But in our more prosaic age, the most influential practitioners deal with what E. B. White, an occasional columnist, called the political pickle.
As for Mr. Clinton, he has once more removed himself from dealing with what Mr. Christopher today again called "a problem from hell."
In these plays he chose to deal with what he called "the battle of the soliloquy," sifting the past and enduring the continuum of life.
He said that he could no longer deal with what he called Danone's harassment and smear campaign against him and his family.
They started sessions with a psychotherapist to deal with what the father called their "bewilderment and pain," and the questions that kept spinning around in their heads.
In his early lectures and books Neville dealt solely with what he called The Law, the technique of creating one's physical reality through imagining.
Lorentz published a series of papers dealing with what he called "Einstein's principle of relativity".
By the next Monday, the acting school superintendent, Frank DeLuca, had a plan to deal with what he called a serious error in judgment.
Mr. Lamm said he had been deeply disappointed by the failure of the Democrats to seriously deal with what he called the imminent financial collapse of Medicare.
I remembered Mike saying that when dealing with what people called the supernatural, some background in legerdemain was essential.