He obliges, and his lucubrations on these matters occupy most of the book. |
Formerly called the Museum of American Folk Art, this reborn institution challenges conventional thinking about whirligigs and needlepoint samplers, among other artifacts, and a mad Chicagoan's midnight lucubrations. |
He evangelized for an idiosyncratic version of Henri Bergson's creative evolution, stripped of the Frenchman's lucubrations on space, time, duration, memory, and mind. |
Their lucubrations may be persuasive, but not authoritative. |
That was something different, something that far exceeded the German's lucubrations. |
Buckley was noteworthy in being the first intellectual to have a wider public than those relatively small audiences that read the little magazines in which intellectuals published their lucubrations. |