He went to the location to give a laudation if he learnt about the death of an important person, or appeared there at the first anniversary of his death.
12.
Susceptible artists would have filled their sketch-books, photographers would have vied with one another, books of laudation would have appeared, and a world celebrity would have danced onto the newspaper pages.
13.
On James I's visit to the university in 1605, he was appointed to hold a disputation in the royal presence on natural philosophy, and his majesty was loud and frank in laudation of Bolton.
14.
J . Salwyn Schapiro argued in 1945 that Proudhon was a racist, " a glorifier of war for its own sake " and his " advocacy of personal dictatorship and his laudation of militarism can hardly be equalled in the reactionary writings of his or of our day ."
15.
"My family, my dad, my children, all of us enjoy reading him every day, " said DeWine, whose laudation was carried on C-SPAN 2 and witnessed in the chamber by Sen . Lincoln Chafee, R-R . I ., who was presiding.
16.
As Scipio saw that he was likely to prolong his self-laudation he said, laughing, " where would you place yourself, Hannibal, if you had not been defeated by me ? " Hannibal, now perceiving his jealousy, replied, " in that case I should have put myself before Alexander ".
17.
The " laudation " from Princeton called him " . . . Defender of constitutional liberties, champion of human rights . . . ", and stated, " he has courageously advanced his conviction that expediency in the name of progress, at the cost of freedom, is no progress at all, but retrogression.