profundified? |
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The central mosaic depicting The Awakening of the Muses includes portraits of Virginia Woolf and Greta Garbo, subverting the high moral tone of its Victorian forebears. |
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