In hectic lives overflowing with demands for instant response, reverie is too often banished.
Technological advances, he predicts, will liberate even the working classes, granting them lives of aesthetic reverie.
The spectacle lodges somewhere between erotic reverie and the perfection of a revolving sculpture.
Before long, though, Roberts steered away from nostalgic reverie and into constitutional controversy.
Or is it a bucolic reverie the elements of which have come to them not through direct experience, but the media?
In this exquisite, impressionistic, quasi-autobiographical reverie, from 1993, the British director Terence Davies celebrates, with meticulous grace, a Liverpool boyhood in 1955-56.
Reverie, dreaming, and memory threaten to immobilize the Petterson protagonist, to take him out of time, to set him drifting in deep waters.
That stark, almost religious reverie is followed immediately by "Demon Days, " a less pointed song of disquiet further softened by another Grant McLennan melody.
It would be, from an economist's point of view, the Pennsylvania oil fields of man-hours, a beautiful gusher, a bonanza of reverie washing upon our shores.
And I tried to find a good balance between the educational stuff that makes a dad proud and straight entertainment that puts childhood reverie before academic accountability.
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And so I leave you this morning as a gray mist spreads across the castle stonewall, gazing out at the rushing waters beyond lost in an Irish reverie.
If he did, his reverie lasted just 10 balls after the break as Jones groped at a Brett Lee delivery a yard wide of off-stump and chipped to the gully fielder.
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The reverie from being high in the hills gazing out across a rugged landscape that stretches away in all directions into the haze brings the usual sense of calmness and well-being.
After all, those moments have the potential to be gripping, powerful bits of gameplay that shock us out of our reverie as we gaze in wonder at the lovely architecture of Columbia.
Mr. Possokhov's desperately sexy but hardly mysterious rite, which closes one of the programs, stands in stark contrast to "Scotch Symphony, " George Balanchine's 1952 Mendelssohn-motivated reverie on Scotland's highlands, which opens the other.
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It was like waking up from a reverie or witnessing a real life transformation into technicolor like in The Wizard Of Oz or to be more current, it was like playing with Instagram filters.
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You can travel for hours though pristine terrain and only occasionally be jolted from your reverie by turning a bend in the river to be confronted by the raw scar of a Chinese-financed dam under construction.
Next, pause for free-form reverie in the designated Poet's Chair upstairs at City Lights, the bookstore owned by Beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who won a landmark 1957 free-speech case over the publication of Allen Ginsberg's incendiary epic poem Howl.
The question sends him into dreamy reverie.
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And he picked up the horn and he went into his bedroom for what he felt was for 15 minutes and he came out six or seven hours later and he had been in a reverie the whole time.
His control of the scene is remarkable, but it makes one laugh, too, because in so much of the surrounding interview material, the director describes himself as a kind of medium through which a given movie passes, a mere craftsman in the service of reverie.
Both Benjamentas exhibit a rather unhealthy interest in a new student named Jakob (Mark Rylance), and for a hundred and five minutes the three main characters drift through stark rooms and impossibly long corridors (photographed, in luminous black-and-white, by Nic Knowland) in a bizarre erotic reverie.
The exhibition begins indoors, with portraits that were a shock because they captured women in the privacy of their homes, lost in reverie (Monet's "Madame Louis Joachim Gaudibert, " 1868) or engaged in quotidian rituals like removing a glove (Charles Carolus-Duran's "The Lady With the Glove, " 1869).
His next film, "Days of Heaven" (1978), hauntingly photographed but less compelling than "Badlands, " was followed by a long hiatus before he returned with his wrenching James Jones adaptation, "The Thin Red Line" (1998), and his glittering reverie about the colonization of Virginia, "The New World" (2005).
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