| Dancing with the Stars: Double Your Pleasure, Double Your Fun |
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on 26-10-2006. |
| This week™s roundup on Dancing with the Stars was double your pleasure, double your fun. Each of the remaining five couples performed not one, but two choreographed routines -- ballroom and Latin dance. Scores from last week and this week will be tallied (for one total of 90 points), and, as always, will count for half of the total at the results show. ... |
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| Sheer, Crosshatching Pleasure |
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on 26-10-2006. |
| John Keats addressed one poem to one Grecian urn: "Thou still-unravish'd bride of quietness!/Thou foster-child of Silence and slow Time,/Sylvan historian, who canst thus express/one flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme." The figures painted on the urn inspired in Keats the type of reverie that he usually saved for things like Indolence, or Seeing one Lock of Milton's Hair. Why did the Grecian urn have such an effect? Can painting really express one flowery tale more sweetly than rhyme? ... |
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