Word: saxonizes
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...company regality. The querulous eccentricity that has illuminated and humanized his portrayals of kings, popes and other men of power in the past is missing here. After the first Broadway production of Henry IV (1924), Critic Stark Young suggested that it might simply be beyond the power of Anglo-Saxon actors. Maybe so. But the impression now irresistibly arises that this is one antique that has not withstood the test of time...
...desire to break with a past burdened by precious personal loss was fortified by her willingness to defy Victorian convention. Bloomsburysociety was by now in high swing, Virginia was one of its hostesses, entertaining geniuses destined to fame. Maynard Keynes and Lytton Strachey, and geniuses contracted to obscurity. Saxon Syndey-Turner. Bell reveals the Virginia of the Bloomsbury period to have irresistible, gay, irreverent, charming, flirtatious and independent. Admidst the libertarian affairs of Bloomsbury Virginia was also earnestly training for her craft. She read omnivorously, took up journalism, practiced writing daily, and attempted to compensate for the lack of formal...
...SAXON. Across 110th Street...
...PICTORIAL HISTORY OF ENGLISH ARCHITECTURE by John Betjeman. 112 pages. Macmillan. $12.95. British Poet Laureate Betjeman has long been an amateur of architecture. Here he transcends the book's rather tired format to produce an essay that is sublimely confident of its delights and prejudices. Betjeman loves tiny Saxon churches whose masons "captured holy air and encased it in stone." Noting that some of his illustrations of modern buildings are "cautionary examples," he ends with a plea for the survival of the profession of architecture. "We should wish him well," Betjeman writes of the architect, "for he should...
...SAXON. Troubleman, 10, 11:40, 1:20, 3, 4:40, 6:20, 8:10, 10. Sunday...