The teacher never obtrudes or disturbs the concentrated work of a child in any way. |
In Angst the world obtrudes itself and is seen as what gives significance but is itself without significance. |
One of the problems of a long rehearsal period is that real life obtrudes in a way that isn't possible in the month or six weeks normally given to a play. |
This hexagram indicates a situation in which the principle of darkness, after having been eliminated, furtively and unexpectedly obtrudes again from within and below. |
Nothing jars or obtrudes into the emotional flow of the narrative, and large-scale sets with plenty of vertical height give stature to a tale that could easily get too domestic in Glyndebourne's small theatre. |
Into this meditation obtrudes another vision, with an entirely distinct vocabulary and resonance. |