Like the Caroline poets of his epoch, Brome's use of rhetorical hyperbolism is also linked to the eye of the one who beholds. |
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Behold how most fair is Mary to the one who beholds her, and how loveable these things of hers to the ones who are capable of discerning. |
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Mithra was also the god of the sun, of the shining light that beholds everything, and, hence, was invoked in oaths. |
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John can dally with a host of other women but never find in them the revelation of heavenly glory that he beholds after the most awkward kiss with the scholarly Lucy. |
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The Jew beholds his tormentor dressed in the vestments of his own ancient culture. |
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What a different proposition life is to the man who looks out of his window and beholds a seascape and not a landscape. |
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In a dream the unknown poet beholds a beautiful tree the rood, or cross, on which Christ died. |
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One is on the ground floor, where, as one turns a corner to go into the exhibition halls, one immediately beholds a wide expanse of garden. |
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Lenntech beholds tables that contains a comparison of reaction speed for a number of substances with ozone and OH-radicals. |
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Baunat also beholds a wide expertise to choose the nicest diamonds for every jewel and to purchase it at the best price. |
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With its shining bronze color and diaphanous veils appearing when it moves in the glass, this cognac beholds perfect brilliance. |
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Peter does not do any of this, nor does he think about it: He lives his dreams, beholds vast countries that only exist in his imagination. |
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It is the spirit, that after every day of work and every trial, upon querying the Arcane, beholds the unmovable stone of my Law and the ever open book that contains the Doctrine of the Spirit. |
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When she finally appears at table, for she does not usually eat, it is a ghastly shell of a woman, emaciated, pallid, shrunken and grotesque, who beholds the fetching new arrival with beady-eyed ardour. |
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Already a kind of Derridean supplement, one simultaneously beholds the commodification of artworks and the artification of commodities. |
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For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like to a man beholding his natural face in a glass: for he beholds himself, and goes his way, and straightway forgets what manner of man he was. |
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He beholds his own finitude and the finitude of creation. |
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All glory, such as it is, accrues to the art of photography, which doesn't care what it beholds even as it burns it, through the eye, into the soul. |
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Already partially freed from matter, it beholds the future unrolled before it, and enjoys, in anticipation, the spirit-state upon which it is about to re-enter. |
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In this unique moment in the liturgical year, the bonds of ecclesial communion are strengthened and the People of God, notwithstanding its numerous anxieties, beholds a powerful sign of hope. |
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