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Word: patterning (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...poetry of bell effects has always appealed to composers for the piano. In Borodin's Au Couvent, a bell tolls for 18 measures, silvery, gentle, relentless; Debussy composed an intricately sophisticated pattern for bells in his Japanese Temple Gongs; stern bells crash and roll in Tschaikowsky's 1812 Overture; sleigh bells jingle like hard, gay laughter in his Troika (Op. 37, No. 11); bells happily pious tinkle in the Celeste of Korngold's Die Tote Stadt; the profound and icy-hearted Kremlin bell booms in Rachmaninoff's Prelude (Op. 3, No. 2). Many are the other...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Bells | 12/15/1924 | See Source »

...epic of the soil is "a panorama of the whole round of peasant life, a brilliant picture of Polish nature ... the tragic sense of the elemental forces which dominate the efforts of the tillers of the soil." The work is truly epic in its scope, a carefully worked, heroic pattern. It is a sweeping view of Poland, ground under the imperial heel of Russia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Peasants* | 12/1/1924 | See Source »

...large audience went to see. For them she danced. In chevelure of curled peruke, to a Mozart serenade, she swished her silken panniers, as did the belles of Bath, treading in the formal maze of a minuet, all the pride and fashion of the 18th Century caught in pattern of her narrow slippers. She danced a "Hurdy-Gurdy" dance like a marionette of ivory pulled on silver wires, to an imaginary music-box that slowly wound down and down. In gold boots and scarlet gown, she glided through an adagio with her big partner, Vladimiroff, to music by Glazunov. Again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Karsavina | 11/10/1924 | See Source »

Another notable figure in Rensselaer Institute's history was Benjamin Franklin Greene, who became director in 1847 and reorganized the Institute into a general polytechnic. As such, it thereafter became a pattern for U. S. technical schools...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Extension | 10/13/1924 | See Source »

...free from malice. It is enough to stir any true Democrat to wrath to realize that the process of making modish shirtwaists for $1.69 is exclusively a Republican secret. One suspects that the criticism is motivated as much by the fact that Mrs. Coolidge withheld the details as to pattern and material as by the advertising of her thrift. Were the Democratic women truly wise, they would immediately closed themselves in conference with Mr. Snippean. What consternation in Republican ranks if Democrats (feminine) were to appear at political rallies garbed in shirt-waists of their own creation at a cost...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FEMININE TOUCH | 10/7/1924 | See Source »

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