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"imperiously" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows you expect people to obey you and treats them as if they are not as important as you
"imperiously" Synonyms
absolutely autocratically fully supremely despotically dictatorially tyrannically authoritatively domineeringly totally unconditionally utterly peremptorily sovereignly tyrannously arbitrarily autonomously omnipotently unquestionably unrestrainedly urgently insistently compellingly eagerly earnestly frantically hastily vigorously anxious beseechingly emotionally enthusiastically excitedly gravely impetuously imploringly importunately persistently persuasively precipitately pompously boastfully conceitedly arrogantly egotistically proudly snobbishly bombastically disdainfully flamboyantly gaudily insolently ostentatiously overbearingly spectacularly theatrically pretentiously haughtily overweeningly superciliously bossily commandingly authoritarianly high-handedly imperially assertively bullishly loftily superiorly presumptuously cavalierly uppishly importantly bumptiously huffily sniffily huffishly chestily toploftily assumptively critically pressingly imperatively acutely burningly direly exigently clamantly emergently necessitously cryingly instantly crucially vitally seriously difficultly fussily pickily particularly choosily demandingly finickily fastidiously finically inflexibly uncompromisingly rigorously intractably obstinately toughly unaccommodatingly strictly unreasonably powerfully dominantly effectively formidably demonstratively imposingly leadingly prominently transcendently impressively ably capably decisively effectually predominantly chiefly principally mainly primarily foremostly centrally paramountly preeminently primely cardinally majorly firstly capitally grandly masterly greatly dignifiedly distinguishedly augustly statelily decorously formally nobly solemnly staidly ceremoniously exaltedly reservedly properly sedately uprightly venerably composedly extravagantly grandiosely ambitiously epically largely audaciously bigly boldly immoderately immodestly monumentally elaborately exaggeratedly excessively exorbitantly extremely exactingly hardly agonizingly(US) brutally challengingly dauntingly gruelingly(US) gruellingly(UK) harshly intensely mightily punishingly roughly obligatorily compulsorily mandatorily necessarily bindingly essentially requisitely statutorily incumbently unavoidably forcedly inescapably involuntarily coercively intimidatingly antagonistically aggressively hostilely bellicosely unfriendlily combatively confrontationally unkindly unsympathetically malevolently inhospitably inimically maliciously spitefully truculently meanly hectoringly More

75 Sentences With "imperiously"

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

Plus he knew his subject matter and narrated authoritatively and imperiously.
Her imperiously lusty performance in "Kiss Me, Kate" is one of my touchstones.
In one, her mane of red hair appears to billow imperiously over the canvas's edge.
He imperiously created a commission dominated by partisan lackeys to drum up evidence of supposed fraud.
Helen Mirren peers imperiously from inside a high collar that lends her an aura of majesty.
In the other semifinal, Real Madrid imperiously swept away Kashima Antlers, the Asian champion from Japan, 3-1.
That's when they were confronted by those exact peers, eyeing them imperiously from behind a double-sided mirror.
His Getty is convinced that he is the reincarnation of a Roman emperor, but he doesn't strut around imperiously.
He plays a Gypsy-like character who imperiously waves away his female partner so that he can show off.
At the sound of the door they turned to look, their faces grim and suspicious, and Jane returned their look imperiously.
Far from welcoming you in, the Elbphilharmonie glowers imperiously, as if prepared to repel a sneak attack on the Hanseatic League.
There were also goofs about a video posted around the same time of the first lady imperiously taking in a ballerina performance.
She imperiously stuffs a dropped handkerchief back into her sleeve, a woman clearly used to being obeyed, to things going her way.
Shere Khan is still the baddie, but now he's lethally, instead of imperiously, cool, which seems unfair, given that Bengal tigers are endangered.
In the black-and-white picture, he sits imperiously in a galabiya, a cane in one hand and a tarboosh on his head.
I don't know, but I'm starting to think that I'm basically rushing my nuts off from this absolute bombardment of imperiously high GI foods.
The junior officer protests, and the senior officer cuffs him imperiously with the back of his hand, then lifts his assault rifle and repeats his order.
As the two men ate at Jean-Georges in Manhattan in 2002, Mr. Trump ordered briskly and imperiously from the head chef and owner, Mr. Christie recalled.
Mr. Sisi has encouraged that image, whether standing imperiously at the prow of a boat plowing through the Suez Canal, or posing against the backdrop of the pyramids.
" When asked for a response to Nadler saying Trump was asking more like a king, the official said it sounded like it was the committee who was acting "imperiously.
"Tiburones" ("Sharks"), Ms. Lopez Ochoa's new work for Ballet Hispánico, takes place on a movie set, evoked by lights, camera and a male authority figure snapping a clapperboard imperiously.
The newspaper graciously provides us with the very images it had so imperiously overlooked, as the whole endeavor calmly reasserts the grip of the media on the public imagination.
"The president is not acting in an imperial fashion, it seems to me Congress [and Nadler] are acting imperiously ... by setting forth demands for documents that are secret, that are privileged."
But six minutes later, Bakayoko rose imperiously to meet Thomas Lemar's curling free kick and restore the two-goal margin Monaco needed as the contest finished at 6-6 on aggregate.
Yet when Emma begins swanning around some blooms while imperiously instructing a maid about which flower to cut, the scene economically summons up a world and an attitude of careless, unconscious privilege.
Well, the 2016 season is halfway spent, and New England is imperiously looking down, from a 7-1 perch, at the bog of mediocrity that has swallowed most of its would-be peers.
It was the safest version of running away from home, in which my refuge was still mum-approved, and near enough to her that she could imperiously summon me back if she so desired.
Stephanie Grisham, Trump's press secretary, imperiously announced that the White House would also strong-arm federal agencies to end their subscriptions to the papers, noting that this would be "a significant cost saving" to taxpayers.
But that was belied during the presidential campaign, when he refused to engage his opponent, a former guerrilla commander, in a debate, as well as during his presidency, when he was accused of ruling imperiously.
The lush guitar harmonies are the star attraction here, floating imperiously above the weighty half-organic rhythm section, but there are precious few weak links overall—the album is remarkably cohesive given its fragmented birth.
He strutted imperiously onto the Barclays Center stage to an Irish ballad and thunderous applause before flexing his muscles, striking poses and rattling off a dance step or two as he waited for the undefeated boxer.
Making a rare theatrical appearance, she is required mostly to bustle imperiously about, lobbing insults at her hapless daughter, Agatha (a game Ami Metcalf), and narrowing her eyes when about to land an especially withering remark.
Its elements included roadside greenery, featured most prominently along the East Coast Parkway (ECP) highway, which connects the city-state's international airport to the city center, with colorful bursts of tropical flowering shrubs and imperiously-tall trees.
When Sineenat was installed for her brief reign as noble royal consort, official photographs of the ceremony showed her lying on the floor, making hand gestures of fealty, while Vajiralongkorn sat imperiously on a gilded throne above her.
For Daniel Plainview—the oil-tycoon hero played so imperiously by Daniel Day-Lewis in There Will Be Blood, Paul Thomas Anderson's fifth and still greatest cinematic achievement—nothing says "I'm king of the world!" like staying good and smashed inside your own mansion that's full of cool stuff to shoot with a gun.
Even after a 10-year stint as a tricorn hat–clad "junior docent" at the Gilbert Stuart Birthplace in Rhode Island, I still find myself lulled into a nearly comatose state after spending a good chunk of time among the uniformly pallid, elegantly attired men and women who stare out imperiously from within their gilded frames.
But after this introduction came little development — some unison, then another rotation of solos with new music (by Mr. Newsome), requiem-like this time, the dancers goaded by the stratospheric melisma of the vocalist Kyron El. Individual dancers made an impression (especially the imperiously truculent Leggoh LaBeija), but there was more flash-and-fade than inventive variation, and all the artists were subsumed in the sensory-overload collage, the color scheme, the concept.
So even as Axelrod and Rhoades fulfill what are now the familiar requirements of two snarling patriarchs in a personal as much as a professional standoff; even as Axelrod's wife (played convincingly by Malin Akerman) hisses threats and struts imperiously around her mega-mansion; even as his goons spit out misogynistic remarks with the casual contempt of those who believe that money buys them the right to be repugnant, it's hard not to be caught up by the spectacle.
He pressed the buzzer imperiously, and Betty responded with duteous haste.
Captain Ahab, with his leg miraculously intact for this voyage, was standing imperiously by the sternsheets barking out orders to his crew.
Marlene Dietrich in her classic cabaret pose. Her reclining position with one leg elevated was selected after a dozen other attitudes were tested and discarded.Baxter, 1971. p. 19: "... arrived at only after much experiment ..." Marlene Dietrich as Lola: "She straddles a chair...imperiously, magisterially, fully the measurer of men in the audience..."Sarris, 1966. p.
He also opened the scoring against Manchester United a few weeks later, although Sunderland went on to lose 2–1. Gardner scored the only goal of the FA Cup fifth-round tie against Southampton when he "unleashed a 20-yard shot which arced imperiously before brushing the underside of the bar as it dipped en route to the top corner".
Maria falls at her feet and names Gabriele. Amidst general consternation, Cristina launches a furious attack on the lovers and vows that they are destined to live forever apart and that Gabriele will be exiled. Messenius and his son are now sure they will be able to recruit Gabriele to their conspiracy. Cristina imperiously leaves the chamber followed by the heart-broken Erik and his father.
As he is talking, Nikolai Stavrogin quietly enters. Varvara Petrovna stops him imperiously and, indicating Marya, demands to know if she is his lawful wife. He looks at his mother impassively, says nothing, kisses her hand, and unhurriedly approaches Marya. In soothing tones he explains to Marya that he is her devoted friend, not her husband or fiancé, that she should not be here, and that he will escort her home.
The Sydney Morning Herald opined that "Waugh would imperiously render them [the fielders] obsolete, going over, between and sometimes through them". Waugh returned to state duty and New South Wales needed to beat Tasmania in their last match to qualify for the final. They were struggling at 3/33 in reply to Tasmania's 117 when Waugh came to the crease and made 198 not out from 390 balls.Knight, p. 95.
Two days later, Chief returns, apparently none the worse for wear. Having read thus far in Hokart's journal, Mike prepares to travel to the mesa, to personally investigate. He pauses to read further. As Hokart resolved to leave now that his dog had been returned, he is confronted by a striking raven-haired ivory- skinned woman who imperiously orders him to accompany her back through the portal in the kiva.
The expected return of the first theme becomes instead a contrasting section with the piano in divided octaves, and the cello in pizzicato chord, and repeated notes. Nichols comments that the piano is "the leader of things harmonic, while the cello rides imperiously over all its eccentricities". The two main themes of the movement are further developed before the final coda, described by Nectoux as "a burst of the highest spirits". The playing time of the sonata is about twenty minutes.
The song tells the story of a platoon wading in a river in Louisiana on a practice patrol in 1942. Imperiously ignoring his sergeant's concerns, the captain orders the platoon to continue with himself in the lead until they are finally up to their necks. Suddenly, the captain drowns and the sergeant instantly orders the unit to turn back to the original shore. It turns out the captain was not aware that the river was deeper with a joining stream upriver.
The discovery of sex is a "phenomenon as painful as weaning" and she views it with disgust. When she discovers that men, not women, are the masters of the world this "imperiously modifies her consciousness of herself". Beauvoir describes puberty, the beginning of menstruation, and the way girls imagine sex with a man. She relates several ways that girls in their late teens accept their "femininity", which may include running away from home, fascination with the disgusting, following nature, or stealing.
They stand in front of a red garage door; Tennant is in front dressed with a long coat, white shirt and dark necktie, directly addressing the camera, with Lowe standing behind him with a blank expression. Lowe is filmed in double-exposure and appears almost ghostlike. In other shots, Tennant power-walks imperiously while Lowe casually follows behind. While Tennant delivers the lyrics & chorus directly at the viewer, Lowe appears at times disinterested in the proceedings or preoccupied with other goings-on around them.
Their only Test defeat on the ground came in the gloom against England in 2000–01. The first ODI at the National Stadium was against West Indies on 21 November 1980, and it went down to the last ball as Gordon Greenidge drove Imran Khan imperiously to the cover boundary with three needed. It has been a far less successful limited-overs venue, with defeats outnumbering victories. In fact, in a little under five years from the start of 1996, Pakistan failed to win on the ground.
Graffiti praised the song, saying "[it] is divinely subversive and imperiously dancing" is "a piece with an unstoppable melody". Pascal Bussy, from French magazine Compact, awarded three stars to the CD maxi and added: "Without shame, [Farmer] may be to attack the UK charts." On the French Singles Chart, "Sans contrefaçon" appeared for 22 weeks, from 5 December 1987 to 30 April 1988. It debuted at number 21, reached the top ten four weeks later and remained inside for a total of ten weeks.
In addition, Ping establishes a friendship with the panda's other father figure and master, Shifu. He is extremely skilled at Chinese chess as shown when he outwits Shifu in a match. However, the Kung Fu Panda Holiday shows that Mr. Ping harbors a deep-seated anxiety of Po leaving him in his nightmares. In addition, Ping finds the conflict of his priorities with his son's responsibilities as the Dragon Warrior deeply upsetting, especially since Master Shifu is prone to imperiously draw Po away on these matters at will.
Initial critical reception of The Empire Strikes Back was divided, with some critics dismissing the film and others celebrating it. For example, Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote a largely dismissive review of the film, saying "it is nice and inoffensive and, in a way that no one associated with it need be ashamed of, it's also silly. Attending to it is a lot like reading the middle of a comic book." David Denby of New York magazine called the film "a Wagnerian pop movie—grandiose, thrilling, imperiously generous in scale, and also a bit ponderous".
The inertia really set in when the middle section of ballads gassed the arena like a dry-ice cloud of emotion. Dressed as a fairy-tale princess, her childlike innocence was affecting, and she can certainly convey a trembling, pining heart. [...] Just when it felt like we were permanently trapped in a maze of polished but stilted performances, a trapdoor opened, strobes flashed and Lewis emerged in strikingly symbolic high-waisted leggings. The effect was startling: she seized control of the music and the audience, ordering them to their feet as she imperiously motored through her final hits.
However, ten-man Juventus held on until extra time, and with six minutes left on the clock, substitute Marcelo Zalayeta scored a second goal to advance the club to the semi-finals. Even tougher opposition was awaiting them in the following round in Real Madrid. Madrid had won three of the previous five editions of the competition and presented a star-studded squad with players such as Iker Casillas, Roberto Carlos, Luís Figo, Raúl, Ronaldo and former Juventus playmaker Zinedine Zidane. They had imperiously seen off the challenge of Manchester United in the quarter-finals and were in search of their tenth European Cup/Champions League title.
Slovak historian Ivan Kamenec praised the documentary for bringing the postwar Jewish history to the attention of a wider audience. The Slovak newspaper said that the documentary was probably the best Slovak documentary to premiere in 2004. Some commentators accused the documentary of anti-Catholicism, pointing out that the church in Topoľčany is the main visual focus, and the documentary did not mention that some Catholic Church officials opposed the Holocaust. The Slovak writer Peter Bielik criticized the film, citing contemporary reports claiming that "the Jews behaved very arrogantly and imperiously, trying to systematically occupy important positions in the economic, public, and political spheres".
Royal Oak between the wars As Flag Captain to Admiral Collard, Dewar was technically Collard's chief staff officer as well as captain of Royal Oak. A good working relationship between Dewar and the second-in-command of the battle squadron was necessary. Notwithstanding, Collard on occasion acted imperiously and tactlessly on his flagship, causing friction with Dewar and his executive officer, Commander Henry Martin Daniel, DSO. At a dance on the quarterdeck on 12 January 1928, Collard openly lambasted Royal Marine Bandmaster Percy Barnacle and allegedly said "I won't have a bugger like that in my ship" in the presence of ship's officers and guests.
Apart from the extravagant praise, Hoffmann devoted by far the largest part of his review to a detailed analysis of the symphony, in order to show his readers the devices Beethoven used to arouse particular affects in the listener. In an essay titled "Beethoven's Instrumental Music", compiled from this 1810 review and another one from 1813 on the op. 70 string trios, published in three installments in December 1813, E.T.A. Hoffmann further praised the "indescribably profound, magnificent symphony in C minor": > How this wonderful composition, in a climax that climbs on and on, leads the > listener imperiously forward into the spirit world of the infinite!...
The Android's Dungeon & Baseball Card Shop Comic Book Guy is the owner of The Android's Dungeon & Baseball Card Shop, a local comic book store. The comics, collectibles, and toys he sells are of wildly varying quality and often have very high prices. His store is his sanctuary, where he holds some level of self-esteem, imperiously lording over pre-teen kids, like Bart Simpson and Milhouse Van Houten, using a heavily sarcastic tone and often banning certain customers for minor infractions. His store contains a lower level full of illegal videos (which include Mr. Rogers drunk, Alien autopsy, Illegal Alien Autopsy, a "good version" of The Godfather Part III, and Kent Brockman picking his nose).
However, over time, Madea helps Kate and Cindy relate better to each other and to other family members, while Joe and Kate help George become more confident, more in touch with his surroundings and people around him, and more effective in channeling his emotions. Barbara displays dual sensibilities about "colored people". On one hand, she mistakes Madea for a domestic named Sadie, treats "Sadie" imperiously, and threatens to get her fired. On the other hand, she recognizes Joe as a man she slept with years ago (and George's biological father), and relates to him seductively; she also enjoys Negro spirituals and repeatedly asks to be taken to the African American church down the street from Madea's house.
The play is set in Sicily, where the royal court is a grim and somber place: King Atticus is mourning the death of his eldest son and heir, Lusippus, and the prolonged absence of his second son Lorenzo. In the middle of the opening scene, news arrives that Lorenzo is missing after fighting in the Battle of Lepanto (1571), and is feared to be either dead or captured by the Ottoman Turks. The king also has a daughter, the beautiful and spirited Leonida. Yet Atticus is displeased with her: the scions of the great royal houses of Europe have come to seek her hand in marriage, but she has imperiously refused them all.
Instead, Bielik cited contemporary reports stating that "the Jews behaved very arrogantly and imperiously, trying to systematically occupy important positions in the economic, public, and political spheres". In his article, Bielik made no mention of the Holocaust, which claimed the lives of the majority of Slovak Jews, and was perpetrated by the collaborationist Slovak State in concert with Nazi Germany. Bielik presents Slovaks who stole from Jews during the war as victims of the Jews' efforts to regain their property, and the Jews as ungrateful to the majority of Slovaks to whom they supposedly owed their lives. His perspective was criticized by the contemporary Slovak media, which identified him as a supporter of the Slovak State.
Chiradzulu Mountain rises imperiously from the valley below its southern silhouette and can be viewed by Zomba-bound motorists along the Blantyre-Zomba Road, from as far away as Mapanga. Its massive form looms larger as motorists approach Njuli. It cuts a picturesque backdrop to the east of the Blantyre-Zomba Road as motorists cruise past Njuli, aiming to perhaps stop and catch their breath at Namadzi, an intriguing town by a river of the same name on the Zomba District border. From this vantage point, motorists can, on a clear day, look back to catch one last silhouetted view of Chiradzulu Mountain as it lumbers tantalisingly further to the south-east.
Meanwhile, the presumptive duke, Monsieur de Croisenois, one of the fortunate few of Bourbon France, is killed in a duel over a slur upon the honour of Mathilde de la Mole. Her undiminished love for Julien, his imperiously intellectual nature and romantic exhibitionism render Mathilde's prison visits to him a duty to endure and little more. When Julien learns that Madame de Rênal survived her gunshot wound, his authentic love for her is resurrected, having lain dormant throughout his Parisian sojourn, and she continues to visit him in jail. After he is guillotined, Mathilde de la Mole reenacts the cherished 16th-century French tale of Queen Margot, who visited her dead lover, Joseph Boniface de La Mole, to kiss the forehead of his severed head.
Scientific imperialism is a term that appears to have been coined by Dr. Ellis T. Powell when addressing the Commonwealth Club of Canada on 8 September 1920. Though he defined imperialism as "the sense of arbitrary and capricious domination over the bodies and souls of men," yet he used the term "scientific imperialism" to mean "the subjection of all the developed and undeveloped powers of the earth to the mind of man."Scientific Imperialism (an address), Delivered by Ellis T. Powell, LL.B. D.Sc. (1920) In modern parlance, however, scientific imperialism refers to situations in which critics perceive science to act imperiously. Philosopher of science John Dupré described it (in his 2001 book Human Nature and the Limits of Science, p.
The men pitch in and help the cousins fix up the manor, although Chiquita is continually bothered by the fact that she can pick up radio programs on the fillings in her teeth. Rocky, who has begun a romance with Blossom, suggests that they put on a musical show to raise funds for the renovations. On the day that "The Old Southern Corn Revue" is to open, Blossom is stunned by the arrival of Melanie Walker (Sheila Ryan), a snobbish, rich woman, who Rocky is forced to admit is his fiancé. Melanie, believing that Rocky has arranged for the manor to be let just for her, imperiously announces the changes she intends to make, and the infuriated Blossom refuses to speak to Rocky.
He petitioned with some success for laws that would reduce the working hours of children in the factories. In Legrand's 1841 Lettre d'un industriel des montagnes des Vosges he threw down a challenge to the French leaders when he said that even England had "found that all its interests, without exception, imperiously demanded the intervention of the legislation in order to fix the age, working hours and schooling of its factory workers in order to save them from ruin and perdition." Legrande was a believer in small-scale family industry, where children worked with their parent, and hours were shorter than was common at the time. This would avoid the corrupting influence of the factory on children, would strengthen family bonds and would provide long-term social benefits.
Angel goes to the Oracles to ask for Doyle's life back, but they will not help him, even when he protests that Doyle, aside from being his friend, was also his only link to The Powers That Be. Cryptically, the Oracles tell Angel that when one door closes, another door opens, before imperiously waving him out of their realm. Meanwhile, in the real world, an unprepossessing demon runs frantically down an alley in broad daylight, trying to evade the pursuit of a mysterious, black-clad motorcycle rider. At Angel Investigations, Cordelia despondently seeks something tangible to keep in memory of Doyle. Angel tries to be understanding, but Cordy shies away from further discussion of her feelings, until her watch beeps a reminder that she is scheduled for an audition.
There were three tie-break sets to start, and just one loss of serve in the fourth set was enough to seal their defeat at the hands of the eventual champions. In mixed doubles, Sitak teamed up with Ukrainian Lyudmyla Kichenok to beat Argentina's Leonardo Mayer and Maria Irigoyen, but he withdrew from the second round due to fatigue from the length of the men's doubles matches. Sitak teamed up with Erlich for the Hall of Fame Championships in Newport, marching imperiously to the final, where they very quickly swept aside clay-court specialists Marcelo Arevalo and Miguel Ángel Reyes-Varela. Sitak maintained that it was their experience which counted - it was the 39th ATP final for Erlich, and the 11th for Sitak, but just the first for both their opponents.
Vitangelo Moscarda discovers by way of a completely irrelevant question that his wife poses to him that everyone he knows, everyone he has ever met, has constructed a Vitangelo persona in their own imagination and that none of these personas corresponds to the image of Vitangelo that he himself has constructed and believes himself to be. The reader is immediately immersed in a cruel game of falsifying projections, mirroring the reality of social existence itself, which imperiously dictate their rules. As a result, the first, ironic "awareness" of Vitangelo consists in the knowledge of that which he definitely is not; the preliminary operation must therefore consist in the spiteful destruction of all of these fictitious masks. Only after this radical step toward madness and folly in the eyes of the world can Vitangelo finally begin to follow the path toward his true self.
However, Gao Cheng, displaying the influence that he had on his father by this point, was able to persuade Gao Huan, through Gao Huan's assistant Chen Yuanda (陳元達), that punishing Cui would undermine Gao Cheng's authority, and therefore Gao Huan never did punish Cui.) In the ensuing battles over the control of the Hulao and Luoyang region, both Yuwen Tai and Gao Huan nearly died. After Eastern Wei forces finally captured Hulao later that year, and Lady Li was delivered to Yecheng, Gao Cheng made her one of his concubines. In 544, Gao Huan, believing that the officials Sima Ziru, Sun Teng (孫騰), Gao Yue (高岳, Gao Huan's cousin), and Gao Longzhi (高隆之), were becoming too powerful and too corrupt, transferred major portions of those officials' responsibilities to Gao Cheng. Gao Cheng further showed off his authority by acting imperiously toward those officials.
This goal can naturally not be reached in twenty-four > hours and the clever anticipation which Shakespeare has put into the role of > Hamlet and the negotiations with England which come clearly to the light of > day at the end of the drama according to my view justify Dawson's > interpretation, which Herr von Goethe and the aesthetes should not take too > badly." Regarding Ophelia, Liszt wrote: > "She is loved by Hamlet, but Hamlet, like every exceptional person, > imperiously demands the wine of life and will not content himself with the > buttermilk. He wishes to be understood by her without the obligation of > explaining himself to her. She collapses under her mission, because she is > incapable of loving him in the way that he must be loved, and her madness is > only the decrescendo of her feeling, whose lack of sureness has not allowed > her to remain on the level of Hamlet.
Barthélemy Prosper Enfantin (1796–1864), long-time friend and partner of Arlès-Dufour As early as 1822 Arlès wrote, "The greatest and most conclusive step, and that which our state of civilization imperiously requires, is the abolition of customs and obstacles, which make communication and exchange between people difficult or impossible." In 1828 he wrote, "Let us abolish these barriers ... multiply our relationships, live as brothers." He believed that freedom of trade must lead to universal peace. In 1828 he published an article in the Lyon paper Le Précurseur in which he spoke in favour of the free export of French silks in return for the free entry of foreign silks, which drew protests from those who felt the Lyon silk industry could not survive without protection. In articles in 1832 and 1833 in L’Écho de la Fabrique Arlès-Dufour wrote on subjects such as industry in Lyon, tariffs, cooperation with England and a progressive income tax.
Instead, Roosevelt employs former FBI Agent Jackson, who had left the Bureau under a cloud and incurred Hoover's personal enmity, and who is completely loyal to the President. The bulk of the book follows Jackson's chase after the photo, starting from Paris at the very eve of its fall to the Wehrmacht and concluding with a cataclysmic confrontation at a secret Michigan base of the "Silver Shirts" - a murderous, power-mad American Fascist militia. The chase ends with a mixed result - the Nazi agents have been killed or captured, but the negative did fall into the hands of the FBI who caught the scent of what was going on. The book ends on a cynical note: Hoover meets the President at the White House, claims to have destroyed the negatives (which is manifestly untrue) and proceeds to imperiously demand the sacking of Jackson - obviously he is under the impression that he now holds Roosevelt's fate in his hand.

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