He then bewails his ( unnamed ) wife's profligacy : pawning her petticoats and getting him to redeem them, and indulging in needless lawsuits.
22.
The irony, of course, is that no one will ever bewail the results of a Syrian election or rue the outcome of a close Palestinian vote.
23.
Junketing world leaders bewail a " crisis " while U . S . Secretary of State Madeleine Albright sees a " low point ."
24.
Long before Elvis's face first hit black velvet, the guardians of all that is good and serious in American art had something else to bewail.
25.
Deplore originates with the Latin deplorare, to bewail, weep bitterly, mourn, and its English connotation, for centuries, was primarily regret, not anger.
26.
She is author of " Survival of the Prettiest "; though her title is Darwinian, her message bewails the evolution of the power of beauty.
27.
One of Bertran's last works was written between the Seventh and Eighth Crusades ( 1260 & ndash; 1265 ) and bewails the decline of Christendom in Outremer.
28.
This last factor is even more evident in an early 17th-century version that notes that the next day did many widows come / Their husbands to bewail .
29.
One occasionally hears someone bewail a metamorphosis of These United States from a REPUBLIC ( good ! ) to, or at least toward, a DEMOCRACY ( bad ! ).
30.
Using exactly the image of a diving hawk, the bereaved Macduff bewails the loss of " all my pretty chickens and their dam, at one fell swoop ."