Today, he still rejoices in his success but bears no rancour against those who delayed the day of his vindication. |
|
Roman historians tend to present the sororicide in a positive light, stressing Horatia's father's public vindication of his son. |
|
The day of vindication and the year of favor meet in the paschal mystery, in Christ died and risen. |
|
After graduation he went on to a clerkship on the federal court of appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and there he found vindication. |
|
It is a vindication that the colonial mindset and slavish mentality are still alive among some Indians. |
|
Most of the nicer blokes were chosen by two or three women, so this was at least a vindication of my particular views on how to treat people. |
|
The artist has been belatedly credited in the new film, a vindication he is reported to have accepted grudgingly. |
|
This splendid music is a fine vindication of Bach's teaching, with its emphasis on thorough bass and chorales. |
|
The splendid music on this CD's a fine vindication of Bach's teaching, with its emphasis on thorough bass and chorales. |
|
I now intend to work to ensure my full and complete vindication of the charges as expeditiously as possible. |
|
Learning to love his outsider status has got him this far, which feels like a vindication. |
|
If Bruce expounds such views with a defiant gleam of vindication, it's understandable. |
|
The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the vindication and glory of his Passion. |
|
For him a better than expected result marks a personal vindication and certain reconfirmation as party leader. |
|
Once an apology to the accused has been published, the element of vindication becomes less significant in quantifying the financial award. |
|
While it was too early to comment with finality on the hearing, yesterday's evidence was a vindication of the minister. |
|
Our military history offers few such stunning examples of the spectacular rise, precipitous fall and dramatic vindication of a combat leader. |
|
It is a total vindication of all war veterans suffering from Gulf War syndrome. |
|
The attorney for the parents called the ruling a vindication for his clients. |
|
Furthermore the claimant was not motivated by a desire for vindication, but was pursuing a vendetta. |
|
|
Opponents of Muslims and immigrants across the continent are claiming vindication in the aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo attack. |
|
In vindication, Gerald turned and walked away, leaving April to stand in the middle of the sidewalk with a flurry of golden leaves cascading around her. |
|
And in these times of crisis, reification, and dehumanization, I love the possibility of the human being's future vindication. |
|
I thus strolled with my nose in the air looking for some antiquities which would have escaped with the vindication of the property developers. |
|
These Old Testament believers are pronouncing their longing for vindication and judgment in the name of Jehovah the righteous one, and in vivid poetic language. |
|
The semi-final victory was vindication for many of the US players, who defended manfully against the world's top-ranked team. |
|
The result is not only vindication, but also the self-serving sense that only you can save the republic. |
|
The decision of the federal cabinet on softwood lumber is a vindication of the classic principles of federalism. |
|
But he never failed to defend innocent people, even in a world of repression and vindication. |
|
The stories are both wonderful in their own right and illustrative as well of important points about the vindication of human rights. |
|
This was a situation in which nearly five decades of apartheid perfected, legalised and claimed religious vindication for it. |
|
Fewer Appellants mention positive life changes, such as, an increase in their income or a sense of relief, satisfaction, or vindication. |
|
We look forward to proving their innocence and to their complete vindication before a trial court. |
|
Further, the news that the kilo is in such imminent danger of extinction will no doubt be seen as a vindication by Brits reluctant to sell their fruit and veg in metric units. |
|
There would be some vindication, some redemption, some soul-cleansing. |
|
A vindication suggested the ills that Bolingbroke had attributed to the artifice of revealed religion could be paralleled by those generated by civil society. |
|
But the most depressing aspect of the matter is the way various politicians of all parties have seized upon the outcome as a vindication of Scots law. |
|
I personally took that as a vindication of the care I had taken in making sure I had solid, independent sourcing. |
|
A verdict that could have provided accountability, vindication, and healing did not happen. |
|
The offer of amends signifies a willingness to place oneself in the hands of the court for assessing the appropriate steps to be taken by way of vindication and compensation. |
|
|
This gave him a sense of vindication in his decision to flee. |
|
The program's success is vindication for the Stanford professor. |
|
Empey's victory would not only be portrayed as a comeback for the UUP but also as a vindication of his decision to enter into a formal alliance with David Cameron. |
|
I talked to Thatcher about my concern that any compromise then would have fatal long-term consequences, given Scargill's capacity to present such an outcome as a vindication of his stand. |
|
Among Indigenous communities in Canada, it was heralded as a vindication of sorts - a recognition that living in harmony with the natural environment must become the lifestyle of the future, not just for now. |
|
Intangible benefits, including public recognition of the vindication of the Whistle-blower, and in appropriate circumstances public recognition of the contributions of the Whistle-blower to the Bank. |
|
The verdict handed down may either serve as a collective indictment or vindication, depending on the degree of our willingness to engage with one another. |
|
The verdict is also a clear vindication for Essendon coach James Hird who was suspended for 12 months in August 2013 as part of a range of heavy penalties handed down by the AFL over the supplements program. |
|
The theory's vindication would come only with a glimpse of W and Z bosons particles which, it posited, carried the weak force, just as photons carried the electromagnetic one. The rub was that both W and Z are heavy. |
|
Despite the battle and their vindication by the court, the remaining 200 workers made redundant continue to experience the feeling of social injustice and financial isolation. |
|
In its policy statement to the House of Representatives, this Government declared that the vindication of human rights was one of its principal orientations. |
|
Jamie Cameron: Most plaintiffs who sue for compensation want acknowledgment of a mistake, some vindication of their instinct that the physician must be accountable for his or her effect on individuals' lives. |
|
Rather than seeking vindication or catastrophe in this cold snap, now is a good time to remind ourselves that weather, like death and taxes, will always be with us. |
|
The approaching conflict was about violations of American rights, but it was also about vindication of American identity. |
|
Lord Brownlow took action against Augustus Smith and the court case lasted until 1870 when it ended with the complete vindication of Smith. |
|
His mother was beaming and seemed to take the acquittal as a vindication. |
|
A lot of people took this as vindication that it was a speculative bubble. |
|
He signed the vindication of the officers presented to parliament on 27 April 1647, and the letter of the officers to the city on 10 June. |
|
The benefit is seen to be obtained through the public vindication inherent in the criminal justice process which lifts the burden of responsibility from the shoulders of the victim. |
|
After more than a year of mainstream-culture derision aimed at so-called twitards, vindication of a kind arrived in the March issue of a trendy men's magazine, Details. |
|
|
Lilburne spent his exile in the Netherlands at Bruges and elsewhere, where he published a vindication of himself, and an attack on the government. |
|