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"clamorous" Definitions
  1. (especially of a lot of people or animals) making a loud noise
  2. (of a lot of people) making demands for something

172 Sentences With "clamorous"

How to use clamorous in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "clamorous" and check conjugation/comparative form for "clamorous". Mastering all the usages of "clamorous" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Her new novel, "Barkskins," is a clamorous epic of environmental despoliation.
Nowhere is that reinforcement more clamorous than on social media, Dr. Limaye added.
But, as I learned, cicada calls aren't just clamorous—they can actually be deafening.
Wall-E ends with a clamorous chase involving a ship full of rogue robots.
"We have an understanding, then," the beautiful ones said, to clamorous agreement and wild applause.
Mr. Perahia's stamina was impressive, but he understandably offered no encore, and the clamorous audience relented.
That's where a crowd is planning a clamorous pots-and-pans protest, which Pishevar said he welcomes.
Alliance is more cool city kid: The space, in a former warehouse, is casual, clamorous and crowded.
To this clamorous beat marched Mr. Van Beirendonck's models, their faces wrapped, guerrilla-style, in elegant headscarves.
IN A dismal primary season, the enthusiasm and moral purpose of Bernie Sanders's clamorous supporters has been uplifting.
In a clamorous, politically loathsome world, creating moments of quiet for communal reflection is itself a radical act.
And yet, to be fair, both players are given their say, and their clamorous voice, in equal measure.
The production feels stripped back, and instead of competing with the clamorous funk notes, her voice rides the melody.
A proper writer, she explains, seeks not "clamorous Fame" but the "simpler, quieter and more enduring" reward of recognition.
The government has pushed the clamorous profusion of flower vendors off the sidewalks around the city's famous flower market.
Governments have raised discretionary spending during booms, to placate clamorous constituents, then cut it during busts, to appease jittery creditors.
But the Panama papers have led to clamorous demands that politicians should be required to make their tax returns public.
Critic's Notebook Disruption can sometimes be turned into opportunity, and Thursday night's clamorous Season 2 finale of "Superstore" proved it.
Throughout this memoir, Ahmed reveals the "absurd, clamorous clash of modern and medieval" that defined her time in the country.
Anyone who says otherwise isn't paying attention, or is humming over increasingly clamorous news reports of super storms and sinking cities.
Different from outright racism, this is measured by support for the idea that blacks are undeserving and clamorous for special assistance.
There, the broth tends to be sweeter than its northern counterpart, more clamorous with flavors, heavier in fragrance and less crystalline.
You gotta see this Revelers made a dancing, clamorous human rainbow this week during Holi, a yearly religious festival in India.
But it would transform NAFTA's ménage à trois into a clamorous throng of a dozen; the three amigos would become the 12 acquaintances.
Calls for ethics reforms — and a hard look at outside income — have been clamorous among government watchdog groups and in some quarters in Albany.
When such a staggering possibility was explained to Shiffrin as she tranquilly ate dinner at a clamorous Midtown Manhattan restaurant, she shook her head.
There, tens of thousands of protesters came together in a clamorous gathering to make very clear that they believe Australia Day should be abolished.
In 22011, Shell Oil bid heavily for federal leases in the Chukchi Sea, and a series of clamorous hearings began on the North Slope.
All were a day's work for the increasingly agitated leader, who resumed his schedule in clamorous fashion after a week abroad and a federal holiday.
The date matters, for punk is in full cry, and Enn gets his teen-age kicks from going to see terrible but pleasingly clamorous bands.
Thousands of tons of newsprint left Kapuskasing each year, much of it bound for the clamorous loading docks of The Times's headquarters off Times Square.
Clamorous yet substantively thin calls for Rousseff's impeachment began soon after the fourth consecutive victory for her center-left Workers' Party (Partido dos Trabalhadores, or PT).
And an excruciating "Don't ask, don't tell" Donovan family dinner, featuring a scenery-chewing Susan Sarandon as John's lush of a mother, is a clamorous debacle.
" Jo March (Saoirse Ronan) and her sisters (Emma Watson, Florence Pugh and Elizabeth Scanlon) create a "natural, affectionate, clamorous intimacy" that is "a joy to behold.
All the while, he seemed to be reveling in the moment, and he brought down the house, winning a clamorous ovation from his colleagues and the audience.
The researchers found the already-clamorous species become markedly louder when introduced to warmer temperatures, and will present their research Friday at the 2020 Ocean Sciences Meeting.
At a town hall meeting this week attended by more than 1,000 Utahans, Chaffetz heard repeated calls -- often accompanied by "clamorous boos" -- for an investigation into Trump's finances.
Vexed and clamorous, Kanye West does not merely speak with God; he goes so far as to claim on his prior album Yeezus that he is a god.
It got lost amidst the clamorous noise generating from President Trump's latest tweet, or perhaps because the NY Giants had just been beaten 13-38 at Green Bay.
But as clamorous as these protests have become, Ms. DeVos is also imperiled by a lack of support from constituencies that a Republican nominee might normally count on.
His clamorous approach could backfire in the more moderate suburban districts where the battle for the House will be decided and he ran behind Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Offering a potent brew of harsh industrial noise and hard-hitting bass, "Heat Dish" depicts the unsettling nature of a mechanized world and the clamorous bustle of city life.
The inconsistent news reports about doctor Li Wenliang's death inspired clamorous calls for more transparency and freedom of speech from Chinese citizens — however those calls, too, were quickly silenced.
It was a subtle exchange, about 20 minutes into yet another clamorous White House press briefing, and a casual viewer of Wednesday's proceedings would be forgiven for missing it.
Performers who wielded clamorous, overwhelming sounds onstage — like Pharmakon, whose set was a shriek of human defiance amid a crushing electronic din — also gave daytime seminars demystifying their techniques.
The religious disposition has not waned because religious institutions have; if anything, a mass longing for order and communion has grown more clamorous in the absence of shared cultural outlets.
Frankly, I can't wait for the next month to pass, and for us to get back to the usual if often noisy, even clamorous, sausage-making of American political discourse.
Even so, the company's pledge suggests that management at least listened during the unexpectedly clamorous annual meeting in May and isn't yet inclined to put the idea to the ballot.
The primaries have been even worse, as we in the clamorous majority have had to stand by idly as a pair of small, overwhelmingly white states chose the party nominees.
In the process she deftly shoves the clamorous memories of Carol Channing (who created the role on Broadway) and Barbra Streisand (in the 1969 film) at least temporarily into the wings.
An instrumentally fluent texture record serving an articulately sung melody record, led to its sweetly clamorous fate by Dischord art-pop hand Chad Clark, whose last album came out in 2004.
Four months into our reporting, we were in the village for a series of tense, clamorous late-night meetings, in which the elders grudgingly decreed that the women could return to work.
"I find it abhorrent that you take advantage of the clamorous scandal of sexual abuse in the United States to inflict an unheard of and unwarranted" attack on the pope, Ouellet said.
The film tells the story of the rise and subsequent fall of two brothers who own the titular nightclub in a clamorous Belgian indie scene—a scene which Soulwax helped define IRL.
From before Saturday night's kickoff, the clamorous capacity crowd of more than 83,000 made it clear that there would be no escape from the Tigers' home field for Jackson and the Cardinals.
Even as I carry my baby into the world — this crowded, clamorous, septic world — I am holding a breath that I will not release until he turns precisely one day older than Greta.
Eighteen people had reserved seats at the Holey Artisan Bakery, whose crusty flour-dusted loaves of bread and piles of homemade pasta offered a respite from the sticky, clamorous city that surrounded it.
Last season, Wachner resurrected the composer's clamorous Passion oratorio, "Turbae ad Passionem Gregorianam"; this spring, a slew of Ginastera works will appear at Trinity, notably in the "Concerts at One" series, on Thursdays.
Ambition has led me to spend 20 years of my life in a clamorous, filthy city I cannot afford, and to devote far too much attention to the soul-shriveling business of self-promotion.
But by the 1960s, most of the larger old department stores were struggling to compete with off-price retailers, and in subsequent decades, the strip gradually devolved into a clamorous midway of discount shops.
One assumes that the illusion designer, Ben Hart, was kept busy, as the composer and sound designer Adam Cork has certainly been: The play begins with a clamorous bang but tails off to a whimper.
Yet, unlike the more urbane and congenial Fielding, Richardson has a knack for psychological realism and an ability to craft characters whose clamorous inner lives continue, almost three centuries later, to feel real to us.
Where the playhouse opened in 2014 with a becalmed production of "The Duchess of Malfi" that dialed down the temperature of Webster's best-known play, this "White Devil" is aggressive and clamorous to a fault.
And they're a boon to those sick of living next to clamorous roads—the little high-pitched whine created by electric motors doesn't travel nearly as far as the ripping barrrrp of a gas-powered car.
A reader, in an attempt to follow what is actually transpiring—sex—might find herself swept away by such absurd abstractions as "clamorous rollercoaster coil" or "hunched disadvantage" and then unable to find her way back.
By seeming to concentrate so much power in one regal figure, de Gaulle made it possible to rule France again, but also insured that opposition would have to be impassioned and clamorous to register at all.
Malodorous, clamorous, and with N and Q trains racketing overhead, the setting was Mr. Simons's homage to the animal market scene in Ridley Scott's dystopian classic "Blade Runner," with the addition of ripe fish-market smells.
Ten days before the event, Cleveland was still training police officers for duty at the convention, which is expected to draw 50,000 visitors as well as clamorous protests and crown the most contentious presidential candidate in memory.
The Justice Department's decision to investigate the Mississippi prisons comes after clamorous calls for change at the correctional facilities from celebrities and advocates alike in response to outbreaks of violence left at least 15 dead since December.
But the proposal has also drawn a broad and clamorous blowback from many people who would be directly affected by it, including patients with chronic pain, primary care doctors and experts in pain management and addiction medicine.
The clamorous event was staged in a vast warehouse opposite the new Rubell Museum, 100,403 square feet of linked industrial structures in Allapattah, a working-class neighborhood filled with modest housing, auto repair shops and light industry.
The spectacle of their natural, affectionate, clamorous intimacy is a joy to behold, one we occasionally glimpse through the amused eyes of potential suitors, fond neighbors and a prodigiously judgmental and very wealthy aunt played by Meryl Streep.
" Amid clamorous riffs, studio concoctions, tangled wordplay and sly in-jokes is the quietly telling "If You Run," a tale of tattered romance laced with sage advice: "You lie to each other, but you better never lie to yourself.
Scheduled for the afternoon, so that parents could get their children home early, the opening dissolved into a clamorous rumpus of young kids amusing themselves at ground level while drab little islands of staid adults gathered in customary art world conversations.
In a remarkable split-screen, Trump was taking the stage at a rally in Battle Creek, Michigan, as the final votes were cast, basking in the clamorous applause of his most passionate supporters amid the darkest moment of his presidency.
Republicans' zeal to undercut the case laid out by Democrats led to a clamorous afternoon in which Democratic and Republican lawyers sparred publicly and GOP lawmakers repeatedly interjected, leading Nadler to test the strength of his gavel over and over again.
"If the saying that markets in the year of the monkey (2016) and rooster are raucous holds true, then this year will be clamorous indeed," Akira Kiyota, chief executive of Japan Exchange Group, said at the Tokyo Stock Exchange's opening ceremony.
Keeping its options open, the group gathers its loosely knit crew of clamorous, flexible musicians behind songs that are ready for a big soundstage: an exultant surge of instruments, voices and wide-open reverberation that Broken Social Scene delights in applying.
Such a display of lock step discipline is a striking change in a country that became used to clamorous politics under Mr. Johnson's predecessors, David Cameron and Theresa May, who struggled to hold together balky coalitions and govern without a Parliamentary majority.
This year's Globalfest, the 17th, was the most manic and clamorous of them all, a lineup of musicians demanding attention with speed, rhythm, passion, humor, costumes, dance moves and the determination to hold on to particular cultural heritages in a connected world.
When I was young, and new to modern art, I doted on the Expressionist heads and faces by the Russian-born artist Alexei Jawlensky, which he painted in thick layers of clamorous color, and wondered why a bigger deal wasn't made of them.
An airy cafe in the center of the clamorous complex, Landeau Chocolate is decorated with a mix of industrial lighting, flea-market finds and gorgeously photographed indie magazines, but the center of anyone's attention is that chocolate cake, the only offering on Landeau's menu.
The clamorous opposition to his resignation from various parties this week demonstrated the level of support that still remains for his policies, says Sanam Vakil, a senior fellow at think tank Chatham House and associate professor at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.
At others, she shot to her feet with a clamorous ovation, as when the president promised to rein in drug prices and protect patients with pre-existing conditions — a central element of the ObamaCare law that Pelosi had ushered into passage almost a decade ago.
The first protestors had started showing up for what grew to be an enormous, clamorous demonstration, with people shivering in the January cold but chanting, "Build a wall, we'll tear it down" as they played trumpets, drums and even banged on pots and pans.
As a clamorous global alarm over air safety rings in the wake of Sunday's crash, causing Boeing 213 Max planes to be grounded across the world, a quieter reckoning is taking place in shattered homes across Kenya, the country that suffered the single largest toll.
Perhaps the liberal Democrats in the House who staged a clamorous sit-in Wednesday night in Washington, while part of the system themselves, were channeling the populist anger of the American left in their willingness to break the rules to make a point about the need for gun control.
As if that were not enough, adding to these challenges will be the fact that the 220006 Census will be the first to employ online response and will have to compete for the nation's attention in the midst of what promises to be a clamorous primary season and presidential campaign.
The rallies on Sunday were routinely physical and often extended, full of topspin and corner-to-corner action and punctuated by loud grunts that were every bit as clamorous as any in the women's game (even if the grunting issue only seems to be a talking point in the women's side).
The first long stretch of the race went by the first street I lived on, in a Brooklyn neighborhood that realtors were then still struggling to name, and I would walk down to watch the race roar over and through an avenue that was, every other day of the year, mostly a clamorous and unlovely truck route.
In a 2009 article, Georgetown University Law Professor Hope M. Babcock introduces the concept of the "environmental republican moment"—the interval when, due to growing awareness of looming ecological catastrophe, citizens might be open to changing their behavior in relation to environmental challenges, through "a process that is essentially a dialogue" but also, as in Arendt, more clamorous than consensual.
During his tenure at the F.D.A., Dr. Gottlieb, who was not shy about announcing his achievements, sometimes several times a day on social media, eventually moved from a hands-off approach to the nascent e-cigarette companies, to leading a clamorous fight against them, particularly as studies emerged about how teenagers swarmed the new product, unaware of the addictive properties of nicotine.
Perhaps the most disturbing portent of a bleak American future is that for all the millions of words proving not just Mr. Trump's dishonesty and unfitness to serve but also the dishonesty and unfitness of most of the people he has put in positions of authority and influence, there is no clamorous outrage that is not easily dismissed as partisanship.
B PLUS Frank Ocean: Blond/Blonde (self-released) This indifferent melodist's coup d'art only comes into its own when he brings the noise—especially as of the clamorous "Nights," which together with the 100-mph Andre 3000 rap and the rehearsal-tuneup chorale that follow add up to the only nine minutes on his stairway to nowhere that I'd call thrilling as well as admirable.
Be clamorous and leap all civil bound rather than make unprofited return.
As a matter of course, he was loud, clamorous, dogmatical and not very argumentative.
Question!' to take part in the debate on the Duke of York's conduct, and had not got very far when the house became 'so clamorous for the question that the hon. member could no longer be heard'.
Along with other actresses, including Paola Dionisotti, Fiona Shaw, Juliet Stevenson and Harriet Walter, Cusack contributed to a book by Carol Rutter called Clamorous Voices: Shakespeare's Women Today (1994). The book analysed modern acting interpretations of female Shakespearean roles.
The way he grappled with one the other day was a caution. Jim Slack, the “Lone Fisherman,” carried him a three pound trout. Jim had four men at work on an arastra, and each one was clamorous for a piece.
Clamorous reed warbler is a large song thrush- sized warbler at 18–20 cm. The adult has an unstreaked brown back and whitish underparts. The forehead is flattened, and the bill is strong and pointed. The sexes are identical, as with most warblers.
The clamorous reed warbler (Acrocephalus stentoreus) is an Old World warbler in the genus Acrocephalus. It breeds from Egypt eastwards through Pakistan, Afghanistan and northernmost India to south China, southeast Asia and south to Australia. A. s. meridionalis is an endemic race in Sri Lanka.
Fantozzi is working overtime to protect the "Clamorous Mega-Director Duke-Count Engineer" Semenzara, (a CEO) who is cheating on his wife. Missing security guards shooting (that mistake him as a rogue), he's even "physically" forced by his colleagues to return to work in normal daylight hours.
For example, when the eucalyptus are flowering the New Holland honeyeater, musk lorikeet and rainbow lorikeet are frequent visitors. Breeding of some species is occurring in the Wetland, including the, dusky moorhen, Eurasian coot, Australasian grebe, clamorous reed warbler, magpie- lark, willie wagtail, crested pigeon and spotted turtle dove.
They, and others who emerge from the side alleys of his mind, strut their stuff, accost one another, argue, and shout until eventually they leave him, on a scorching Cairo street, peering after an infinite succession of receding, parallel clamorous worlds, from whose possibilities he must draw his own conclusions.
There is no sound of wild beast or of cattle, of branches rustling in the breeze, no clamorous tongues of men. There mute silence dwells.Ovid, Metamorphoses 11.594-602. In keeping with this theme of "silence", Ovid says that Somnus' house has no doors, "lest some turning hinge should creak".Ovid, Metamorphoses 11.608-609.
Its tail is shorter and more square-ended than that of the clamorous reed warbler (A. stentoreus) and it has a slightly longer primary projection and a slightly shorter and thicker bill. The pale tip to the tail separates it from both species. The song is a mixture of warbling phrases and guttural, croaking notes.
She never left the asylum. 1920 was the year of comedies such as Tutto per bene, Come prima meglio di prima, and La Signora Morli. In 1921, the Compagnia di Dario Niccomedi staged, at the Valle di Roma, the play, Sei personaggi in cerca d'autore, Six Characters in Search of an Author. It was a clamorous failure.
In February 1830, Ries conducted the work in Cologne. Ries wrote to his brother saying, "The moment I stepped out, I was given a clamorous reception from the audience and a fanfare from the orchestra. For these resources, it was an extraordinary performance." In 1831 Ries presented the opera to the King of Prussia in Berlin.
The people became clamorous to get land, and the rich and the great, we may believe, were perfectly determined not to give them any part of theirs. To satisfy them in some measure, therefore, they frequently proposed to send out a new colony.' Project Gutenberg. Hegel described the same phenomenon happening in the impetus to Greek colonisation.
He went underground. Even though he was a fugitive, Wiwa met with human rights groups, environmental groups, church leaders, and western embassies in Nigeria frequently, informing them of the situation and requesting that they put pressure for Ken's release. The response to the campaign was overwhelming. The media reacted with a clamorous condemnation of the Nigerian military.
It is very like great reed warbler, but that species has richer coloured underparts. There are a number of races differing in plumage shades. The migratory northern race has the richest brown upperparts, and the endemic Sri Lanka subspecies is the darkest form. Like most warblers, clamorous reed warbler is insectivorous, but will take other small prey items.
Joe Shooman of Record Collector awarded the album 4/5 and wrote "Mind Over Matter's sleazy rockabilly nightmares and Captain Beefheart-channeling psychedelic detours are entirely keeping with the group's '80s records". Uncut also rated the album 4/5 and said "This Terrific follow-up is even better, the quartet unloading a clamorous set of songs full of pique, provocation and waspish humour".
Most populations are sedentary, but the breeding birds in Pakistan, Afghanistan and north India are migratory, wintering in peninsular India and Sri Lanka. Acrocephalus stentoreus - Clamorous Reed Warbler XC129322 This passerine bird is a species found in large reed beds, often with some bushes. 3-6 eggs are laid in a basket nest in reeds. At Nalban in Kolkata, West Bengal, India.
Vocalisations at the nest have not been documented because the sound of rushing stream water may mask these noises. This ibis remains silent during the day when feeding in its typical habitat, so is difficult to detect at this time. The call of the olive ibis also sounds harsh but measured, unlike the clamorous three-syllable shrieking of the hadada ibis.
Breath from Another received positive reviews from music critics. Tom Demalon of Allmusic stated that album "too scrumptious sounding to be ignored", however called it unfocused. He praised tracks "That Girl" and "Country Livin' (The World I Know)" as album's best offerings. Chris Molanphy of CMJ New Music Monthly noted that album sounds "slick for starters; clamorous but never abrasive, yearning but not very dark" and "organic".
The manuscript is preserved in British Museum Additional MS. 25277, ff. 117–20. It cannot be said to exhibit any advance upon its predecessor, nor can its clamorous vituperation: Shall Pope alone the plenteous harvest have, And I not glean one straggling fool or knave? be held to be dignified by its pretence of proceeding from a patriot whose hopes are centred in Frederick, Prince of Wales.
Democrats, fearing their party's disrepute, made clamorous cries for McNulty to be punished, and his conviction was viewed as a foregone conclusion. Stanton, at Tappan's request, came on as McNulty's defense. Stanton brought a motion to dismiss McNulty's indictment. He employed the use of numerous technicalities and, to the shock and applause of the courtroom, the motion was granted with all charges against McNulty dropped.
He framed his perception of the group as if it consisted of four male emcees and one female emcee as if an excess. "Quick tradeoffs and clamorous breaks vary the steady-flow rhyming of the individual MCs, and when it comes to Sha-Rock, Miss Plus One herself, who needs variation?" Male dominance has been a popular assumption about the genre since its earliest recorded moments.
But, brilliant soldier as he was, the prince was unable to do more than raid a few Parliamentary posts around Lincoln. After that, he had to return his borrowed forces to their various garrisons, and go back to Walesladen, indeed with captured pikes and muskets, to raise a permanent field army. But Rupert could not be in all places at once. Newcastle was clamorous for aid.
18\. It is to be anticipated that perhaps not everyone will easily accept this particular teaching. There is too much clamorous outcry against the voice of the Church, and this is intensified by modern means of communication. But it comes as no surprise to the Church that it, no less than its divine Founder, is destined to be a "sign of contradiction."Lk 2.
The 1949 New Zealand Māori rugby union tour was a collection of rugby union games undertaken by the New Zealand Māori against invitational and national teams of Australia. The Maoris plays 11 match, winning 9 of them and losing only one (1 tied). Three test matches against Australia were played. The victory in the first match against the "Wallabies" was clamorous and the Australian coach Johnny Wallace was fired.
Madhavsing took possession of Verabar, which his descendants held it until independence of India. For several years Idar remained in the hands of a Muslim garrison commanded by Muhammad Bahlol Khan. In 1696 Chandrasing began to make raids on the Idar territory, and in 1718 the proprietors of Vasai having driven out the Muslim garrison, brought him back to Idar. His soldiers getting clamorous for their pay he gave Sardarsingh of Valasna as security, and entrusting tho government to him retired to Pol.
A shrew's fiddle, used as mobile stocks for women in Austria and Germany during the Middle Ages. The large hole was for the neck with the smaller holes being for the wrists. By the middle 16th century, the opposing extremes of wifely personality traits were contrasted as "shrew" vs. "sheep". The earliest-known formal definition of shrew as applied to people is Samuel Johnson's, in the 1755 A Dictionary of the English Language: "peevish, malignant, clamorous, spiteful, vexatious, turbulent woman".
The hooded butcherbird is now placed in the genus Cracticus that was introduced in 1816 by the French ornithologist Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot with the hooded butcherbird as the type species. The generic name is from the Ancient Greek kraktikos meaning "noisy" or "clamorous". The specific epithet cassicus is from the French "Cassican" which in turn is from "Cassique", the French word for cacique used from orioles. It is one of six (or seven) members of the genus Cracticus known as butcherbirds.
The origin of the name Maenclochog is unclear. It appears to be made up of two Welsh words, maen ("stone") and clochog ("noisy, clamorous").Y Geiriadur Mawr, Gwasg GomerGeiriadur Prifysgol Cymru A local tale reports that there were stones near Ffynnon Fair ("Mary's Well"), to the south of the village, which rang like bells when struck, but these were blown up by treasure-hunters, in the mistaken belief that they concealed a golden treasure. This may represent nothing more than folk etymology.
Matrimony Creek is a stream in Rockingham County, North Carolina and Henry County, Virginia. An 18th-century bachelor named Matrimony Creek because he regarded the stream, like civil marriage, as "noisy, impetuous, and clamorous, though unsullied". This greenway stretches a little over a mile in each direction, winding through scenic groves of brush, some overhanging for cool shade from harsh summer sun. Towards its western edge, a rushing stream flows as a waterfall converges just below the Center Church street bridge.
This was the period when the nation underwent the clamorous fall of the First Republic as government corruption surfaced through the institutionalised graft scandal known as ' ("Bribesville"). Thus, in the wake of the nation’s moral upheaval further promotion of the “forged” novels was judiciously halted. Subsequently, however, he published other three novels in Russia under his own name: Once a Good Man and Short Stories (2001), Terms of Estrangement: Diaries of A Paratrooper (2002) and Excursion: Adventures of Modigliani the Ghost (2005).
Roberts was appointed by Roosevelt to head the commission investigating the attack on Pearl Harbor; his report was published in 1942 and was highly critical of the US military. An antiwar journalist, John T. Flynn, wrote at the time that Roosevelt's appointment of RobertsFlynn, John. "The Final Secret of Pearl Harbor" (October 1945) > was a master stroke. What the public overlooked was that Roberts had been > one of the most clamorous among those screaming for an open declaration of > war.
1; and "Queen's Theatre", The Morning Post, 23 January 1868, p. 5. There she also played Mrs Corney to Brough's Bumble in The Gnome King, Mrs Spriggins in Ixion parle français, Polly in Not Guilty, Mrs Fielding in Dot, and Mrs Subtle in Paul Pry. In 1868, at the same theatre, she appeared as "the clamorous landlady" in H.J. Byron's serio-comic play Dearer Than Life, starring J. L. Toole, with Henry Irving in a supporting role."New Queen's", The Era, 12 January 1868, p.
Rutter, Carol. Clamorous Voices, Shakespeare's Women Today with Sinead Cusack, Paola Dionisotti, Fiona Shaw, Juliet Stevenson and Harriet Walter (London: The Woman's Press, 1988) She starred in Michael Bogdanov's 1978 Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Taming of the Shrew at the Aldwych.Miller, Stephen Roy (ed.) The Taming of a Shrew: The 1594 Quarto (The New Cambridge Shakespeare; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), page 52 In 2014, she played the tavern landlady Mistress Quickly in the acclaimed RSC production of Henry IV Parts One and Two.
In any case, the Jones and Schemerhorn heirs subsequently brought a lawsuit and successfully obtained an injunction to block the acquisition, and the bill was later invalidated as unconstitutional. The clamorous arguments fought in the newspapers over a city park then shifted to proposals for the modern day Central Park. Another suggestion was to enlarge the existing Battery Park, a move endorsed by most of the public but opposed by wealthy merchants. As a compromise, New York City's aldermen also voted to expand Battery Park to .
The 1897 WAFA season was the 13th season of senior Australian rules football in Perth, Western Australia. West Perth won the premiership, their first, after remaining undefeated throughout the season. The Rovers team finished last and failed to field a team for the final rounds of the season, forfeiting several matches to their opponents. 1897 was also the final season that Imperials competed, when at the end of the season it was discovered that “many of the bills were unpaid and that creditors were clamorous”.
Stephen Thompson of The A.V. Club wrote that the record is an often "fairly compelling racket," especially on the "Pong" instrumental, but nonetheless felt the album's concept was more successful than the music, commenting: "If you didn't know Octant's music was made by robots, you'd just think Shock-no-par is an extremely clamorous, relatively minor rock record." Television music supervisor Shawn Petersen named Shock-No-Par as one of his top ten albums of 1999, as listed in the year-end issue of CMJ New Music Monthly.
The campaign of Jena and the battle of Eylau followed; and Napoleon, though still intent on the Russian alliance, stirred up Poles, Turks and Persians to break the obstinacy of the Tsar. A party too in Russia itself, headed by the Tsar's brother Constantine Pavlovich, was clamorous for peace; but Alexander, after a vain attempt to form a new coalition, summoned the Russian nation to a holy war against Napoleon as the enemy of the Orthodox faith. The outcome was the rout of Friedland (13/14 June 1807). Napoleon saw his chance and seized it.
In 1581, Lee and his wife were cited in a petition to Lord Deputy Grey for wrongs done to Robert Pipho, who again complained against him in the following year for cattle theft. However, Grey was relying on him to counter the Eustace rebellion in the Pale and suppressed the charges. Lee managed to capture the rebel brother of Viscount Baltinglass, Thomas Eustace, and incurred the displeasure of the Earl of Ormond, who objected to his invasions of Tipperary, describing him as, "this railing fellow". The following year in Waterford he had to clear himself of "clamorous complaints".
Hélène de Portes, born Hélène Rebuffel, (1902-28 June 1940), was a Frenchwoman best remembered for the strong influence she exerted on her lover Paul Reynaud, premier of France under the Third Republic, shortly before and at the time France's June 1940 debacle at the hands of Nazi Germany. A Fascist sympathizer, she was described as '..a middle aged woman, with a shrill voice, and a clamorous, demanding manner, who chatted like a magpie and lost her temper with ease.'Gates, E. M. (1982). End of the affair: the collapse of the Anglo-French Alliance 1939-40. 409-412\.
Frustrated, the Basque MPs in Madrid, all of them Liberals, abandoned their seats in clamorous silence. The law pushed by prime minister Antonio Canovas del Castillo abolished the Basque institutional system of Biscay, Álava, and Gipuzkoa, virtually assimilating it to the status held by Navarre (established in 1841). As stated by the prime minister, the Abolition Act was "a punishment law," and guaranteed "the expansion of the Spanish constitutional union to all Spain," according to the centralist Constitution proclaimed in 1876. A unitarian and central administration was established in Spain cut out according to a Spanish-Castilian pattern.
Innocent codified Adrian's changes to the Imperial coronation as official procedure. Even the Besançon affair, suggests Ullmann, casts him in a positive light, and "by his dignified stand against Staufen attacks appears like a rock in comparison with the clamorous Germans". The period immediately preceding Adrian's pontificate, argues Malcolm Barber, was one where "even without a direct imperial threat, Roman feuds, Norman ambitions and incompetently led crusades could reduce grandiose papal plans to ashes". The Papacy itself was one of permanent struggle and conflict, although scholars disagree as to the degree of culpability the papacy had for this.
Zerrin Tekindor (born 5 August 1964) is a Turkish actress and painter. In 1985 she graduated from the Hacettepe University State Conservatory, School of Theater. In that year, she began to work at the Adana State Theatre as an intern. After two years she was charged with a duty in Ankara at the State Theatre and performed in numerous plays such as: Laundry, Ferhad and Sirin, A Noisy and Clamorous Story, Death, Istanbul Efendisi, Last of the Red Hot Lovers, Skylight, From War to Peace, From Love to Quarrel, Love Kills, The Government Inspector, A Place in the Middle of the Earth.
I can't for the life of me see how the postulate of an > Almighty God helps us in any way. What I do see is that this assumption > leads to such unproductive questions as why God allows so much misery and > injustice, the exploitation of the poor by the rich and all the other > horrors He might have prevented. If religion is still being taught, it is by > no means because its ideas still convince us, but simply because some of us > want to keep the lower classes quiet. Quiet people are much easier to govern > than clamorous and dissatisfied ones.
Though Fidá-ud-dín Khán doubted the genuineness of the order, he was not powerful enough to remove Jawán Mard Khán, who accordingly proclaimed himself deputy viceroy. ;Mutiny of the Troops At this time the troops, clamorous on account of arrears, placed both Fidá-ud-dín Khán and Muftakhir Khán under confinement. Jawán Mard Khán assumed charge of the city and stationed his own men on guard. While Fidá-ud- dín Khán and Muftakhir Khán were in confinement, Khanderáv Gáikwár sent them a message that if they would cause the fort of Petlád to be surrendered to him, he would help them.
As might be expected, varying degrees of abstraction are found in Precisionist works. The Figure 5 in Gold (1928) by Charles Demuth, a clamorous hommage to William Carlos Williams' imagist poem about a fire truck is abstract and stylized, while the paintings of Charles Sheeler sometimes verge on a form of photorealism. (In addition to his meticulously detailed paintings like River Rouge Plant and American Landscape, Sheeler, like his friend Paul Strand, also created sharply focused photographs of factories and public buildings.Charles Sheeler photo, retrieved online November 9, 2008) The majority of Precisionist paintings and drawings, however, present no obstacles in identifying their imagery.
113 Journalist Victor Frunză claims that the actual votes for the PNŢ–Maniu could have allowed it to form a government, either in its own right or as senior partner in a non-BPD coalition.Frunză, pp. 290–291 Various authors note however that the fraud has been mythologised by the opposition, including in its post-1990 instalments. The 1946 elections were in many ways similar to the ones won by PNL–Brătianu or PNŢ before World War II: the governing party always used state resources in its campaign, ensuring for itself a comfortable majority, against clamorous accusations of fraud and violence coming from the opposition parties.
" On Metacritic, the film achieved an average score of 69 out of 100 based on 43 reviews, signifying "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a rare "A+" grade on an "A+ to F" scale. Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter gave a positive review of the film, remarking, "It's clamorous, the save-the-world story is one everyone's seen time and again, and the characters have been around for more than half a century in 500 comic book issues. But Whedon and his cohorts have managed to stir all the personalities and ingredients together so that the resulting dish, however familiar, is irresistibly tasty again.
There are various elements within the story which make up the atmosphere. The description of the setting, Jijo’s Ocean, portrays the atmosphere as full of wonder and eeriness because it is so different from what the dolphins are used to. > “Though it seemed a bit disloyal, Makanee felt this alien ocean had a > silkier texture and finer taste than the waters of Earth, the homeworld she > had not seen in years…. Unlike the clamorous sea of Earth, this fallow > planet wasn’t supposed to have motor noises permeating its thermal—acoustic > layers.” The thoughts of escape that run through Peepoe’s mind bring forth an atmosphere of uneasiness.
The main entrance to Presbyterian Hospital in the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center is now the adult emergency services entrance of the Columbia University campus of New York- Presbyterian Hospital The writer Henry James described the hospital in his 1907 book The American Scene as one of the few fine examples of architecture in Manhattan, describing it as an "exemplary Hospital" and expressing his admiration for the red-bricked building's ability to "invest itself with stillness. It was as if the clamorous city ... [was] forever at rest and no one was stepping lively for miles and miles. [...] I was won over, on the spot."James, Henry.
Her life, as she put it, had been one of intellectual aspirations and clamorous dish-washing and bread-winning. Clark left Florence, Massachusetts in 1884, returning to her father's house in Northumberland with her youngest child, an only daughter, her two older children being boys. There, for two years, she was a teacher in the high school, varying her duties by teaching music and German outside of school hours, story and verse writing, and leading a Shakespeare class. In August, 1887, she accepted a position in the Good Cheer office, Greenfield, Massachusetts, till she was recalled to Northumberland the following February by the illness of her father.
Kevin Maher in The Times gave it two out of five, saying: "[Dunkirk] is 106 clamorous minutes of big-screen bombast that's so concerned with its own spectacle and scale that it neglects to deliver the most crucial element—drama." He also suggested that Dunkirk felt like a Call of Duty video game. David Cox of The Guardian felt the film had historical inaccuracies, a paucity of female characters, small scale, a thinly characterised cast, and lack of suspense. In the London Review of Books, Michael Wood compared it to the films of Luis Buñuel and commended Zimmer's soundtrack as an effective match to the film.
These shows brought Tambellini to prominence with the Herald Tribune remarking that this was "Tambellini's Rebellion in Art Form". In 2009, Performa 09, the NYC performance biennial, hosted a memorable recreation of Black Zero at White Box (34 years after it premiered at the Astor Playhouse in 1965) featuring William Parker and Hill Greene on double basses and Ben Morea on clamorous machines, among others. In 2011, the Chelsea Art Museum was host to yet another recreation of Black Zero, as part of Tambellini's museum retrospective there. Both performances were produced by Swiss conceptual artist Christoph Draeger, who invited bass legend Henry Grimes to join this time.
La battaglia di Legnano (The Battle of Legnano) is an opera in four acts, with music by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian-language libretto by Salvadore Cammarano. It was based on the play La Bataille de Toulouse by Joseph Méry, later the co-librettist of Don Carlos. Written as a commission from the Teatro Argentina in the "beleaguered republic" of Rome while the composer was still living in Paris, he traveled to Rome in late 1848 to prepare the opera for its first performance, which was given on 27 January 1849. Musicologist Roger Parker describes the première as "a clamorous success, with the entire final act encored"Parker, p.
No consensus was reached in regard to actions, and a few uncoordinated violent acts were carried out by students later. The poet Ludwig Börne, who followed his invitation by the representatives of the banned press association, described his mixed emotions, when Heidelberg students gathered in a clamorous torchlight procession in his honour, declaring him a national hero. Burschenschaft members demanded an open revolt and the implementation of a provisional government, which was strongly rejected by the journalists. Nevertheless, of the four main organizers of the meeting, three (Philipp Jakob Siebenpfeiffer and the attorneys Schüler and Geib) fled the country, a fourth (Johann G. A. Wirth) chose to stay and was sentenced to two years in prison.
The album was released to a positive critical reception. Robert Palmer of Rolling Stone rated the album four stars out of five, saying that the band "deliver the songs as well as the sound. Tunes like "Mood Swing", "Not in This Life", "Trouble Spot" and the sublime "Blind" unfurl sharp, both melodies over stick-in-your-head ensemble riffs," and said that "mayhem and transcendence, sweetness and bite: The thought of what these people might accomplish with a more substantial recording budget is almost frightening. He concluded, "all hail the overdriven amp, the feedback- saturated guitar pickup, the hum of harmonic sustain, the clamorous collision of power chords in the heart of the sonic maelstrom.
After Salisbury declared independence unilaterally on the morning of 11 November 1965, Gondo continued as leader of the opposition, keeping his party in the House of Assembly. In stark contrast to his predictions of a chaotic bloodbath following UDI, life continued as normal in almost all corners of the country. A week after UDI, Smith invited Gondo to talk, but Gondo refused. On 25 November, the Rhodesian Legislative Assembly recognised the new constitution attached to the independence declaration, prompting protests from amongst the opposition; the independent "B"-roll MP for Highfield, Dr Ahrn Palley, a white man, was particularly clamorous in his interjections, prompting the Serjeant-at-Arms to eject him from the chamber.
It is noteworthy to call to mind the Hadith of one who asked an A'immah about meeting the Qa'im. The Imam asked him if he knew who his Imam was to which the man responded "it is you". "The Imam said, 'Then you must not worry about not leaning against your sword in the shadow of the tent of the Qa'im, 'Alayhi al- Salam.'" Also, Baha'u'llah warned that "Erelong shall clamorous voices be raised in most lands." referring to people believing they have a direct Revelation from God before the thousand-year period is complete. Further, Abdu'l-Baha states, “The East has ever been the dawning point of the Sun of Reality.
He was selected to be Civil Governor of the Autonomous District of Ponta Delgada, following the Carnation Revolution (25 April 1974). He took office on 21 August 1974, succeeding the Madeirense Augusto Branco Camacho, who had been in the post since 1950. In January 1975, he joined the Grupo dos Onze (Group of 11), with elements of the Social Democratic Party, Socialist Party and Portuguese Democratic Movement, who developed an autonomy project for the Azores, presupposing the Junta Regional. But, after the clamorous defeat of the Portuguese Democratic Movement in the constituent assembly elections that occurred on 25 April 1975, he presented himself at the disposal the minister of Internal Administration (), major António Arnão Metelo, who insisted he remained and continued in his position.
" Despite this, they went on to say: "The arrangements on [Sun on the Square] are somewhat denser and more intricate than on any of the band's previous outings, relying on rich string arrangements, horns, reverberating piano thrums and even a handful of clamorous drum parts." Elizabeth Klisiewicz of The Big Takeover also complimented the "meticulous" arrangements, and described the entire record as "beautiful". London in Stereo called Sun on the Square a "stunning collection of beautifully vulnerable folk songs, ... thanks to typically subtle picking and increasingly orchestrated and gently cinematic accompaniment. Peris’ effortless storytelling once again plays centre stage, weaving through bucolic scenes, touching on love and loss yet always maintaining a blissful hope that ensures the record has the moments of sun its title suggests.
Meinmahla Kyun Wildlife Sanctuary harbours about 40 mangrove species, 53 species of medicinal plants and 11 orchid species, 59 fish species, 35 butterfly species, 26 snake species, 12 shrimp species, 10 crab species, and saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus). A fishing cat (Prionailurus viverrinus) was photographed in February 2016 for the first time in the country. The sanctuary provides habitat for both resident and migratory birds. Among the 102 species sighted during boat surveys in February 2006 were Oriental white ibis (Threskiornis melanocephalus), glossy ibis (Plegadis falcinellus), bar-tailed godwit (Limosa lapponica), hen harrier (Circus cyaneus), clamorous reed warbler (Acrocephalus stentoreus), Oriental white-eye (Zosterops palpebrosus), greater coucal (Centropus sinensis), red-breasted flycatcher (Ficedula parva), whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus) and black-crowned night-heron (Nycticorax nycticorax).
The elegiac music of Rachel and of ma, the melancholy of Adeus and of Remoinho, the tender and sincerity of Meu casto lírio, of Lágrima celeste, of Descale and a score more songs are distinguished by the large, vital simplicity which withstands time. It is precisely in the quality of unstudied simplicity that João de Deus is incomparably strong. The temptations to a display of virtuosity are almost irresistible for a Portuguese poet; he has the tradition of virtuosity in his blood, he has before him the example of all contemporaries, and he has at hand an instrument of wonderful sonority and compass. Yet not once is João de Deus clamorous or rhetorical, not once does he indulge in idle ornament.
So basically we hired a load of gear and set up sort of a makeshift string and sticky-tape kind of studio under the church where we rehearsed for ages, and in the church as well... We didn't have a track when we started, so we just set ourselves ten days to do a 12-inch and that's what came out... It's probably the most spontaneous record we've put out." Scum experimented with the use of space and extreme dynamics, with music that varied between minimal jazzy chording, airy acoustic drums, clamorous noise guitar, space-ambience and random vocal snippets. "There was no part except for a few rough galactic idea(s)," Sutton recalled. "That's how we'd written the past few years, just jamming as a band underneath the church.
Described variously as "one of the most exciting women of her times," or a cynical manipulator who "could be mournful, seductive, capricious, haughty, vacant, fickle, passionate, intelligent – whichever you wanted her," according to Viktor Shklovsky, Lilya found herself the unwilling object of the poet's all-consuming passion. "For two and a half years I didn't have a moment's peace. I understood right away that Volodya was a genius, but I didn't like him. I didn't like clamorous people ... I didn't like the fact that he was so tall and people in the street would stare at him; I was annoyed that he enjoyed listening to his own voice, I couldn't even stand the name Mayakovsky... sounding so much like a cheap pen name," she claimed in her memoirs.
Holland Cotter again characterized art in the Bronx, as a resilient, clamorous, multifaceted thing, cosmopolitan in outlook but imbued with a spirit of place. His review of the Longwood Arts Project, an arm of the Bronx Council on the Arts and operating in a former public school in the South Bronx, noted that Cortes's labor-intensive sculptures were based on chains stitched from tiny glass beads and were the best in the show. Of one piece, suspended from the ceiling and hung with handmade amulets and charms, he noted its dense but attenuated presence. At Wave Hill in the Bronx, the multipart sculptural installation Altar to Those Forgotten (2000) consisted of a heap of unglazed clay roses along with exaggeratedly long thorns on a table put in front of an abstract painting.
In February 1970, during a session of debate on federal aid to school districts serving children living in public housing units, Hollings asked New York Senator Jacob K. Javits if he would support the anti-busing amendment given that it was based on New York law. In September 1970, during a speech at the University of Georgia in Athens, Hollings declared that the United States could not afford such "leadership by political bamboozle", calling on Americans to ignore the voices of discord and unite for "meaningful changes" in society. Hollings said President Nixon had led the U.S. down a "clamorous road of drift and division" and criticized the "ranting rhetoric" of Vice President Spiro Agnew. Hollings attributed the principal blame for the disunity of the U.S. on special interest groups and "impatient minority blocs" that had shouted "non negotiable demands".
According to Beatles biographer Ian MacDonald, "I Me Mine" "would have been a more truthful choice" for the B-side of the Beatles' final single, "The Long and Winding Road", rather than Harrison's "For You Blue", which was chosen instead. He says the song "juxtaposes a self-pitying Gallic waltz (complete with Piaf wobble) against a clamorous blues shuffle – suggesting that selfishness, personal or collective, subtle or crude, is always the same". Although he describes Harrison's lyric as "typically thoughtful", he finds that it "touches a nadir of worldly pessimism in the line 'Even those tears: I me mine'". In a 2003 review for Mojo, John Harris described Harrison's vocal as "frequently pitched just short of falsetto" and a "delight", and admired the string arrangement for "teas[ing] out the sense of camp" underlying the song.
The musical improvisations accompany simultaneous slide- and film projections by Aldo Tambellini and his team of eight performers, and sound recordings by the late Calvin Hernton's radical poetry. The 2012 re-creation at the Tate Tanks of the 1965 Astor Playhouse performance in New York City noted the many Group Center artists involved—with Aldo Tambellini and Elsa Tambellini on projectors, Ben Morea on the clamorous machines, Ron Hahne on the spiral machine, Bill Dixon playing the horn, Alan Silva bass, and Calvin C. Hernton's recorded poetry and voice. In 1966, Tambellini founded The Gate Theater in New York's East Village, which showed experimental films once a week. Nam June Paik and Hollywood director Brian de Palma's first films were shown in Tambellini's theater, the only avant-garde experimental theater to show independent films of the time.
Poster for a performance of Tancredi in Ferrara, 1813Such structural integration of the forms of vocal music with the dramatic development of the opera meant a sea-change from the Metastasian primacy of the aria; in Rossini's works, solo arias progressively take up a smaller proportion of the operas, in favour of duets (also typically in cantabile- caballetta format) and ensembles. During the late 18th-century, creators of opera buffa had increasingly developed dramatic integration of the finales of each act. Finales began to "spread backwards", taking an ever larger proportion of the act, taking the structure of a musically continuous chain, accompanied throughout by orchestra, of a series of sections, each with its own characteristics of speed and style, mounting to a clamorous and vigorous final scene. In his comic operas Rossini brought this technique to its peak, and extended its range far beyond his predecessors.
Eliza R. Snow relates that Parrish and a group of others came into the temple during Sunday services "armed with pistols and bowie-knives and seated themselves together in the Aaronic pulpits, on the east end of the temple, while father Smith [Joseph Smith, Sr.] and others, as usual, occupied those of the Melchizedek priesthood on the west." Parrish's group interrupted the services and, according to Snow "a fearful scene ensued--the apostate speaker becoming so clamorous that Father Smith called for the police to take that man out of the house, when Parrish, John Boynton, and others, drew their pistols and bowie-knives, and rushed down from the stand into the congregation; John Boynton saying he would blow out the brains of the first man who dared to lay hands on him." Police arrived and ejected the troublemakers, after which the services continued.
"Eagle Eye review, James Berardinelli, ReelViews, September 2008 The Hollywood Reporter called it a "slick, silly techno-thriller" and "Even those who surrender all disbelief at the door will be hard pressed not to smirk at some of the wildly improbable plotting."Film Review: Eagle Eye, Michael Rechtshaffen, The Hollywood Reporter, September 25, 2008 Josh Rosenblatt of The Austin Chronicle enjoyed the film, calling it "good, manic fun plus a heavy dose of political intrigue adding up to two hours of clamorous, mind- numbing nonsense," calling it "Transporter 2 on crack."Eagle Eye review, Josh Rosenblatt, The Austin Chronicle, September 2008 William Arnold of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer also gave Eagle Eye a positive review, remarking that it's "engrossing as an intellectual puzzle" and "a solid thriller."Eagle Eye review, William Arnold, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, September 2008 Mark Bell of Film Threat said: "the film isn't a complete waste of your time [...] but don't expect anything brilliant.
Baker is said to have been the son of an eminent attorney of London, and is said to have been educated in Oxford. A disparaging estimate of his character and his powers is furnished in the List of Dramatic Authors with some Account of their Lives, attributed to John Mottley (the compiler of Joe Miller's Jests), which appears at the close of Thomas Whincop's tragedy of Scanderbeg. According to this rather prejudiced authority, Baker 'was under disgrace' with his father, 'who allowed him a very scanty income,' and was compelled to retire into Worcestershire, where he lived as a schoolmaster and vicar until his death in 1749. His successor at Bolnhurst, John Jones, remarked in private papers that he was "A man of strange turn, imperious and clamorous upon topics of no service towards the promoting of true religion in his parish, and not a little addicted to stiff and dividing principles".
The Statute of Praemunire (the first statute so called) (1353), though especially levelled at the pretensions of the Roman Curia, was also levelled against the pretensions of any foreign power and therefore was created to maintain the independence of the crown against all pretensions against it. By it, the king "at the grievous and clamorous complaints of the great men and commons of the realm of England" enacts "that all the people of the king's ligeance of what condition that they be, which shall draw any out of the realm in plea" or any matter of which the cognizance properly belongs to the king's court shall be allowed two months in which to answer for their contempt of the king's rights in transferring their pleas abroad. The penalties which were attached to the offence under this statute involved the loss of all civil rights, forfeiture of lands, goods and chattels, and imprisonment during the royal pleasure.Kenny, C. Outlines of Criminal Law (Cambridge University Press, 1936), 15th edition, p.
An attempt to have an institution for secondary education was made when the St. Vincent Grammar School was founded by an Ordinance in 1878. Conditions, however, were not satisfactory at the school and in 1885, moves were afoot to abolish it. The inhabitants on the island-here the influential minority-refused to support these moves and stated that they "would be just as clamorous for the restoration of such an institution as the people of Grenada now are for the establishment of one." In 1887 another attempt at establishing another school was made when The Inspector of Schools, Mr F.H. Hawkins started the Kingstown Grammar School but the effort died when he was transferred a few years later to the Leeward Islands. A fourth Grammar School, a co-educational one, was started by Mr. Miles Phillips in 1896 and by 1899 had 42 pupils on its roll. As the thrust for more knowledge to promote the best interests of the emerging agro-based economy on the island of St Vincent, a new Agricultural School was established in 1900.
Humphrey Norton, arrested for returning after banishment, took Prence to task during his trial, calling him "a malicious man" and saying, "Thou art like a scolding woman, and thy clamorous tongue I regard no more than the dust under my feet."George Willison, Saints and Strangers, (New York: Reynal and Hitchcock, 1945), p. 378 James Cudworth, a Scituate resident and United Colonies commissioner, refused to sign a letter of protest addressed to Rhode Island (which tolerated the Quaker presence), and became an outspoken opponent of the harsh policies. He was eventually stripped of his offices and disenfranchised.Harry M. Ward, The United Colonies of New England, 1643–90, (New York: Vantage Press, 1961), p. 251 The backlash against Prence's Quaker policy was quite widespread in some communities, notably in Barnstable and Duxbury.George Willison, Saints and Strangers, (New York: Reynal and Hitchcock, 1945), pp. 379–380 In some towns the problem was so extensive that the colony established a special constable to investigate conditions and make Quaker-related arrests in resistant towns.Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony: Its History and People, 1620–1691, (Salt Lake City: Ancestry Publishing, 1986), p.
A traveler in 1819 remarked that during Twelfth Night celebrations in Rome the Piazza della Rotonda was "in particular distinguished by the gay appearance of the fruit and cake-stalls, dressed with flowers and lighted with paper lanterns." Charlotte Anne Eaton, an English traveller who visited in 1820, was much less impressed with the piazza and deplored how a visitor would find himself "surrounded by all that is most revolting to the senses, distracted by incessant uproar, pestered with a crowd of clamorous beggars, and stuck fast in the congregated filth of every description that covers the slippery pavement ... Nothing resembling such a hole as this could exist in England; nor is it possible that an English imagination can conceive a combination of such disgusting dirt, such filthy odours and foul puddles, such as that which fills the vegetable market in the Piazza della Rotonda at Rome." An 1879 Baedeker guidebook noted that the "busy scene" of the piazza "affords the stranger opportunities of observing the characteristics of the peasantry." Its present appearance was threatened with destruction under the French administration of 1809-1814, when Napoleon signed decrees calling for the demolition of the buildings around the Pantheon.

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