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Word: poeticizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...letter, since they doubt that Mao at the time was really that suspicious of Lin's ultimate intentions. Most accept the authenticity of the document, which offers rich insights into Mao's view of himself and his role in Chinese history, and is laced with tersely poetic allusions and lofty philosophical aphorisms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHINA: A Letter from Mao | 11/27/1972 | See Source »

...paean to America's vanquished Indian heroes, was imbued with all of the solemnity of an Indian sun dance and, unfortunately, much of its tedium. But Orfeo, a free, ever-unwinding retelling of the old legend set to Beethoven's String Quartet No. 11, summoned up the poetic suggestiveness and exquisite line that characterized his first big success, The Moor's Pavane, which is still a favorite with the American Ballet Theater. Less striking but still provocative were Dances for Isadora, which drew on the Duncan story to fashion a subtle metaphor of death-in-life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dance: Delights of Diversity | 11/20/1972 | See Source »

...born in Hailey, Idaho. At 15-already 6 ft. tall, with a blazing shock of carrot hair-he entered the University of Pennsylvania to study "eight or nine" languages and flout the regular curriculum. He also met a medical student named William Carlos Williams, and they began poetic experiments together. After his studies, Pound taught briefly at Wabash College but was thrown out-he kept a girl in his room for a night. Outraged but probably relieved too, Pound set off for the Continent in 1908, the first of the modern expatriates. "London, Lundon, the place of poesy," he chortled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poetry: The Lost Leader | 11/13/1972 | See Source »

...poetic banality of a George Segal environment: the grimy interior of a small soda shop, complete with three tattered barstools, and "oldies" juke box and an empty cigarette machine: its general bleakness is dimly lit by a purple noon glow. Here, in the black heart of the Brooklyn werehouse district, on a December night in 1962, a German immigrant shopkeeper, a schizoid ghetto youth and a Jewish NYU coed encounter each other and, in the course of two hours (the action is continuous), slowly, painstakingly post off the one another's marks, wrestling out each other's hidden guilts...

Author: By Sharon Shurtz, | Title: Slow Dancing | 11/11/1972 | See Source »

...certainly my favorite), and more worth seeing than anything else around. The characters are both attractively larger- than-life and full of basic human traumas, and they move with point through the rich decay and underworld glamour of Louis-Philippe's Paris. The concept of the film is daringly poetic for film narrative (the characters' developments are seen largely through their own conscious artistic achievements), but fully achieved. It is a brilliantly acted and mimed film about great mimes and actors who really lived and performed in and around the Boulevard of Crime, But it is as much about different...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: the Screen | 10/26/1972 | See Source »

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