In one of his verses, Cnut's court poet Sigvatr Þórðarson recounts that famous princes brought their heads to Cnut and bought peace.
Baffert's top workout rider, Dana Barnes, rode him for the first time at Churchill Downs after the prince bought the colt three weeks before the Derby.
While there, the prince bought a nightingale, and found it could talk.
A prince of that tribe, a man called Celtillus, had been buying my wine for years, quite a sizable order.
The prince had bought his Greek Interior (1850), a depiction of a brothel also in the Pompeian manner.
In 1837 his wife with their children (three sons and one daughter) had moved abroad, the prince bought land in Paris where he establish with his family.
The prince bought the Twitter stake after "months of negotiations" through his Kingdom Holding Company.
Maybe because the billion-dollar racing establishment doesn't like the way the prince bought a winner.
No one else there would care to keep him; your prince could buy him out of prison with no more sweat than a little bargaining.
The prince bought his 16.6 million common shares at an average price of $12.40, and has the right to convert the preferred stock into common shares at $16 a share.