A mark of the civilized person is that he in no way luxuriates in his violence. |
This is a book that luxuriates in description and the use of extended metaphor, as Homer did himself. |
The blue gum luxuriates on the margin of rivers, and grows in such situations to an enormous size. |
Its international audience luxuriates in Venice. |
He luxuriates in the romance of frontier life – the felling of the great-girthed trees, the billycan on the campfire – without neglecting to mine its darker seams. |
He paints a poetic world in which harmony of form luxuriates in restfulness and serenity. |