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words and preacher
Even George Buttrick, whose words had so inspired Buechner, observed that, " It would be a shame to lose a good novelist for a mediocre preacher.
With these words, the most popular preacher in Paris legitimised in advance the events of St. Bartholomew's Day ".
On two facing walls are large photos of fists with the words " LOVE " and " HATE " written on them, a reference to the preacher played by Robert Mitchum in the film, The Night of the Hunter, who had similar tattoos on his knuckles.
With these words, the most popular preacher in Paris legitimised in advance the events of St. Bartholomew's Day ".
Could this preacher believe the words that there is an eternal fire that never consumes its victims, and yet slide over the phrase with a tremor?
He became a favorite preacher in Paris, and was Lent preacher at court in 1781, when King Louis XVI said of his sermon: " If the abbé had said only a few words on religion, he would have discussed every possible subject.
In 1344 Clement VI, referring to this matter in a Brief, uses only the words propter miraculum aliquod (" on account of some miracle ") ( Pennazzi, 367 ); Gregory XI, in a Brief of 25 June 1337, gives a short account of the miracle ; and abundant reference to it is found later ( 1435 ), in the sermons of the Dominican preacher Leonardo Mattei of Udine (" In festo Corp. Christi ", xiv, ed.
There has been speculation that, though Toplady was a Calvinist, the words, " Be of sin the double cure, Save from wrath, and make me pure ," suggest that he agreed with the teachings of the Methodist preacher under whom he received his religious conversion, and of his contemporary, John Wesley, who taught the “ double cure ,” in which a sinner is saved by the atonement of Jesus, and cleansed from inbred sin by the infilling of the Holy Spirit.

words and Barbara
However, Bede ignores the fact that at the time of Augustine's mission, the history between the two was one of warfare and conquest, which, in the words of Barbara Yorke, would have naturally " curbed any missionary impulses towards the Anglo-Saxons from the British clergy.
More recently, the idea has been " borrowed " by Barbara Wallraff for her new book Word Fugitives: In Pursuit of Wanted Words, where " word fugitives " is her term for invented words.
Anne Tyler once compared Taylor to Jane Austen, Barbara Pym and Elizabeth Bowen -- " soul sisters all ," in Tyler's words.
* Barbara Hill, “ Actions speak louder than words: Anna Komnene ’ s attempted usurpation ,” in Anna Komnene and her times ( 2000 ): 46-47.
This is actually a map of Santa Barbara County, California with the words " Sunnydale County " superimposed on it.
And I wrote them for myself .” These were the poet ’ s words as they appeared in his first collection of poetry, Poeżiji, published in 1971 thanks to his second wife Louisette and his friend P. Valentin Barbara ’ s constant encouragement.
I think of the postmodern attitude as that of a man who loves a very cultivated woman and knows that he cannot say to her " I love you madly ", because he knows that she knows ( and that she knows he knows ) that these words have already been written by Barbara Cartland.
As the history teacher of the Doctor's granddaughter, Susan Foreman, Barbara Wright was the first of the companions to appear in the show in 1963, with Hill speaking the series ' first words.
Ian follows Webster's words and hunts out Jules Renan, who turns out to be the man sheltering Barbara and Susan, who remains critically ill in bed.
Her second book, “ Barbara Nitke: American Ecstasy ,” a memoir in pictures and words of her hardcore porn days, is scheduled for publication in Fall, 2012.
Geoff Johns and J. G. Jones will work on the first six issues, which will present a connection between Barbara Gordon and Arkham Asylum, and a mystery to Batman on Batgirl, in Johns ' words, like Batman: The Long Halloween.

words and Brown
Songs and poetry often rely on ambiguous words for artistic effect, as in the song title " Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue " ( where " blue " can refer to the color, or to sadness ).
Different accounts on how " Please, Please, Please " came together vary, one story from Etta James stated that during her first meeting with Brown in Macon, Brown " used to carry around an old tattered napkin with him, because Little Richard had written the words, ' please, please, please ' on it and James was determined to make a song out of it ...".
It was Peart who named the album, as he borrowed the words of Ernest Hemingway to describe what the band had to go through after making the decision to leave Terry Brown.
The Brown Corpus was the first major database available, containing several million words.
On 17 October, Dynamo told The Sun that Brown had confirmed the reunion by saying that the band were " ready to take the world by storm ", and that Brown had sent him a text message with the words " It's happening ".
A landmark in modern corpus linguistics was the publication by Henry Kucera and W. Nelson Francis of Computational Analysis of Present-Day American English in 1967, a work based on the analysis of the Brown Corpus, a carefully compiled selection of current American English, totalling about a million words drawn from a wide variety of sources.
In the words of USAF General George S. Brown, Commander, Air Force Systems Command in 1972, " The only reason we need ( UAVs ) is that we don't want to needlessly expend the man in the cockpit.
On the pot are the words " Treg's a Foo ", referring to Treg Brown.
Thus, in the Brown Corpus of American English, about half of the 50, 000 words are hapax legomena within that corpus.
However in his notebook for 1868 ( known as the ' Brown Book ') there appear the ominous words " Consider Judentum.
" In the words of Dan Lowenstein, a Democrat and political appointee of former California governor Jerry Brown, " The Federalist Society is one of the few student organizations putting on public events that contribute to the intellectual life of the law school.
The novel was the inspiration for the 1974 song " The Consul at Sunset " by Jack Bruce of Cream ( words by Pete Brown ), as well as for the song " Back Room Of The Bar " by the Young Fresh Fellows, from their 1987 album The Men Who Loved Music.
More plausible is that the term Brown Bess derived from the German words " brawn buss " or " braun buss ", meaning " strong gun " or " brown gun "; King George I who commissioned its use was from Germany.
That same month Eric Brown, a British test pilot who had known her before the war, was surprised to receive a letter from Reitsch in which she reminisced about their shared love of flying, the letter ending with the words ; " It began in the bunker and there it shall end ".
In November 1798, David Brown led a group in Dedham, Massachusetts in setting up a liberty pole with the words, " No Stamp Act, No Sedition Act, No Alien Bills, No Land Tax, downfall to the Tyrants of America ; peace and retirement to the President ; Love Live the Vice President ," referring to then-President John Adams and Vice President Thomas Jefferson.
The film had its world premiere at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival The film garnered a great deal of media attention because of the explicit and unsimulated sexual content of the final scene between Gallo and actress Chloë Sevigny, as well as a war of words between Gallo and film critic Roger Ebert, who stated that The Brown Bunny was the worst film in the history of Cannes, although he later gave a re-edited version of the film his signature " thumbs up ".
A war of words then erupted between Gallo and film critic Roger Ebert, with Ebert writing that The Brown Bunny was the worst film in the history of Cannes, and Gallo retorting by calling Ebert a " fat pig with the physique of a slave trader.
Newspapers reported troops singing the song as they marched in the streets of Boston on July 18, 1861, and there were a " rash " of broadside printings of the song with substantially the same words as the undated John Brown Song!
When Brown was released, one of those present remembered his first words as " How do you do, gentlemen?
" As the second tower fell on live television, Brown fell silent, until he quietly said, "... good Lord ... there are no words ..." and resumed reporting after several seconds.
Hitchens described Blair's successor, Gordon Brown, as a " dismal Marxoid ", but criticised what he saw as " prejudiced, shallow " attempts by the media to destroy Brown after he became Prime Minister in 2007, and praised Brown for, in his words, " saving the pound ".

words and Taylor
Such an anagram may be a synonym or antonym of its subject, a parody, a criticism, or praise ; e. g. George Bush = He bugs Gore ; Madonna Louise Ciccone = Occasional nude income or One cool dance musician ; William Shakespeare = I am a weakish speller, Roger Meddows Taylor = Great words or melody.
In the words of sociologist Laurie Taylor:
On this point Samuel Taylor Coleridge requested, jokingly, that novice poets should know the " definitions of prose and poetry ; that is, prose ,— words in their best order ; poetry ,— the best words in their best order.
Their first album, 2000's SMPT: e ( a play on words, as both a combination of the members ' last initials, as well as a common machine time protocol used in high end recording studios ) received strong critical reviews, including " some of the best progressive rock music ever written " ( Robert Taylor in Allmusic )).
The album also includes many expletives ; David Fricke of the Rolling Stone magazine said " there isn't much shock value left in the words fuck and shit, which Taylor uses in some variation more than forty times in Iowas sixty-six minutes.
*" How To Live on Christ " a pamphlet by Harriet Beecher Stowe, taken from her Introduction to Chistopher Dean's " Religion As It Should Be or The Remarkable Experience and Triumphant Death of Ann Thane Peck " published in 1847 Hudson Taylor sent a pamphlet using the words of this preface out to all the missionaries of the China Inland Mission in 1869.
In 1871, Taylor supplied the words to Arthur Sullivan's dramatic cantata, On Shore and Sea.
Suzie Shooter, the love interest of the main character, John Taylor, in Simon R. Green's Nightside series has a poster of Emma Peel hanging in her living area, with the words " My Idol " scrawled in what Taylor refers to as " suspiciously like blood " across the bottom of the poster.
Taylor was heard to utter the words " Do I not like that ", when England conceded a goal to Poland, and it became a national catchphrase.
In the words of John B. Taylor, Aziz suggested that U. S. should called out for a meeting of finance minister of the G7 member countries, where the illicit funding of money would become a great problem for G7 countries later in future.
* Jane Taylor ( poet ), ( 1783 – 1824 ), author of the words for the song " Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star "
) date back before the Christian era ,< ref > Encyclopedia of Indo-European culture By J. P. Mallory, Douglas Q. Adams Edition: illustrated Published by Taylor & Francis, 1997 ISBN 1-884964-98-2, ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5 ( page 11 ) borrowed words from Greek and Latin date back to before Christian era see also ( page 9 ) Even very common words such as mik " friend "(< Lat.
As Dr. Taylor neared the day of his execution he spoke these words on February 7, 1555 ( probably ) Taylor was taken back to his own place of Rectory-Hadleigh-where his wife awaited him in the early morning hours at St. Botolph's churchyard.
"), Mack can't spell (" I can't spill to save me loaf, have to rely on the spillchock on me compluter "), Vine can't put emphasis on words correctly (" I have problems with my emPHARsis at different parts of my senTENces ")-which causes him problems as a " speech theRAHpist ", Taylor places exclamation marks randomly at the end of sentences and shouts the final word (" Sorry, I sometimes put an exclamtion mark at the end by MISTAKE!
Taylor, sensing that Mabel might still have feelings for Mack, persuades Mabel, who is complaining of tiredness, to take heroin, saying it is a pick-me-up, which works with the magic words, " Bye, Mack !".
Outside court after the trial, angry words were exchanged by the opposing factions and both Stokes and Taylor were struck by punches.
The inspiration for this song came when Roger Taylor heard his son utter the words " radio ca-ca " while listening to a bad song on the radio while they were in Los Angeles.
Tornell was the fourth person to quit the game since Survivor's start in 2000, and the first player to quit the game and still be allowed to participate in the jury, and her final words were aired during the closing credits ( the first to quit the game, Osten Taylor of Survivor: Pearl Islands, did not get his final words aired when he quit ).

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