The couple met in Scotland about five years ago and Annabel has become something of a muse for him. |
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In the same way that I turned in my external muse a few weeks ago, it's time for me to stop beating myself up over the way I broke his heart. |
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The poet's traditional invocation of the muse calls her into being, to sing to him. |
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Almost 50 years after being immortalised by the poet Philip Larkin in a famous anthology, the muse who inspired him is to speak on his legacy. |
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It proves they can grow old just as contentiously as they grew up, that theirs is not a muse whom custom can wither. |
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But her main role would be as Hirschfeld's muse and playmate, his elfin inamorata, the one editor to whom he paid devoted attention. |
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Harriet Smithson may have been the muse who inspired Berlioz's most celebrated symphony but she herself dies in obscurity and misery. |
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They all bespeak a past that didn't have the Valley's problems of today that I'll muse about over the next few weeks. |
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Since then, this perennially restless muse has wandered through a maze of creative highways and byways. |
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My personal favorite was a four-foot tall statue of Terpsichore, the Greek muse of dancing who bore the Sirens. |
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The artist's restless muse and critical intellect enable a confrontation with, and the effort to amend, the society's limiting traditions. |
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It offers an opportunity to drink deep of the Gothic atmosphere and muse on the blurry boundaries between truth and illusion. |
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It's tempting to see parallels between their rich, expressionist daubs and the emotionally charged abstractions of Perelman's restless muse. |
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The figure and face of the woman have been the inspirational muse for artists over the centuries. |
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But the tutelary divinity here is neither Thalia, the muse of comedy, nor Melpomene, the muse of tragedy, but Morpheus, the god of sleep. |
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While I walk, I muse on art and life. Back home, I make breakfast for Rose, who is with child. |
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It's not only his pet muse these days, but the very definition of his work. |
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My dear, my darling, my love, the question is not when have you ever been my muse, but when have you ever not been my muse. |
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Although you may sometimes resent the pressure of being everybody's muse or ray of sunshine, you try not to let it show. |
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I don't think my blogging muse has quite returned yet, so standby for some more inane waffle. |
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The muse may crave a spot of deprivation and misery every now and then to spark the old imagination, but there are limits. |
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Does the muse ever give up, other than when dissipation takes hold of the creative artist concerned? |
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Many privately muse that if the government insists on outlawing hunting, then outlaws they are prepared to be. |
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My happy muse was interrupted by the prickly, nettling sensation of being watched. |
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So far since the bells chimed midnight and the party poppers popped, my creative muse has been sleeping on the job. |
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The period between Christmas and New Year is a strange form of no man's land where we muse and watch the rain fall. |
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She was the muse and lover of the French poet and art critic Guillaume Apollinaire. |
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Opportunities do not wait for those who muse and pause for deliberation. |
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In death as in life fashion editor and muse Isabella Blow continues to fascinate. |
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It is difficult to make the transition from a muse to an artist. |
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And they no longer muse about which nations might be next on the target list, disappointing their most fervent neoconservative supporters as often as they please them. |
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Calliope, the muse of epic poetry, is a frequent guest in the Council of States, whose members are allowed to speak without time limits. |
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Well, I will say that your muse sounds like a truly righteous babe. |
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In the dark hush of the Tunnel, I muse on how similar the fawn-coloured velour Eurostar cabin is to the interior of a 1993 Renault Clio. |
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Let the Liberal leader muse from his professor's lectern during the spenders' conference. |
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The Leader of the Opposition can muse and pontificate all he wants about the economy, but everyone knows he has no plan. |
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An early muse was the actor Li Tobler, with whom Giger had a tempestuous relationship. |
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Absinthe was the muse of painters and poets during the XIXth century and its true spirit lives again in the Musée de l'Absinthe. |
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May Gaskell was the adored last muse of the artist Edward Burne-Jones. |
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Rodriguez wrote a script that imagined Trejo, his thuggish muse in desperado and Spy Kids, as a Mexican Charles Bronson. |
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And as a tailpiece, Padma Lakshmi, Rushdie's muse of many years now, has revealed that she often has disagreements with her husband about her numerous pairs of shoes. |
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Modotti, a famous beauty of Italian birth, was the colleague and muse of photographer Edward Weston, who took her to Mexico to mix with the avant-garde. |
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As critically self-reflective as she always is, Rose also satirizes the role of the artist as muse and siren, by presenting herself as both subject and object of desire. |
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The world's most successful musical theater impresario had his muse and the muse had roles written for her and her name spelled with big letters on theater marquises. |
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In the years thereafter, Aeschylus found his muse and became one of the three celebrated 5th-century-BC Athenian tragedians, alongside Sophocles and Euripides. |
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Only the corsets of those roles foreshadowed the Gothic babe she would become, the tousled muse to the phantasmagoric Tim Burton. |
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It was a Samson copy of a Meissen and she was the muse of music, that figure. |
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There are numerous paintings and drawings of Olga, who served as Picasso's muse for many years. |
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He meets an isolated female who is his muse and his messenger of death. |
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As the summer progresses, all three begin to muse over the shape the book will take and the way it will reflect upon Marsha. |
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Keates is an enthusiastic, serious and careful writer, and this delightful book, though designed up to the hilt, contains a lot to muse over. |
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Grownups can muse on whether their recollections of the troll under the bridge matches the one devised by Robert Bender. |
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Elena believes that Lila is her muse — and Lila forces Elena to succeed, through a combination of encouragement, generosity, and bedevilment. |
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I get home in low spirits and try to forget your verdict by turning for help to my muse, a bit stubborn this time! |
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She left the company in 1999 after eighteen years as Édouard Lock's principal dancer and muse. |
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Let us muse over the idea of public service on new vehicles. |
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Many celebrities, it seems, are saddling up into fashion muse side jobs. |
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Many of these works were portraits of Elizabeth Siddal, Jane Morris and William Holman Hunt's muse Annie Miller. |
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The radical film-maker Chris Petit used to muse about the aesthetic possibilities of movies made entirely from unmanned surveillance camera-footage of parking garages and service stations. |
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With her stylist and muse credentials, Valentine does have a touch more whimsy to her look than yer average head-to-toe-in-black French chicists but she adheres to the core principle that less is ultimately more. |
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Not where people muse over classical literature. |
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Ullmann, the leading lady of Scandi cinema, former muse and partner to Ingmar Bergman, pinup to a generation, is having a cappuccino in the basement of a private members club in Toronto. |
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It was 1970, more than a century after Alexander Pushkin lived and worked in the Arbat, and two decades before musicians and academics would muse over Perestroika philosophy. |
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And while you muse over how to execute a stitch – or a pose – those problems that threatened overwhelm you as you left the office can take a backseat. |
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That show found its muse in producer Karl Pilkington, a laconic sad sack who quickly became the centerpiece of the show. |
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The beautiful muse on the left has been carved out of a wood log which Original shape and surface is still there, thus displaying the cracks and veins of a well aged tree. |
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Man came into this world, not to sit down and muse, not to befog himself with vain subtleties, but to gird up his loins and to work. |
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Ursula became the composer's muse, helper and London companion, and later helped him care for his ailing wife. |
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She has blossomed into a graceful muse whose charm, self-deprecating wit and stunning voice wins every time, and those powerful vocals far exceed her 21 years and tiny 5' frame. |
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Woolf's mother, a muse of the Pre-Raphaelites, was the austerely beautiful Julia Stephen, née Jackson — Cameron's niece, namesake, godchild, and favorite model. |
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A battle sung by the muse in the Homerican style, and which none but the classical reader can taste. |
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The muse whispers into the ear of Caeneus, once an argonaut questing for the golden fleece, now second mate on a 1940s Danish merchant vessel schlepping paper pulp to Turkey. |
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Auxilio is trapped in a fourth-floor ladies' bathroom when, in September 1968, the army invades the university campus where she works as helpmeet and muse for her beloved junior literati. |
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And the pantomime muse is even more disastrously invoked by the costumes, designs, lighting, and choreography, which are all the last word in tackiness. |
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The green-eyed muse thus set free will release your imagination. |
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So was the cellist Charlotte Moorman, muse to Nam June Paik and proactivist champion of all things fringe. |
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Role Models pays homage to Baltimore, Waters's muse and hometown, whose culture spawned many magnificent oddballs, as well as the bars and barkeeps who nursed his imagination. |
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Meanwhile, Derrick, the shoegazer, has found a muse in Abby. |
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Over the next decade, she became his muse, his pupil, and his passion. |
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Sienna Miller stars as Edie Sedgwick, 60s It girl and muse of pop art legend Andy Warhol and shows her descent from society partier to her 1971 death from a drug overdose. |
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In honor of Women's History Month in March, miss KOREA BBQ restaurant offers a special Hwang Jini cocktail inspired by the famed muse of Korean history. |
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But instead of stirring the waters and creating an unintended tidal wave of kvetch, why not mellow out and concentrate on finding your gay muse this Valentine's month? |
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Damon Albarn's Gorillaz replaced U2, and joined Muse and Stevie Wonder for the Saturday and Sunday headline slots respectively. |
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Sarah Siddons as the Tragic Muse, painting at The Huntington, San Marino, California. |
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Joshua Reynolds depicted Sarah Siddons as The Muse of Tragedy, largely due to her triumph in the role of Lady Macbeth. |
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Muse became the first band to sell out the new stadium on 16 and 17 June 2007, and released a live DVD of the performance. |
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Matt Bellamy, Dominic Howard and Christopher Wolstenholme from the English group Muse all grew up in Devon and formed the band there. |
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The Muse, as embodiment of epicness, is throughout the Metamorphoses both desired and resisted. |
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The performances by Muse and The Rolling Stones at the last festival were a major influence. |
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The festival ended with Muse headlining the Pyramid Stage on Sunday, after Oasis had headlined on Friday. |
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Biffy Clyro were confirmed to be supporting Muse for 14 dates on their European tour, including Wembley Stadium on 11 September, performing after I Am Arrows and White Lies. |
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Each of the Arts whose office is to refine, purify, adorn, embellish and grace life is under the patronage of a Muse, no god being found worthy to preside over them. |
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In addition to his formal studies, Blackstone published a collection of poetry which included the draft version of The Lawyer to his Muse, his most famous literary work. |
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