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is and always
Even the knowledge that she was losing another boy, as a mother always does when a marriage is made, did not prevent her from having the first carefree, dreamless sleep that she had known since they dropped down the canyon and into Bear Valley, way, way back there when they were crossing those other mountains.
However, there is always the possibility that chance will make demands the dancers find impossible to execute.
And it is precisely in this poorer economic class that one finds, and has always found, the most racial friction.
On the one hand, he does not work for a large agency, but is almost always self-employed.
In short, the fictional private eye is a specialized version of Adam Smith's ideal entrepreneur, the man whose private ambitions must always and everywhere promote the public welfare.
A further regulation is that commands always go down, unaccompanied by statements, and statements always go up, unaccompanied by commands.
Its massive contours are rooted in the simple need of man, since he is always incomplete, to complete himself.
The problem is to remove the accretions and thereby uncover the order that was always there.
But all this, I am well aware, is the bel canto of love, and although I have always liked to think that it was to the bel canto and to that alone that I listened, I know well enough that it was not.
The United States is always ready to participate with the Soviet Union in serious discussion of these or any other subjects that may lead to peace with justice.
Social process is always anchored in past predisposition ; ;
Plato's attitude toward poetry has always been something of an enigma, because he is so completely sensitive to its charm.
This is not to assume that his work was without merit, but the validity of his assumptions concerning the meaning of history must always be considered against this background of an unprofessional approach.
Thus science is the savior of mankind, and in this respect Childhood's End only blueprints in greater detail the vision of the future which, though not always so directly stated, has nevertheless been present in the minds of most science-fiction writers.
But there is, nevertheless, always a subtle difference in the way in which supposedly similar opinions are held.
If it proclaims that the best is yet to be, it always arouses, at least in the young, either a suspicious question or perhaps the exclamation of the Negro youth who saw on a tombstone the inscription, `` I am not dead but sleeping ''.
But in ways more fundamental than specific political opinions they are still what they always were: passionate, sure without a shadow of doubt of whatever it is that they are sure of, capable of seeing black and white only and, therefore, committed to the logical extreme of whatever it is they are temporarily committed to.
But one need not always be sure that the action is either wise or conclusive.
And it is also a fact of life that there will always ( be youngish half-educated people around, who will be dazzled by the glitter of what looks like a literary movement.
When a person has thoughtlessly or deliberately caused us pain or hardship it is not always easy to say, `` Just forget it ''.
His advisers in the Politburo ( White House ) are engaged in a great struggle of opinions, so he is not always consistent.
Since the obvious is not always true, the Republican National Committee wisely analyzed its defeat of last autumn and finds that it occurred, as suspected, in the larger cities.
For it is the family that, in China, has always provided social security for the indigent, the sick, the down-and-out members of the clan.

is and sorrow
Her mother wrote Kate of her grief at the death of Kate's baby and at Jonathan's decision to go with the South `` And, dear Kate '', she wrote, `` poor Dr. Breckenridge's son Robert is now organizing a militia company to go South, to his good father's sorrow.
While down there, along with the dead, he is shown the place where the wrongly convicted reside, the fields of sorrow where those who committed suicide and now regret it reside, including Aeneas ' former lover, the warriors and shades, Tartarus ( where the titans and powerful non-mortal enemies of the Olympians reside ) where he can hear the groans of the imprisoned, the palace of Pluto, and the fields of Elysium where the descendants of the divine and bravest heroes reside.
Misvan Gatu is the ' place of the mixed ones ' where the souls lead a gray existence, lacking both joy and sorrow.
James Basker also acknowledged this force when he explained why he chose " Amazing Grace " to represent a collection of anti-slavery poetry: " there is a transformative power that is applicable ...: the transformation of sin and sorrow into grace, of suffering into beauty, of alienation into empathy and connection, of the unspeakable into imaginative literature.
French poet Paul Verlaine's " Chanson d ' automne " (" Autumn Song ") is likewise characterised by strong, painful feelings of sorrow.
In the Pāli canon, the bodhisatta is also described as someone who is still subject to birth, illness, death, sorrow, defilement, and delusion.
Werner E. Lemke and Kathleen O ’ Connor point out “ Lamentations is probably the work of a survivor ( or survivors ) of the nation ’ s destruction who poured out sorrow, anger and dismay after the city ’ s traumatic defeat and occupation by the Babylonians.
This chain of causation purports to show that the cessation of decay, death, and sorrow is indirectly dependent on the cessation of craving.
In his opinion sorrow is conquered " by finding an object of knowledge which is not transient, not ephemeral, but is immutable, permanent, everlasting.
But evolution from the standpoint of the creature, with his limited knowledge, limited power, limited capacity for enjoying bliss, is an epic of alternating rest and struggle, joy and sorrow, love and hate, until, in the perfected man, God balances the pairs of opposites and transcends duality.
The Buddha acknowledged that there is both happiness and sorrow in the world, but he taught that even when we have some kind of happiness, it is not permanent ; it is subject to change.
: " This is the noble truth of dukkha: birth is dukkha, aging is dukkha, illness is dukkha, death is dukkha ; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and despair are dukkha ; union with what is displeasing is dukkha ; separation from what is pleasing is dukkha ; not to get what one wants is dukkha ; in brief, the five aggregates subject to clinging are dukkha.

is and me
Laurel is gone, my men are gone, Ed is dead -- and you come to me, to help me.
`` Exterminatin' cow thieves is just a business proposition with me '', he'd blandly announce.
`` What is it you want me to do, Mr. Brenner ''??
Let me pass over the trip to Sante Fe with something of the same speed which made Mrs. Roebuck `` wonduh if the wahtahm speed limit '' ( 35 m.p.h. ) `` is still in ee-faket ''.
Bryn Mawr Drive is only two or three miles from the Spartan, and it took me less than five minutes to get there.
`` Dear girl '', Walter had finally said, `` he writes me that he is sleeping in the English Gardens ''.
All of us, that is, except me.
The stink is all the same to me, but I really think they can make one another out blindfolded ''.
for example, the mode of bravery to this anonymous folk poem: `` They brought me news that Spring is in the plains And Ahmad's blood the crimson tulip stains ; ;
The design is determined emotionally: `` I must reach into myself for the spring that will send me catapulting recklessly into the chaos of event with which the dance confronts me ''.
When Heidegger and Sartre speak of a contrast between being and existence, they may be right, I don't know, but their language is too philosophical for me.
that is, about one-half of one per cent, which looks pretty `` tokenish '' to me, especially in an institution which professes to be `` national ''.
Let me quote him even more fully, for his analysis is important to my theme.
`` My doctors assure me that this increased percentage of risk is not great ''.
But to me innocence is far less tangible.
`` Dear Miss Steichen: It is a very good letter you send me -- softens the intensity of this guerilla warfare I am carrying on up here.
His birth, education, and fortune, he says, have all been ridiculed simply because he has spoken with the freedom of an Englishman, and he assures the reader that `` whoever talks with me, is speaking to a Gentleman born ''.
But there is one in particular which, it seems to me, deserves special attention.
William Wimsatt and Cleanth Brooks, it seems to me, have a penetrating insight into the way in which this control is effected: `` For if we say poetry is to talk of beauty and love ( and yet not aim at exciting erotic emotion or even an emotion of Platonic esteem ) and if it is to talk of anger and murder ( and yet not aim at arousing anger and indignation ) -- then it may be that the poetic way of dealing with these emotions will not be any kind of intensification, compounding, or magnification, or any direct assault upon the affections at all.

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