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The whole sky was aglitter with stars, like sparks from a huge fire.
But there it was aglitter, big as an ice cube, in my palm.
Its vast curving surface was aglitter with the essence of his twin sister.
His eyes are nearly aglitter as he looks toward the basket, ball in his spindly hands.
The leveled lance was aglitter in the sun.
The huge dark wig was aglitter with rubies.
A broad, reckless smile was on his face, and his gray eyes were aglitter with the aftermath of adventure.
That table was aglitter with precious jewels.
Every claw was aglitter with rings.
Her huge chapeau, also black and red, was aglitter with jewels and had a black veil floating from it.
Kelsea's, too, were aglitter with evil anticipation.
Public gardens have sprouted, downtown avenues are aglitter, and development projects are revitalizing many outlying neighborhoods.
The fleet was aglitter with lanterns and torches, spread to the sea-gates and be- yond.
As John Barnes wrote in his 1978 book "Evita: First Lady," she sweetly strong-armed union officials and government employees into keeping her aglitter day and night.
WHILE THE frozen streets here glistened with new-fallen snow, the entrances to galleries and museums were aglitter with the same curvilinear glass vase filled with tulips.
Now Ms. Markoff, a Paris-trained confectioner, has opened a shop at 132 Spring Street (Wooster Street) in SoHo that is aglitter with crystal chandeliers.
Sharn retrieved the floating head and flung it aloft with ail of his titanic strength straight at Aiken Drum The head blazed green and the teeth in the open jaws were wickedly aglitter.
The ceiling of the auditorium is aglitter with fan vaults of mosaic peacock feathers, studded with ceramic roses in full bloom and culminating in a spectacular stained-glass dome that recalls an immense, inverted Tiffany lampshade.
To their right, the harbor was aglitter with the reflected lights from hundreds of ships and pleasure craft anchored out in the gulf, or behind the long breakwater pier that enclosed Salonika's inner harbor in front of the customs house.
Given the plethora of child pictures, some of them early and exquisite, like the soft-focus pigment print of Steichen's other daughter, Mary, taking her first steps in a wooded setting (1905), others from the late 1920's that are aglitter with reflected lights and somewhat commercial looking, it is a relief to come upon two beautiful animal studies.