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Word: coffining (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Even more touching was the situation of the poor man in In the Baggage Coach Ahead (1896), who sat in a train trying to hush his crying baby. The child's face reminded him of his late wife, making the trip in a coffin elsewhere on the train...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TIN PAN ALLEY: The Shady Side of the Street | 8/29/1960 | See Source »

...members of his Cabinet and flew north from Vientiane to the royal city of Luangprabang on a matter of some urgency: the burial of the late King Sisavan Vong, who has been preserved in formaldehyde since last October. By long tradition, a Laotian King must be buried in a coffin made from a sandalwood tree that had been growing for centuries for this predestined purpose. This tree had just been found, and Sisavang Vong could at last be laid to rest. But even as Somsanith and his ministers were making funeral arrangements, a paratroop captain back in Vientiane was preparing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LAOS: Tale of Two Cities | 8/22/1960 | See Source »

When Nikos Kazantzakis was buried in Crete three years ago, a tall, unknown peasant stepped suddenly from the crowd, seized the coffin and lowered it single-handed into the grave. It was a giant's gesture which the dead man himself might have planned. For the author who wrote a brilliant modern sequel to The Odyssey and stirred the world with Zorba the Greek believed that man's destiny is determined by his own acts in the face of life, death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Son of Man | 8/8/1960 | See Source »

...house of Beethoven and being reminded of the composer's deafness; walking up 49th Street under Writer Nancy Hale's window chanting "I wrote 10,000 words today"; and finally, lying dead in Maryland, survived by the ringing fact that nowhere in the region could a coffin be found that was big enough for Thomas Wolfe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Legend of a Giant | 7/11/1960 | See Source »

...rube, has suffered the melancholy fate of Old Hank Bunker. "Old Hank," said Huck, "he . . . fell off the shot-tower, and spread himself out so that he was just a kind of a layer, as you may say; and they slid him edgeways between two barn doors for a coffin, and buried him so, so they say, but I didn't see it." Moviegoers may now see it, thanks to Sam Goldwyn Jr., who spent $1,400,000 making this movie version of the book. The film is distressingly flat, but then those who have not read the book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Pictures: The New Pictures | 6/13/1960 | See Source »

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