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Page "Władysław Szpilman" ¶ 9
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vividly and described
The Red Terror, implemented by Dzerzhinsky on September 5, 1918, was vividly described by the Red Army journal Krasnaya Gazeta:
Though not named as Caledfwlch, Arthur's sword is described vividly in The Dream of Rhonabwy one of the tales associated with the Mabinogion:
Inoculation was first vividly described by Yu Chang in his book Yuyi cao ( 寓意草 ), or Notes on My Judgment, published in 1643.
" Jerome ( c. 342 – 420 ) also lauds the Prophet Esias, saying, " He was more of an Evangelist than a Prophet, because he described all of the Mysteries of the Church of Christ so vividly that you would assume he was not prophesying about the future, but rather was composing a history of past events.
Vessels were of many types Their construction is vividly described in the Yukti Kalpa Taru, an ancient Indian text on shipbuilding.
Novelist Ishikawa Tatsuzo vividly described how the 16th Division of the Shanghai Expeditionary Force committed atrocities on the march between Shanghai and Nanking in his novel Ikiteiru Heitai ( Living Soldiers ), which was based on interviews that Tatsuzo conducted with troops in Nanking in January 1938.
One was through mob violence committed by supporters of each religious camp, and it is vividly described in the Liber Pontificalis.
The years of their marriage — during which the couple lived in Bermuda and had two children, Shane and Oona — are described vividly in her 1958 memoir Part of a Long Story.
In the early 18th Century Yarmouth, as a thriving herring port, was vividly and admiringly described several times in Daniel Defoe's travel journals, in part as follows:
Krishna left his native place at the age of twelve for study at gurukul. The Mahabharata does not describe Krishna's earlier life in Vrindavan in much detail, and focuses more on the later battle of Kurukshetra but within the Bhagavata Purana the child-hood pastimes of Krishna are described very vividly.
The phenomenon, which depends upon the irregular shape of the moon's limb, was so vividly described by him as to attract an unprecedented amount of attention to the total eclipse of 8 July 1842, observed by Baily himself at Pavia.
This Hamlet was in fact the National Theatre's official opening production, directed by Olivier, but Simon Callow has dubbed it " slow, solemn, long ", while Ken Campbell vividly described it as " brochure theatre.
She vividly described weaponry, tactics and battles.
Oamaru: The clock tower on the old Post Office, vividly described in Frame's debut novel, Owls Do Cry, as well as in her third volume of autobiography, The Envoy from Mirror City
* Alamut and Hassan-i-Sabbah are described vividly in William S. Burroughs ' The Western Lands.
" Anthony Aston vividly described Verbruggen as " a little in-kneed, which gave him a shambling gait, which was a carelessness, and became him.
In a deathbed statement, Oberholtzer vividly described Stephenson's assaults on her.
Out of the English Reformation, an understanding of salvation in terms closely comparable to the Orthodox doctrine of theosis was recognized in the Anglican tradition, for example in the writings of Lancelot Andrewes, who described salvation in terms vividly reminiscent of the early fathers:
" Though Schoff is unclear about which " Berenice " he is referring to and several possibilities exist for " Berenice ", it is actually Berenice Troglodytica which is documented, discussed at length and vividly described within the periplus text itself.
The celebrated brass growl effect was vividly described by Duke Ellington's son, Mercer Ellington:
The town was vividly described by Robert Baird in 1845:
His singing at such soirées was vividly described by Anna Lillie de Hegermann-Lindencrone, the American wife of the Danish Ambassador to the Holy See: " Mrs Charles Bristed of New York, a recent convert to the Church of Rome, receives on Saturday evening.
The bloody aftermath of Caporetto was vividly described by Ernest Hemingway in his novel A Farewell to Arms.
The journalist Cyril Connolly described him vividly as he struck him in London in 1951.

vividly and memoir
Desperately needing officer replacements, the Colonel posted him to A Squadron, and gave him the opportunity to take part as a fighting tanker in the Eighth Army's victorious sweep through North Africa vividly recounted in his beautiful memoir Alamein to Zem Zem, illustrated with his own drawings.
This period is vividly portrayed in Bostonian Richard Henry Dana, Jr .' s famous seafaring memoir, Two Years Before the Mast and the culture of the great Mexican landowners of this period is often harked back to as exemplifying the height of California's romantic pastoral era.
Ransohoff is vividly described and featured in a chapter of screenwriter Joe Eszterhas's memoir, Hollywood Animal, about the making of the film Jagged Edge.
Theodor Fontane vividly described the society's activities in his memoir Von Zwanzig bis Dreißig.

vividly and 1944
In 1944 he took a job as a good will ambassador for a professional basketball team in Washington D. C., where he lamented that fans remembered his two dropped fly balls in the 1929 World Series far more vividly than his 56 home runs and 191 RBIs in 1930.

vividly and found
Zonaras vividly narrates how " he and his son and a large number of Romans fell into the marshland ; all of them perished there, none of their bodies to be found, as they were covered by the mud.
In cases of unrequited limerence, transient relief may be found by vividly imagining reciprocation from the limerent object.
Susan L. Nickerson of Library Journal writes in a review that " Imaginative readers know the story doesn't end when the covers close ; the magic to be found in books is eternal, and Ende's message comes through vividly.
At school and at the École Normale Supérieure he gave evidence of brilliant, if somewhat undisciplined, powers, for which he found physical vent in different directions — first as a franc-tireur in the Franco-German War, and afterwards as actor, sailor and stevedore -- and an intellectual outlet in the writing of poems, plays and novels which vividly reflected his erratic but unmistakable talent.
The Wife's Lament, even more so than Wulf and Eadwacer, vividly conflates the theme of mourning over a departed or deceased leader of the people ( as may be found in The Wanderer ) with the theme of mourning over a departed or deceased lover ( as portrayed in Wulf and Eadwacer ).
Of the people analyzed, those suffering from " insecure attachments " were found to dream with more frequency and more vividly than those who were evaluated to have " secure attachments.

vividly and places
" When objects, people, places or situations are encountered with the limerent object, they are vividly remembered, especially if the limerent object ' interacted ' with them in some way.
Two places suggest more vividly than any others the vitality of Buddhist cave painting from about the 5th century AD.
The craftsman's village at Deir al-Madinah is one of the few places in the ancient world where life has been vividly preserved.

vividly and survived
Senior residents recall vividly how they survived the hardships.

vividly and with
His delightful picture of society and institutions is filled with warm detail that brings the period vividly to life.
Although the particular form of conceptualization which popular imagination had made in response to the experience of spirit was undoubtedly defective, the raw experience itself which led to such excesses remains with us as vividly as ever.
Swift ’ s specific strategy is twofold, using a " trap " to create sympathy for the Irish and a dislike of the narrator who, in the span of one sentence, " details vividly and with rhetorical emphasis the grinding poverty " but feels emotion solely for members of his own class.
In conversation with Ivinskaya, Pasternak explained that the swine dictator Napoleon, " vividly reminded ," him of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Hofstadter also noted that " sexual freedom " is a vice frequently attributed to the conspiracist's target group, noting that " very often the fantasies of true believers reveal strong sadomasochistic outlets, vividly expressed, for example, in the delight of anti-Masons with the cruelty of Masonic punishments.
Although high level of stylization, mystical appeal, and surreal elegance were often preferred over realism ( such as in shan shui style ), beginning with the medieval Song Dynasty there were many Chinese painters then and afterwards who depicted scenes of nature that were vividly real.
An inquisitive gust of air would at one moment with quite lubricious affection blow this garment aside, so that when wafted away it revealed her virgin bloom ; at another moment it would wantonly breathe directly upon it, clinging tightly and vividly outlining the pleasurable prospect of her lower limbs.
This status as a secular and civil ruler was vividly displayed by Pope Leo I's confrontation with Attila in 452.
Book 4 concludes with a long mythological narrative, in the form of an epyllion which describes vividly the discovery of beekeeping by Aristaeus and the story of Orpheus ' journey to the underworld.
" Kugel said " For many Dominicans in New York, these journeys home are the defining metaphor of their complex push-pull relationship with their homeland ; they embody, vividly and poignantly, the tug between their current lives and their former selves.
Scenic or " panoramic " hallucinations, which are not superimposed but vividly replace the entire visual field with hallucinatory content similarly to dreams ; such scenic hallucinations may occur in epilepsy ( in which they are usually stereotyped and experimental in character ), hallucinogen use, and more rarely in catatonic schizophrenia ( cf.
It vividly characterizes the deities involved ; as the Egyptologist Donald B. Redford says, " Horus appears as a physically weak but clever Puck-like figure, Seth as a strong-man buffoon of limited intelligence, Re-Horakhty < nowiki >< nowiki ></ nowiki > as a prejudiced, sulky judge, and Osiris as an articulate curmudgeon with an acid tongue.
The light is often extremely bright, with both the sky and the sea vividly blue.
Both ranges are covered with lush forests vividly contrasting with the scenery below.
One unusual development was the Geisslerlieder, the music of wandering bands of flagellants during two periods: the middle of the 13th century ( until they were suppressed by the Church ); and the period during and immediately following the Black Death, around 1350, when their activities were vividly recorded and well-documented with notated music.
In the 1940s, as long-time residents vividly recall, a hilltop literally was shaved away to produce landfill for expanding San Francisco Airport, which received an " international " designation in 1954 with the completion of the Central Terminal.
Many of Allegan's senior residents can recall the old courthouse with reverence, and vividly contrast apathy that consumed the courthouse with activism that saved the Old Iron ( Second Street ) Bridge.
As an example, he states that if a plank of wood is placed as a bridge over a chasm, a person could hardly creep over it without falling if that person only pictures himself / herself in a possible fall so vividly that the " natural power of limbs accord with it.
Driven into the ropes and battered with a fusillade of short, crisp blows from every angle, Schmeling turned his back to his opponent and clutched onto the ropes, letting out a scream that even years later, many spectators could recall vividly.
" There are passages in his music which evoke the ' sweet especial rural scene ' as vividly as Elgar or Vaughan Williams ; passages ( such as the Pastorale from the Fantasia Concertante on a Theme of Corelli ) perhaps redolent of the Suffolk landscape with its gently undulating horizons, wide skies and soft lights.

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