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solemn and pride
In proclaiming the holiday, he said " To us in America, the reflections of Armistice Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country's service and with gratitude for the victory, both because of the thing from which it has freed us and because of the opportunity it has given America to show her sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of the nations.
Disseminated through Redcross to the multiple reflectors of his worsening state, the Archimago virus manifests its allegorical toxicity in the procession of " too solemn sad " powerseekers and losers who exhibit the stunning coincidence of pride and despair, superbia and accidia, that Søren Kierkegaard would analyze as " the sickness unto death ": the phallic hysteria and suicidal despair variously inscribed in the machismo of faithless and lawless chivalry, in the joyless aspiration and desperation of Luciferan glitter, in the abjection of the maternal cave of Night that haunts the house of Pride, and in the spastic thunder of Orgoglio.
An extract, " the solemn pride that must be yours, to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom ", adorns the statue of Lady Columbia in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Hawaii.

solemn and must
The doctrine of the infallibility of ecumenical councils states that solemn definitions of ecumenical councils, approved by the Pope, which concern faith or morals, and to which the whole Church must adhere are infallible.
Her conclusion was that the evidence testified to an ancient Celtic festival on 1 August that involved the following: solemn cutting of the first of the corn of which an offering would be made to the deity by bringing it up to a high place and burying it ; a meal of the new food and of bilberries of which everyone must partake ; a sacrifice of a sacred bull, a feast of its flesh, with some ceremony involving its hide, and its replacement by a young bull ; a ritual dance-play perhaps telling of a struggle for a goddess and a ritual fight ; an installation of a head on top of the hill and a triumphing over it by an actor impersonating Lugh ; another play representing the confinement by Lugh of the monster blight or famine ; a three-day celebration presided over by the brilliant young god or his human representative.
It also states that a bishop usually holds the crosier during a procession and when listening to the reading of the Gospel, giving a homily, accepting vows, solemn promises or a profession of faith, and when blessing people, unless he must lay his hands on them.
I must obey and fulfill, the solemn oath that I have just rendered.
At early dawn on that day, all of us, notables and people, farmers and merchants, artizans and tradesmen, must assemble at the Tuan Fang Meeting House, that we may in grave and solemn manner inaugurate this undertaking
And these three men made a solemn vow, John Barleycorn must die,
* It must be executed by the grantor in presence of the prescribed number of witnesses, known as instrumentary witnesses ( this is known as being in solemn form ).
Otherwise, in serious cases ( known as solemn procedure with a jury as opposed to summary procedure without ) the trial must commence within 12 months of the date of first appearance in court.
The doctrine of the infallibility of ecumenical councils states that solemn definitions of ecumenical councils, approved by the pope, which concern faith or morals, and to which the whole Church must adhere are infallible.
When a youth of the tribes owes one a life-debt, they cannot marry or for that matter even engage in courtship, and cannot undertake any of the major responsibilities of adulthood until such time as their life-debt is repaid, for the repayment of that life-debt is a solemn duty they must attend to before all other commitments.
: And whose solemn voice must be
Under solemn High Court procedure, once someone has been charged with an offence and remanded in custody, the Crown must bring the case to a preliminary hearing within 110 days.
This was organised for Tuesday 22 September 1795, the host chapel insisting that no collection for the proposed society must be made during the founding event which would be more solemn, and formally mark the origin of the Missionary Society.

solemn and be
The publication last July of the party's Draft Program -- that blueprint for the `` transition to communism '' -- had led the uninitiated to suppose that this Twenty-second Congress would be a sort of apotheosis of the Khrushchev regime, a solemn consecration of ideas which had, in fact, been current over the last three or four years ( i.e., since the defeat of the `` anti-party group '' ) in all theoretical party journals.
The cappa magna may be worn, but only within the bishop's own diocese and on especially solemn occasions.
The Caeremoniale Episcoporum recommends, but does not impose, that in solemn celebrations a bishop should also wear a dalmatic, which can always be white, beneath the chasuble, especially when administering the sacrament of holy orders, blessing an abbot or abbess, and dedicating a church or an altar.
This solemn commitment tends to be referred to as the " Benedictine vow " and is the Benedictine antecedent and equivalent of the evangelical counsels professed by candidates for reception into a religious order.
The 10. 30 AM mass is the solemn feast high Mass, which will most likely be celebrated by the Apostolic Nuncio to India, Archbishop Salvatore Penacchio.
In the time of the Revolution, women could not be kept out of the political sphere ; they swore oaths of loyalty, " solemn declarations of patriotic allegiance, affirmations of the political responsibilities of citizenship.
His solemn, trademark oath has become a popular catchphrase: " By Grabthar's hammer, by the suns of Warvan, you shall be avenged !".
Foreign Office minister Sir Eyre Crowe also wrote a memorandum to the British cabinet claiming that " a solemn league and covenant " would just be " a treaty, like other treaties ".
" Hitherto Monk had continued to make solemn protestations of his affection and fidelity to the Commonwealth interest, against a King and House of Lords ; but the new militia being settled, and a Convention, calling themselves a Parliament and fit for his purpose, being met at Westminster, he sent to such lords as had sat with the Parliament till 1648, to return to the place where they used to sit, which they did, upon assurance from him, that no others should be permitted to sit with them ; which promise he also broke, and let in not only such as had deserted to Oxford, but the late created lords.
When it came to the issue of slavery in DC and slavery in the United States, he was against its abolition, and said so in his Inaugural Address in 1837: " I believed it a solemn duty fully to make known my sentiments in regard to it < nowiki > ,</ nowiki > and now, when every motive for misrepresentation has passed away, I trust that they will be candidly weighed and understood.
First, however, they all undertook a solemn oath to leave nothing undone, and, if need be, lay down the tiara to end the schism.
With reference to rumours which I believe were at one time afloat, though I know not with what degree of currency: and also with reference to the times when I shall not be here to answer for myself, I desire to record my solemn declaration and assurance, as in the sight of God and before His Judgment Seat, that at no period of my life have I been guilty of the act which is known as that of infidelity to the marriage bed.
Affection can be a cause of kissing " in all ages in grave and solemn moments ," notes Nyrop, " not only among those who love each other, but also as an expression of profound gratitude.
— “ The French Revolution was nothing but a precursor of another revolution, one that will be bigger, more solemn, and which will be the last .”
Their style is also said to be solemn and majestic.
The area around the altar is seen as endowed with greater holiness, and is usually physically distinguished from the rest of the church, whether by a permanent structure such as an iconostasis, a rood screen or altar rails, by a curtain that can be closed at more solemn moments of the liturgy, as in the Armenian Apostolic Church and Armenian Catholic Church, or simply by the general architectural layout.
In July 1549, Paget wrote to Somerset: " Every man of the council have misliked your proceedings ... would to God, that, at the first stir you had followed the matter hotly, and caused justice to be ministered in solemn fashion to the terror of others ...".
One man wrote in The Argosy: “ With its own symbolic meaning of thought, the pansy is also somewhat endued with a soft shadow, not necessarily of grief, but solemn and quiet, indeed grave, as thought should be .”
Loki shouts and begs the eagle for a truce, and the eagle responds that Loki would not be free unless he made a solemn vow to have Iðunn come outside of Asgard with her apples.
For instance, it is on the basis of the preamble to the French Constitution, mentioning the solemn regard of the French Republic towards the principles set forth in the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, that the Constitutional Council has declared certain laws to be unconstitutional ( the first case being decision 71-44DC ).
Peter III of Aragon ( 1239 1285 ) made it a condition, under solemn oath at the moment of crowning, that all the Aragonese kings be buried there.
While solemn vows once meant those taken in what was called a religious order, " today, in order to know when a vow is solemn it will be necessary to refer to the proper law of the institutes of consecrated life.

solemn and yours
Kirsty Wark of Newsnight opens bulletins on the programme with a line from a popular song read in an incongruously solemn newseader's tone, closing with " More on that story later " (" My milkshake brings all the boys to the yard, and they're like, it's better than yours, damn right, it's better than yours.

solemn and have
They all surrounded him, the family circle, Theresa and George as solemn as if they were watching the cat have kittens, and Cousin Emma running back and forth with a kettle of hot water which she poured steaming into a white enamelled pan.
I will show you a great many who have become worse through following it .... The solemn prayers of the Church are abolished, but now there are very many who never pray at all .... I have never entered their conventicles, but I have sometimes seen them returning from their sermons, the countenances of all of them displaying rage, and wonderful ferocity, as though they were animated by the evil spirit .... Who ever beheld in their meetings any one of them shedding tears, smiting his breast, or grieving for his sins ?...
'… However solemn or spirited, interposition resolutions have no legal efficacy.
Plutarch and others have noted that the sacrifices to Osiris were " gloomy, solemn, and mournful ..." ( Isis and Osiris, 69 ) and that the great mystery festival, celebrated in two phases, began at Abydos on the 17th of Athyr ( November 13 ) commemorating the death of the god, which was also the same day that grain was planted in the ground.
He charged that King James had uttered a " solemn lie " when he asserted that he was the first Christian monarch to have discovered the land.
This is a solemn service of the Little Hours and Typica to which antiphons, and scripture readings have been added.
The main distinction between a nun and a sister is that nuns have solemn vows and sisters have simple vows, which allows them to inherit property, unlike a nun.
* Parents have " a solemn responsibility to love and care for each other and for their children.
" In verse, Dwight wrote an ambitious epic in eleven books, The Conquest of Canaan, finished in 1774 but not published until 1785, a somewhat ponderous and solemn satire, The Triumph of Infidelity ( 1788 ), directed against David Hume, Voltaire and others ; Greenfield Hill ( 1794 ), the suggestion for which seems to have been derived from John Denham's Coopers Hill ; and a number of minor poems and hymns, the best known of which is that beginning " I love thy kingdom, Lord ".
The word regicide seems to have come into popular use among foreign Catholics when Pope Sixtus V renewed the solemn bull of excommunication against the " crowned regicide " Queen Elizabeth I, for executing Mary, Queen of Scots, in 1587 among other things.
Contemporary sacred sexual rituals have been tagged as ' structured, symbolic, manifestation, ceremonies, tradition, everyday, habit, grounding, magic, solemn '.
After three o ' clock in the afternoon of Good Friday ( the time at which Jesus is traditionally believed to have died ), noise is discouraged, some radio stations and television stations sign off ( while others remain signed-on, broadcasting Religious Programming ), businesses automatically close, and the faithful are urged to keep a solemn and prayerful disposition through to Easter Sunday.
Today, " Realm of Sweden " can be used as a translation of the term Sveriges rike, which simply is a more solemn term for the contemporary Swedish state, and does not have the expansionist connotations which Svenska väldet may have.
Modern scholars have retroactively used the term " Bull " to describe any elaborate papal document issued in the form of a decree or privilege ( solemn or simple ), and to some less elaborate ones issued in the form of a letter.
" The letter to Smith ended, " Colonel Neill and myself have come to the solemn resolution that we will rather die in these ditches than give it up to the enemy.
1. 1. 6 ). 4 In another excerpt recounted from Cornelius Nepos “ On the Latin Historians ” is a letter from Cornelia to Gaius which had been verbally recited until printed by Nepos :“ I would venture to take a solemn oath that except for the men who killed Tiberius Gracchus no enemy has given me so much trouble and toil as you have done because of these matters.
Although probably too solemn to have inspired Vysotsky himself, the statue is believed by some to be full of metaphors and symbols reminiscent of the singer's life.

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