Mark's reveries turn to the minor humiliations he will be able to impose on his flatmate if he gets the job. |
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It is in order to write that so many poets have tried to live the reveries of opium. |
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A good deal of waking life is punctuated by daydreams, reveries, and fantasies in which the mind withdraws to contemplate an interior landscape. |
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The column is so full of nostalgia and reveries that it's a bit hard to locate the argument, but I think this paragraph is it. |
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I was drifting off into reveries of one sort or another, when I heard a voice. |
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More painful by far than reveries of the uncharted future is the thought of the shut and sealed annals of the past. |
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Such reveries are meant to support Joe's contention that he has less trouble relating to men than he does women. |
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In her installation last season at MAM, Teresita Fernandez continued her minimalist reveries on the art and idea of landscape. |
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It is in it that we materialize our reveries, through it that our dream seizes upon its true substance. |
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One of the reasons I like cycling is that you can get into long reveries while pedalling along. |
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We well know the small influence these gentry exert upon our society, and how the technicians of every order distrust them and rightly refuse to take their reveries seriously. |
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In this sense, you should ask yourself what these reveries are compensating. |
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A collection of architectural elements that look celestial, perfect for romantic reveries! |
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The primary reveries that you have managed to identify should be studied in relation to the current situation in which you are living. |
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These works were intimate, handmade reveries, cryptic yet resonant with outsize themes: history, death, love, fame. |
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The result is chamber music whose sensitivity is exacerbated, giving way to nocturnal reveries, both delicate and fairylike. |
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This slight premise is barely spelled out before each of the guests drift into reveries illustrating how they've arrived at this point in their lives. |
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Little by little producing a cessation of the reveries, conflicts and subjects alien to this practice. |
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Should you on your journey be startled out of your reveries by marauding dogs snapping and barking at your heels, take note of these guidelines, they may be of help. |
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Who was the fraud, the vicious self-appointed censor, or the artist who toiled daily to transmit to future ages his graceful and winning reveries? |
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The Lotus and the Storm turns out to be a grand, haunted melodrama with elements of camp, delivered in fragmentary reveries. |
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It may provide a pleasant background for idle reveries, a soothing balm for jangled nerves or just an aid to digestion. |
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However, such orientalist reveries suit neither a city like Istanbul nor a country like Turkey. |
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They went further than indulging in reveries, but did their utmost to make the dream come true. |
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Moroccan parks and gardens, sources of escape and reveries, always illustrate our need for what is essential and authentic. |
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Only Britain faces that possibility, he added, to avoid any possible doubts. Such reveries ignore the fact that the EU is, first and foremost, an economic project. |
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A nebulous galaxy made up of dreams, reveries, neuroses, Angst, frustrations, resentments, illusions, hopes, disenchantment: an indulgence into a form of Bovaryism that does not belong to humans, but to History itself. |
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Behind a window, the world distances itself, lets itself be seen like a memory, like an image, both near and far, that plunges one into melancholic reveries. |
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I can take as real what I see when I am awake and without reveries. |
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You just can't grasp the bejeweled, darkling purple and pink light emanating from the moody reveries of Venice he painted well on in his career except by standing before them. |
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Sparkling snowflakes glisten against an azure Russian sky, and the familiar strains of Tchaikovsky's music beckon us to indulge our senses in a magical fairyland of dancing bears, animated nutcrackers and Christmas reveries! |
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It has clucky one-note themes over accents like smashing bottles, wistful long-note reveries, car-horn sax choruses turning to free-jazz wails and solemn chants over finger-cymbal pings. |
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As many critics have observed, the thanatoid reveries and eventual suicide of Chopin's protagonist advance a criticism of the male-dominated social order. |
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I ask if in the calm of their measured reveries, if in the deep meditations which fill their hours, they fill the ecstasy of a youthful tyro in the school of pleasure. |
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