Around the fire, babies played quietly while their parents gamboled and caroused.
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The horses gamboled with rhythmic precision in a way I've never seen animals move.
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His father was a wealthy cloth merchant, and in his youth he gamboled about Umbria in colorful, dandyish outfits.
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After attending prayers on a recent Sunday, German and Kyrgyz children gamboled together along the main street, chattering away in Russian.
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His teammates cleared the zone, and after Derek Stepan lofted in an empty-net goal with 17.8 seconds remaining, Lundqvist gamboled by his net and looked skyward.
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Furry, long-snouted, standing seven feet tall and wreathed in giant earthworms, they gamboled at a triumphal arch, briefly menaced an ice cream cart and disrupted a game of pickup basketball.
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Stevens was a giant of the inner life: From his desk at the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Insurance Company, he gamboled in the country of the imagination, pursuing a "supreme fiction" the way Nabokov pursued butterflies.
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In 2012, Missy Franklin came to the Olympic trials and treated every final she made as a reason to dance, and she gamboled her way to berths in the London Games in four individual events and three relays.
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Barbra Streisand gamboled through Bergdorf in 1965 for her TV special, trying on fur coats and hats, spritzing perfume and singing a Fanny Brice-ish medley of "Second Hand Rose" and "Brother Can You Spare a Dime" to funny and glamorous effect.
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The two relaxed and curious putti who appear at the foot of Raphael's Sistine Madonna are often reproduced. They also experienced a major revival in the 19th century, where they gamboled through paintings by French academic painters, from Gustave Doré’s illustrations for Orlando Furioso to advertisements.
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My people call it 'The Dweller on the Threshold' ... But it is > said, if you confront the Black Lodge with imperfect courage, it will > utterly annihilate your soul. During the second season, Windom Earle relates a story about the White Lodge: > Once upon a time, there was a place of great goodness, called the White > Lodge. Gentle fawns gamboled there amidst happy, laughing spirits. The > sounds of innocence and joy filled the air.
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