416 collocations for revived

Perhaps if some fundamental truths were brought home to the people, or, to be more exact, to the peoples now at loggerheads with each other, a notion of the peril equally impending upon all concerned and the conviction that an indefinite prolongation of the present state of things is impossible, would prove decisive factors in restoring a spirit of peace and in reviving that spirit of solidarity which now appears spent or slumbering.

This affair, small as it was, revived British hopes in Montreal and induced a few more militiamen and Indians to come forward.

Also I had a notion that my very homeliness revived in her the memories of our common motherland.

The scenery revived many recollections of Fernando's early experience.

" The Boy turned his head round again with reviving interest in his own group.

The walk began to revive Kate's courage as well as her faculties.

" "Artillery, too!" exclaimed the captain, his military pride reviving a little, to unsettle his last convictions of duty.

Lord Lyttelton's vision has revived the taste; though it seems a little odd that an apparition should despair of being able to get access to his Lordship's bed in the shape of a young woman, without being forced to use the disguise of a robin-red-breast.'

Musica est mentis medicina moestae, a roaring-meg against melancholy, to rear and revive the languishing soul; [3470]"affecting not only the ears, but the very arteries, the vital and animal spirits, it erects the mind, and makes it nimble."

He began by reviving a claim to Herstal and Hermal, two districts in the possession of the bishop of Liege.

They stopped at midday and revived strength by eating the toasted strings of their snowshoes.

Architects have sought to revive the purest forms of both Gothic and Grecian.

Scott's power of reviving the past in all its romantic and picturesque features, which gave him such capacity for re-creating the life that had once passed away, was not possessed by George Eliot.

When, however, in early October, 1918, there could no longer be any doubt that the end of the war was approaching, the President appears to have revived the idea and to have decided, if possible, to carry out the purpose which he had so long cherished.

Those who have ever entered an extensive prison, will require no description to revive the feeling of pain which it excited, by barred windows, creaking hinges, grating bolts, and all those other signs, which are alike the means and evidence of incarceration.

He labored to revive the ruined trade, which he knew to be the staple of Dutch prosperity: but the measures springing from this praiseworthy motive were totally opposed to the policy of Napoleon; and in proportion as Louis made friends and partisans among his subjects, he excited bitter enmity in his imperial brother.

Mr. Lewis, in his "Physiology of Common Life," has thus revived the story of the beef-eating son of France:"A

The East stimulated his imagination, and revived his classical associations.

Roger Boyle, Baron Broghill, and first Earl of Orrery, was at this time Lord President of Munster, and it was he who had revived these rhymed plays in his Henry V., which was brought out in the same year as Dryden's comedy.

Wherever he be, a man need only cast a look around, to revive the sense of human misery: there before his eyes he can see mankind struggling and floundering in torment,all for the sake of a wretched existence, barren and unprofitable!

For all the rest of the evening Amos was no more heard of, till George revived the subject by inquiring whether some account should not be drawn up by the friends of the deceased to be inserted in "Phillips's Monthly Obituary;" adding, that Amos was estimable both for his head and heart, and would have made a fine poet if he had lived.

He seemed to think that reviving a dead man was beyond even the power of perjury.

But kings and princes and bishops and abbots were getting tired of this everlasting drain of money to Rome, in the shape of annats and taxes; so Leo revived an old custom of the Dark Ages,he would sell indulgences for sin; and he sent his agents to peddle them in every country.

" These remarks revived the thoughts which had filled Mathieu's mind all day.

It was then that the monk Gottschalk revived the question of predestination, which had slumbered since the time of Saint Augustine.

416 collocations for  revived