Azar concentrates on poetics and stylistics and devotes only a few pages to the panegyric of the Duke. |
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Nearly all of the book consists of poetry, mostly in the form of religious, vaticinatory, panegyric, and legendary poetry. |
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In fact, the essay is so positive and loving as to be a panegyric, and it is difficult to understand the intensity of his displeasure. |
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He suggests that the artificiality of his faeries is also self-consciously that of Spenser's panegyric poetry. |
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It is no panegyric to the view that alcohol is merely an agricultural matter, a view expressed in certain parts of Europe. |
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In fact, if this award can be some little bit of a song or a panegyric for you all, then I am glad of that. |
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This book is an anthology of his thought, and not a biographical work, still less a panegyric. |
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St. John Chrysostom, who deeply admired and had great devotion to the Apostle, wrote a panegyric extolling his virtues that can help us a lot. |
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As before I used Lonely Planet, Lp, with a critical eye considering its ill-considered tendency to panegyric. |
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Ḥāfeẓ also reduced the panegyric element of his poems to a mere one or two lines, leaving the remainder of the poem for his ideas. |
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The prominent masters of the panegyric qaṣīdeh were Muʿizzī and Anvarī, who both flourished in the first half of the 12th century. |
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To conclude: while a panegyric to free trade is being delivered here, the sparks are flying in Geneva. |
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As its practice Lonely Planet handles the panegyric with excess, reality is sometimes less attractive. |
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They are a panegyric to the deity in the way they speak to us and constantly demonstrate that no particle is more important than any other. |
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As a member of the steering group for the inaugural Edinburgh Art Festival, I wrote a panegyric extolling the possibilities of our brave new project. |
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He is commemorated by a gilded bronze effigy in his chapel in St Mary's, Warwick, and an illustrated panegyric by the Warwickshire antiquary John Rous. |
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The combination of affection, humour and critical comment makes you trust this author and the genuineness of her familial bond far more than a worshipful panegyric ever would. |
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I consider my rant an ethical warning, a panegyric for the unlived life. |
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The latter is particularly famous for his renewal of panegyric poetry through the introduction of learned allusions and sophisticated rhetorical devices. |
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Claudian's poetry is a valuable historical source, though distorted by the conventions of panegyric. |
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The centenary celebrations will probably play down the conjugal row until June 29, when the pres ident and poets will join in a panegyric to Saint-Exupéry. |
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We have also supported the amendments recommending more national self-determination on labour market issues but have, of course, voted against the rapporteur's panegyric to the Treaty of Lisbon. |
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A government-owned newspaper, Es Sahafa provides the most systematic and panegyric coverage of the achievement of President Zein El Abidine Ben Ali. |
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Historical ballads, panegyric odes, metrical versions of Buddhist stories, and various other types of poetic forms, along with exhortatory letters, constitute this literature. |
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However, they shared with the Classic poets a set of complex metaphors and role, as the verse was still often panegyric. |
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For one thing, his praise of the achievements of the Soviet military industrial complex, and the quality of Soviet weaponry and military equipment, is exaggerated, perhaps even panegyric. |
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Even in its moderate form, this argument presupposes that factual elements can be plucked out of panegyric as nuggets of truth isolated from the dross of empty verbiage. |
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