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Chastening, then, that there are only eight of them after 66 years of building.
"The Chastening" is a little hard going at times.
"The health of the world economy depends, in substantial measure, on how that chastening is translated into action," he writes.
And in "The Chastening" he tells the story with admirable aplomb.
But I wonder how this chastening of Aillas is to be accomplished."
Surely humans, too, must be prey to the power of the seasons, the return of light and the chastening of night.
For a young woman to dream of a cloister, foretells that her life will be made unselfish by the chastening of sorrow.
Thus, Isaiah's chastening of Hezekiah is due to his alliances made with other countries during the Assyrian conflict for insurance, if you will.
Even after the bitter chastening of the Corsair affair, Kierkegaard continued to walk the streets of Copenhagen.
According to the book The Chastening, by Paul Blustein, during this crisis, Summers, along with Paul Wolfowitz, pushed for regime change in Indonesia.
I assume that this has a good deal more to do with temperament and with political calculation than with post-60's ideological chastening; but it does expose a political problem inherent in moderation.
Some challenged the wasteland in the name of cartology, determined to map the place for those who might come after them, only, to discover that there was nothing to map but the chastening of their spirit.
JOB: A Comedy of Justice Robert A. Heinlein Behold, happy is the man whom God correcteth: Therefore despise not thou the chastening of The Almighty.
THE CHASTENING Inside the Crisis That Rocked the Global Financial System and Humbled the IMF.
The destruction of Iraqi military power, the diplomatic chastening of the Palestine Liberation Organization, enhanced American prestige in the region and Syria's desire to make a deal over the Golan Heights portended historic breakthroughs.
The Holocaust set a new standard of evil, "crime against humanity," requiring not only the punishment of those who actively perpetrated it and the chastening of those who silently condoned it, but also the atonement of an entire people.
But as the publication of "The Chastening" (Public Affairs, $30), by Paul Blustein, reminds the reader, this has been a half-decade of financial roller coasters, beginning with the Asian and Russian financial crises of the late 1990's.
Monteverdi, she believes, sought to represent in music the eventual triumph of female piety over promiscuity: "Arianna's gradual loss of her passionate self in the lament constitutes a public musical chastening of this incautious woman who dared to choose her own mate".
Now he is contemplating nothing less than an Israeli political realignment, one that would give political expression to the chastening of both the left and the right: it would accept the possibility of some limited form of Palestinian state but also the improbability of any peace with the Palestinians.
By 1950 leading figures like Erik Erikson and Spock were already presenting their advice with less scientific bravura than their predecessors had, and more recent decades have brought a further chastening of claims about alternative approaches to parenting as evidence has mounted in favor of other influences, particularly heredity and peers.
But at the same time, these challenges have caused the Government to tighten up internally, diplomats say, with an evident chastening of Mr. Hun Sen, who is also Foreign Minister, by older, senior party leaders more skeptical of the West, closer to Vietnam and more concerned about their own positions in a post-settlement government.