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Page "Fahrenheit 451" ¶ 29
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From and sprang
From this action sprang the idea of somehow uniting Greek and Shakespearean drama into a new total form, capable of restoring to life the ancient moral and poetic responses.
From his blood sprang a red flower, as at the death of Hyacinthus, which bore on its leaves the initial letters of his name Ai, also expressive of lament.
From this the legend of Pocahontas sprang forth, becoming part of American folklore, children's books, and movies.
From that moment a strong friendship sprang up between the abbot and the bishop, who was professor of theology at Notre Dame of Paris, and the founder of the Abbey of St. Victor.
From my navel there sprang a tree.
From the town assembly, a national assembly and the progress of commerce sprang Parliament all over Europe around the end of the 12th century but not entirely representative or homogeneous for the nobility and the clergy.
From his family Gideon ( biblical figure ) sprang ( Josh.
From 1840 more permanent settlements sprang up, first at Wellington, then at Nelson and at Wanganui ( Petre ).
From the same blood sprang the Erinyes, suggesting that the ash-tree nymphs represented the Fates in milder guise ( Graves 6. 4 ).
From the Meliae sprang the race of mankind of the Age of Bronze.
From the blood that spurted from her neck and falling into the sea, sprang Pegasus and Chrysaor, her sons by Poseidon.
From this incestuous union sprang the child Adonis.
From this union sprang Taligent, a small Cupertino, California, company that's now developing nothing less than a universal operating system.
From these conditions sprang considerable agitation among the small working and professional classes.
From her neck sprang Pegasus (" he who sprang ") and Chrysaor (" bow of gold "), the result of Poseidon and Medusa's meeting.
From the midpoint of this division a flaming torch sprang up, spewing out, over a considerable distance, fire, hot coals, and sparks.
From the race of Hildings sprang Harald Red-beard granrauði, mother's father of Halfdan the Black inn svarti.
From this sprang an unprecedented " linguistic plurality " of styles, techniques, and expression ( Morgan 1984, 458 ).
" Furthermore, Gervase writes, " From the midpoint of the division a flaming torch sprang up, spewing out, over a considerable distance, fire, hot coals and sparks.
From these families sprang the teachers, professors, doctors, lawyers, engineers, businessmen, and politicians that contributed to the city's prosperity.
From his proposal sprang the Houston Street Viaduct ( originally named the Oak Cliff Viaduct ), begun October 24, 1910, and opened to traffic February 22, 1912, acclaimed as the longest concrete bridge in the world.
From these, sprang the Taulantii, Parthini, Dardani, Enchelaeae, Autariates, Dassaretae and the Daors.
From the Skadar Lake at the east its territory sprang down the river of Zeta all the way to the river of Piva to the west.

From and tiny
From atop the tower one can survey the town, the tiny harbor, the great panorama of the Baltic Sea, and much of Warmia's countryside.
From there the brothers soon moved, briefly, to a tiny ground floor + mezzanine operation in the Maynard House apartment building, on the southwest corner of William and Maynard Streets.
The firing methods, paraphernalia and mechanism further divide both categories as do caliber ( From cannons to tiny caliber palm guns ).
From the foreign policy of “ jingoism ” and “ gunboat diplomacy ” to the technological leaps of the Indiana born Wright Brothers, America was on the move, and the tiny town of Griffith was following in her tracks.
From a literary point of view, the book is a feat of skill, since it keeps to a tiny vocabulary and tells an entertaining tale.
From these sketches, he painted large studio canvases that are carefully worked out in small, mosaic-like squares of color, quite different from the tiny, variegated dots previously used by Seurat.
From a different perspective, if it is correct that the properties of a quantum black hole should correspond at a broad level more or less to a classical general-relativistic black hole, then it is believed that the appearance and effects of the Hawking radiation can be interpreted as quantum " corrections " to the classical picture, as Planck's constant is " tuned up " away from zero up to h. Outside the event horizon of an astronomical-sized black hole these corrections are tiny.
From the most advanced and tiny cynodonts, which were only the size of a shrew, came the first mammal precursors, during the Carnian age of the Late Triassic, about 220 mya.
Unable to completely ignore his musical phenomenon, Melodiya in 1974 released the 7 ” EP, featuring four of his war songs ( He ’ s Never Returned From a Battle, The New Times Song, Common Graves, and The Earth Song, which represented a tiny portion of his creative work, which millions already owned on tape and knew by heart.
From 1950, Turbomeca produced the tiny centrifugal flow Palas turbojet, producing 1. 6 kN ( 353 lbf ).
From the late 1970s through the early 1980s, Japanese researcher Chonosuke Okamura self-published a famous series of reports titled " Original Report of the Okamura Fossil Laboratory " in which he described tiny inclusions in polished limestone from the Silurian period ( 425 mya ) as being preserved fossil remains of tiny humans, gorillas, dogs, dragons, dinosaurs, and other organisms, all of them only millimeters long, leading him to claim " There have been no changes in the bodies of mankind since the Silurian period ... except for a growth in stature from 3. 5 mm to 1, 700 mm.
From a few magical tiles or tunnels, the player can visit a few tiny islands in the beginning, but only upon reaching a major port and fulfilling a specific task does the player get a ship which allows the player to explore much more of the world by sea.
From 1957 through to the early 1970s it produced the tiny Puch 500 under license from FIAT, again with an engine of Austrian design.
From 1948 to 1953 Eleanor, and sometimes Barbara, were shown out in the landscape as a tiny counterpoint to large expanses of park, skyline or water.
From two tiny outcrops on a reef, the island was enlarged and transformed into an island holiday resort of 85, 000 square metres.
From this tiny viewpoint, I can see that nothing is solid, no matter how it appears.
From the side, a beam of light is only visible if part of the light is scattered by objects: tiny particles like dust, water droplets ( mist, fog, rain ), hail, snow, or smoke, or larger objects such as birds.
From the outer northeastern rim is a chain of tiny secondary impacts leading to the east, radial to the Tsiolkovsky impact.
From there she was hired by Hal Roach to co-star in short subjects with Max Davidson, Edgar Kennedy, and Charley Chase, but most significantly with Anita Garvin, where tiny ( 5 ') Marion was teamed with 6 ' Anita for a brief ( 3 film ) series as a " female Laurel & Hardy " in 1928 – 1929.
From Canada's point of view, the point of focus in the Lincoln Sea dispute has been Denmark's inclusion of tiny Beaumont Island ( not to be confused with Beaumont Island off the west coast of Graham Land, Antarctica ) off Greenland's northwest coast in calculating the boundary.
Known as the " Thrilla From Camilla ", he played competitive high school basketball in the tiny town of Camilla, Georgia.
From tiny screws to large structures, there are literally thousands of products to make your model railroading easier and more fun.

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