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Updated: June 1, 2025
The "H-O" advertisement is not one whit more monstrous than, for instance, the huge announcements of cheap clothing-shops, &c., painted all over the ends of houses, that deface the railway approaches to Paris; nor is it so flagrant and aggressive as the illuminated advertisements of whisky and California wines that vulgarise the august spectacle of the Thames by night.
'How silly! she exclaimed. 'It is all the fault of those horrid photographers: they vulgarise everything and everybody. I will never be photographed again. 'Oh yes, you will, and in that frock. It's the prettiest thing I've seen for a long time.
Every great man nowadays has his disciples, and it is always Judas who writes the biography. ERNEST. My dear fellow! GILBERT. I am afraid it is true. Formerly we used to canonise our heroes. The modern method is to vulgarise them. Cheap editions of great books may be delightful, but cheap editions of great men are absolutely detestable. ERNEST. May I ask, Gilbert, to whom you allude?
Then came chromatic scales of colour; combinations meant to vulgarise the rainbow; sinfonies and fugues; the twittering of birds and the great peace of dewy nature; maidenhood in her awakening innocence; "The Dawn in June." The Master rested content. A week later came an order from Sybil, including "an entirely original ball-dress, unlike any other sent to America." Mr.
It is always great: above the street, above the suburbs, above the gas-works and the stucco, above the faces of painted white houses the painted surfaces that have been devised as the only things able to vulgarise light, as they catch it and reflect it grotesquely from their importunate gloss. This is to be well seen on a sunny evening in Regent Street.
One doesn't die of it save in soul and sense: one dies only of minding it. Therefore let no man despair a new hope has dawned." "She'll do her work like any other worker, with the advantage over many that her talent's rare," Peter obliquely answered. "Compared with the life of many women that's security and sanity of the highest order. Then she can't help her beauty. You can't vulgarise that."
From such an ignoble spectacle as that of poor Mrs. Lincoln, a spectacle to vulgarise a whole nation, aristocracies undoubtedly preserve us.
"They carve pear-wood because it is so soft, and dye it brown, and call it me" said an old oak cabinet, with a chuckle. "That is not so painful; it does not vulgarise you so much as the cups they paint to-day and christen after me," said a Carl Theodor cup subdued in hue, yet gorgeous as a jewel.
Do not so vulgarise and lower the nobleness and the loftiness of this great promise as to suppose that it only means If you remember His words you will get anything you like. It means something a great deal better than that.
It must not be supposed that there is any direct or speedy way of introducing into life a wider and deeper conception of the erotic play-function, and all that it means for the development of the individual, the enrichment of the marriage relationship, and the moral harmony of society. Such a supposition would merely be to vulgarise and to stultify the divine and elusive mystery.
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