How To Use Aroused In A Sentence

  • He discovers he is aroused by jealousy, so he encourages the young doctor to flirt with his wife.
  • And I cajoled and caroused and codingled a steak dinner from her if she ever sold this novel. November 17th, 2009
  • One of the "brightest minds" in his class, he was one of the laziest; one of the quickest and most agile when aroused, he was one of the torpids as a rule: One of the kind who should have "gone in for honors," as the faculty said, he came nearer going out for devilment. Found in the Philippines The Story of a Woman's Letters
  • The girl was aroused, her expression mirroring her mentor's almost exactly as she raptly observed the scene. In the Midnight Hour
  • Its stirring words aroused free men everywhere to defend the government.
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  • To cultivate the Orgasmic Upward Draw, first practice alone and unaroused, as follows. The Tao of Health, Sex and Longevity
  • Nothing so aroused her indignation as the mention of her name consequently few knew what it really was. Miss Dexie A Romance of the Provinces
  • People who took football too seriously aroused deep loathing in me.
  • This was really the beginning, the outstart, of Nelson's great career; for Hood's interest in him, then aroused, and deepened by experience to the utmost confidence and appreciation, made itself felt the instant the French Revolutionary War began. The Life of Nelson
  • And the coverage of U.S. atrocities aroused feelings of shame rather than pride.
  • In Ionia, Pausanias' arrogance and lust for gold and women aroused widespread anger.
  • Wolf ended her life in her beloved Berlin, doubly exiled in her own country and shorn of her faith, left only with Was bleibt – what remains, the title of the account of being under surveillance by the Stasi that she wrote in 1979, and that aroused considerable controversy when published in 1990. Christa Wolf obituary
  • it aroused the tiger in me
  • As geology has become the focus of more attention, it has aroused the curiosity of young people about nature in general.
  • If, improbably, he had thought that private affairs could have first attention and public business be left to aestivate the summer through, developments on the frontier soon would have aroused him. Washington
  • The affection on the enthalpies of formation aroused by factors, such as size factor, electronegativity, the energy of orbit of selectron etc, is also discussed.
  • The sight of the helpless little boy aroused her maternal instinct.
  • The noise aroused the sleeping guard.
  • As a result of the huge curiosity our stance aroused, we had to continuously explain and defend our politics.
  • The unexpected course of events aroused considerable alarm.
  • And though the chorus failed altogether to dull the splashing of the rivulet and the babbling of the by-cut over a bed of stones, it seemed out of place in this particular spot; it aroused resentment against men who could not think of a lay more atune with the particular living, breathing objects around us. Through Russia
  • His face had darkened with shame at having his pleasure aroused in public by one of his daughters.
  • The new working hours aroused a lot of bad feeling at the factory.
  • However, this is Hollywood: just as we are aroused by the images of disaster films, we are exhilarated by scenes of destruction.
  • I aroused Kyle from his sleep.
  • And as the old hunting instincts had aroused that day in the wolf-dog, so in him recrudesced all the old hot desire of gold-hunting. Chapter XXVII
  • The execution of political opponents aroused widespread disgust .
  • Emotive fragments Our emotions are aroused by symbols and associated ideas that can be classified as emotive fragments.
  • An exhibitionist is sexually aroused by the shock or surprise of the victim.
  • The whole community was aroused by the crime.
  • Fergus and I, after having lain awake for a considerable time, taking it for granted that they had given up all intention of attacking the house, at length fell into a kind of wakeful doze from which we were at once aroused by a loud knocking at the hall-door. The Tithe-Proctor The Works of William Carleton, Volume Two
  • Then the Lady Guinevere, greatly marvelling, aroused herself right quickly, and, dighting herself with all speed, went with the damsel unto that casement window which looked out into that part of the garden.
  • Already suspended, the 27-year-old Riccò was askedto explain himself to the team management after he aroused suspicion upon his admission to the hospital last week, suffering from kidney problems due to a suspected blood infection. Vacansoleil fires Riccardo Riccò
  • In addition, a teacher pays regular visits to the hotel, teaching the little guests paper cutting, clay sculpture and the like, which have largely aroused their interest.
  • Never, not even when some aroused, overweight, ugly Casanova had tried to paw her.
  • And Bessie, the first to wake up, aroused Zara, and then peeped from the door of the cabin. The Camp Fire Girls in the Woods, or Bessie King's First Council Fire
  • It was probably in 1462 that he arrived in Rome, where he aroused papal wrath for supposed impieties and served two terms in prison before bouncing back into favour, and obtaining his librarianship, after writing some papal biographies.
  • The quarry pits aroused the curiosity of the first European-American settlers on the ridge at the beginning of the nineteenth century.
  • Thrilled to the core by his admission that she disturbed and aroused him, she was at the same time terrified.
  • Some people are sexually aroused by the strangest things.
  • His ability was unquestioned, but his brusque and abrasive manner aroused hostility which probably hampered his early career.
  • These actions, which have aroused universal and unreserved disapproval, must nevertheless give us a pause.
  • Further allegations of anti-Catholicism from prominent figures including Cardinal Logue aroused sectarian feelings which led to jeering and hissing on 8 May.
  • The indignation aroused by his enormities has been too crushing to be borne by living man, though sheathed with the brass and triple cheek of Mark Twain…He has vamosed, cut stick, absquatulated; and among the pine forests of the Sierras, or amid the purlieus of the city of earthquakes, he will tarry awhile, and the office of the Enterprise will become purified…33 Mark Twain
  • The Conservative government of the 1980s has aroused profound anxiety by its policies of centralization and executive control.
  • "The chancellor candidate aroused the impression that she wanted to bring about political change."
  • My suspicions were aroused by the unnumbered pages and curious celebrity endorsements, and a quick survey of other news kiosks confirmed that this ad did not come from the Mirror distribution center.
  • They drank to excess together, caroused together and got into scrapes with the law together. Micky Mantle - Baseball's Tragic Hero
  • The organ of alimentiveness, located directly in front of the ear, indicates the functional conditions of the stomach, which, when aroused by excessive hunger, exerts a debasing influence upon this and all of the adjacent organs, and is demoralizing to both body and mind. The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser in Plain English or, Medicine Simplified, 54th ed., One Million, Six Hundred and Fifty Thousand
  • The introduction of the community charge aroused considerable controversy around three main issues.
  • Our suspicions were first aroused when we heard a muffled scream.
  • An uncatholic national feeling had been aroused some years before in New York, assuming under Bishop Connolly all obsequiousness to that prelate and zeal for his honor; under Bishop Du Donahoe's Magazine, Volume 15, No. 1, January 1886
  • The present impasse has also aroused a deep dislike for the politics being manipulated and imposed on the society.
  • Scientists call these amygdale, and this mini-brain apparently takes over whenever you are angry, afraid, aroused, hungry, or in search of revenge. 2010 March « Being En Pointe
  • Although he had irked her so, she had to admit he handled her with such finesse that aroused her admiration.
  • The new working hours aroused a lot of bad feeling at the factory.
  • His free-trade policies aroused suspicion among Tory stalwarts.
  • Commentators with a taste for proving the unprovable have brought forward evidence that virtually every poet of Shakespeare's time - and even of other times, such as Dante and Tasso - aroused Shakespeare's envy.
  • What were the central features of this democracy, which aroused such controversy at the time, and still provokes debate today?
  • These transactions, now recollected but as dreams of the night, were then sad realities; and nothing rescued us from their liberticide effect but the unyielding opposition of those firm spirits who sternly maintained their post, in defiance of terror, until their fellow citizens could be aroused to their own danger, and rally, and rescue the standard of the constitution. Miscellany
  • Clinical suspicion is aroused early in patients who are under regular medical supervision, leading to earlier diagnosis.
  • People who took football too seriously aroused deep loathing in me.
  • Then I went to bed and fell into one of my terrible sleeps, from which I was aroused in about two hours by a still more terrible shock.
  • Coming home from the theater tonight, still dazed with the revelation of what I am capable of, once aroused, I asked Miss Everett if her couzin had said anything about Mr. Egleston being in love with the Leading Character. Bab: A Sub-Deb
  • David's nasal voice managed to sound both sombre and aroused.
  • This extraordinary and highly convoluted story has aroused interest in many quarters from time to time.
  • And the heart, which has no resemblance to an anatomical heart, is a simplistic illustration of an aroused and engorged vulva, a holy yoni. Donna Henes: On Valentines And Vulvas
  • The society hopes the exhibits will explain the fascination steam has aroused in the minds of the people.
  • Young adolescent boys are aroused by sexual imagery, and they burn with longing for sexual contact.
  • She felt aroused by the pressure of his body so close to hers.
  • The white feathers were raised and displayed so that the spot flashed like the "chrysanthemum" on a prongbuck whose curiosity has been aroused. Through the Brazilian Wilderness
  • She was particularly perplexed by geometry; she aroused our hilarity by always calling a parallelogram a parallel-O-gram, with a strong emphasis on the penultimate syllable; and she spent several days repeating over to herself, with a mystified countenance, the famous words, "The square of the hypothenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the two legs. Hawthorne and His Circle
  • On admission to the PACU, Mrs L's vital signs were stable, and she was aroused from sleep easily.
  • The correspondent aroused, heard the crash of the toppled crests.
  • Issues that aroused dissatisfaction included rents, tithes, evictions, and wages, and protest could be aimed at landlords, clergy, and even tenant farmers who sub-let to cottiers and agricultural labourers.
  • The sight of the hopeless little boy aroused her maternal instincts.
  • And it has ever since aroused serious apprehensions and complaints from the work units and a residential community nearby.
  • The shock of hearing this title pronounced was equally distributed between Ruth and her husband; but it aroused two absolutely different emotions. The Ragged Edge
  • How dare that the censors think we'd be sexually aroused by such scenes?
  • The feelings aroused by Princess Diana, and her very public falling out with the House of Windsor, were just as strong.
  • And I cajoled and caroused and codingled a steak dinner from her if she ever sold this novel. November 17th, 2009
  • China has successfully exploded the first A-bomb, which aroused great attention and echo.
  • Tiger - Great fierceness and valor when enraged to combat; one whose resentment will be dangerous if aroused.
  • The proposal aroused little enthusiasm in the group.
  • His advocacy aroused the interests of some of his many friends in the gallery world, bringing several artists to wider notice.
  • ‘This linhay is not yours,’ I said, when they had quite aroused me, with tongue, and hand, and even sword-prick: Lorna Doone
  • His remark not only broke the ice, but aroused everyone's interest.
  • In contrast, Christianson and Mjörndal 1985 found no difference in memorial performance between a group autonomically aroused with adrenaline and a control group given saline injections. Handbook of Stress
  • The close of the year 1894 witnessed an aroused interest, an assertative humane principle which must tend to the extirpation of that crime. The Red Record Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynching in the United States
  • Accepting a position at Princeton, he attended a course on knot theory by R Fox and from this his interest was aroused in combinatorial group theory.
  • Victor got over his lunacy, rejoined Axel and me, and after that we caroused somewhat more discreetly. Chapter 16
  • The whole community was aroused by the crime.
  • Skull and crossbones stickers on the drums aroused the suspicion of the customs officers.
  • The scale of the sudden windfall has aroused suspicions that insurers had been busy in previous years squirreling away unnecessarily high reserves.
  • It follows, that the desire to be well must be excited simultaneously with any principle which shall be merely a modification of combativeness, but in the case of that something which I term perverseness, the desire to be well is not only not aroused, but a strongly antagonistical sentiment exists. The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 2
  • The institution of joint army/police patrols in the cities aroused mixed feelings; they may have been necessary where crime was large-scale and violent, but they were thought to symbolize a reversion to coercive practices.
  • Not long ago I'd've been aroused to the depth of my being. Layers
  • the aroused opposition
  • Interest in pheromonal effects in women has been aroused by McClintock's famous demonstration of influences of armpit compounds of donor women on cycle length of recipients.
  • That would explain why the team tanked deceptively early this season, before suspicion could be aroused.
  • Skull and crossbones stickers on the drums aroused the suspicion of the customs officers.
  • The behaviour of the stranger aroused our suspicions.
  • The mammoth was a monster beast, with perhaps somewhat less of sagaciousness than the modern elephant, but with a temper which was demoniacal when aroused, and with a strength which nothing could resist. The Story of Ab A Tale of the Time of the Cave Man
  • Another instance of so grossly unjust, so palpable, so general an evil that it has occasionally aroused some protest even from our dull conciousness is this: the enforced attitude of the woman toward marriage. Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relation Between Men and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution
  • As he treats of sin, righteousness, and a judgment to cyme, and holds up as sacrifice for sin and a mediator for man the crucified Lord, every heart becomes softened, sinners go by tens and by scores to the anxious seat; Christians become aroused; fear and shame are lost, and all in some way join in the work. One of the wonders of the age, or, The life and times of Rev. Johnson Olive, Wake County, North Carolina,
  • Complaints about these sweeps aroused the ire of not only the activists, but the Mexican government, whose LA consulate expressed its displeasure in no uncertain terms.
  • If relationships are abusive or largely inequable, it may be impossible for the less aroused partner to be in control or to be able to stop when he/she wishes to. Empowering Women Or Blaming The Victim
  • His protective instincts thoroughly aroused, he changed roles.
  • Galeano's little book of the past with Montevideo, Sao Paulo; when they caroused all night into the early morning hours the next day in the midst of hangovers spitting phlegm on the muddy tracks of grass making those spectacular goals to keep them from going back to the docks, factories and mines that always wait Perfect
  • Suspicion is first aroused if breeding wrens find a nestling home alone, as the imposter will eject all the natural offspring.
  • The execution of political opponents aroused widespread disgust .
  • A pat tale aroused a big laugh.
  • These actions, which have aroused universal and unreserved disapproval, must nevertheless give us a pause.
  • Never divining Joan's fluttering wildness, her blind hatred of restraint and compulsion, her abhorrence of mastery by another, and mistaking the warmth and enthusiasm in her eyes (aroused by his latest tale) for something tender and acquiescent, he drew her to him, laid a forcible detaining arm about her waist, and misapprehended her frantic revolt for an exhibition of maidenly reluctance. Chapter 26
  • The question is, does images of men having "bareback" (unsafe, no condoms) sex with each other cause people to fetishize and long to also engage in such behavior, or is it a safe sexual outlet to watch sexual behavior that the viewer (or voyeur) will not engage in, but is still aroused by? Archive 2005-08-01
  • Attempts to carry into effect the law of 1850 aroused much bitterness and probably had as much to do with inciting sectional hostility as did the controversy over slavery in the territories.
  • The idea aroused immense enthusiasm among party workers.
  • The shock aroused by his incidental frankness is travestied in H.C. Earwicker, who reproaches himself for indecent exposure. James Joyce
  • When you try to activate these systems yourself, the body becomes aroused, which pushes sedation and ultimately sleep further away.
  • Fervent disputes were aroused by prayer in the vernacular, chorales after Protestant models, mixed choirs, and organ-playing.
  • These actions, which have aroused universal and unreserved disapPageRankoval, must nevertheless give us a pause.
  • The project aroused tremendous community opposition in the mid-1980s and was initially denied a permit by the California Energy Commission.
  • The setting up of the agency has aroused strong emotions, but there are widespread misunderstandings about it.
  • The unexpected course of events aroused considerable alarm.
  • The noise aroused the sleeping guard.
  • But now the people are aroused and agitated by Bush's failures to deliver on his two big bets.
  • The mag was transplanted to London, where Neville and his cohorts became the defendants in the longest obscenity trial in English legal historyafter a sexually explicit issue aroused the ire of the Obscene Publications Squad. Murphy & Miller team for The Hippie Hippie Shake | Obsessed With Film
  • Men who are smaller when unaroused usually grow more to be near average when it matters. The Sun
  • This aroused the resentment of almost the whole front bench, but Wigg's hostility was not evenly spread.
  • Churchill's essay goes to extremes, but like the man in power here, the way to get public opinion aroused is to make inflated statements that hold only a grain of truth.
  • Preemptive Self - defense aroused a bitter controversy over international law of self - defense and the United Nations.
  • First, our attempts to avoid them when we were constantly meeting the peasants in the country would have aroused suspicion and would have caused any Soviet to arrest us and send us to the "Cheka" in Minnusinsk, where we should have sung our last song. Beasts, Men and Gods
  • The success of the recent TV series has aroused young people's curiosity about nature in general.
  • My interest was aroused in him because of the book that he was carrying.
  • Particular passion was aroused by the demand that firefighters be designated as such, and identified by their engine companies.
  • He beat you, did he?" sneered "Mad Alek," aroused to fury again. The Memoirs of a Swine in the Land of Kultur
  • For she saw in his eyes love, which no woman can mistake, and a thousand tons of regret and remorse, which aroused pity, which is perilously near to love requited.
  • Second, while I expected to see lots of bondage, spanking, cross-dressing, and infantilist sites, until the requests began pouring in I had had no idea, for example, that there are enough people sexually aroused by toy balloons yes, the kind you blow up at kiddy parties to support the hundred or so sites which now cater exclusively to that fetish. Come Hither
  • These transactions, now recollected but as dreams of the night, were then sad realities; and nothing rescued us from their liberticide effect, but the unyielding opposition of those firm spirits who sternly maintained their post in defiance of terror, until their fellow citizens could be aroused to their own danger, and rally and rescue the standard of the constitution. The Anas
  • Its stirring words aroused free men everywhere to defend the government.
  • The series has aroused considerable interest.
  • The beauty of talking dirty in the sack is that you communicate it's not only your body which is aroused but your senses and mind as well.
  • Alarmed at the violent feelings aroused by the crime, Judge Cornelius Hedges closed the hearings to the public.
  • The varieties of emotivism which postulate both descriptive meaning and emotive meaning have sometimes aroused such suspicions. Boys in White Suits
  • We were talking about reading when she admitted that she gets really sexually aroused by books.
  • My expectations were aroused by the implied metaphor, but the cover is ultimately a tease, and by page four I found myself loathing the book.
  • My curiosity about beekeeping was aroused when I read that Sherlock Holmes story.
  • He is bound to recognise the acute public concern rightly aroused where deaths occur in custody.
  • One evening, after the household had gone to sleep, Jane was aroused by the smell of smoke - to find Mr. Rochester's bed on fire.
  • While men are aroused visually, women are more aroused by words.
  • the event aroused nationwide interest
  • The initial inquiry triggered sensational newspaper headlines and aroused widespread distrust of the state's public hospital system.
  • Two attributes - "popular" and "moneyed" - could have aroused Pacquiao's political ambition. PhilBoxing.com - XML News RSS/RDF Feed
  • Often, a man can enjoy making love but may not be sufficiently aroused to climax.
  • Without bankable stars the film script aroused no interest.
  • Her behaviour aroused no suspicion.
  • His naive, fatuous smile alone would have aroused their ire before he opened his vainglorious mouth.
  • The number of converts, be made having aroused the hostility of the heathen priests, he fled from their anger to the summit of what is now known as St. Thomas's The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • The passions of the female slave are a mystery to many free women who, unaroused and sexually inert, never collared and owned, cannot even understand them; to most free women, of course, the passions of the female slave are not so much a mystery as a source of envy and fury; she senses that they, deep and precious, making the slave so helpless and vulnerable, are far beyond anything which she herself possesses. Guardsman Of Gor
  • What of the enormousness of the drink I had consumed, the feelings aroused in me by the heel were not pleasant. THE BONES OF KAHEKILI
  • What's more, the growing climate of controversy surrounding punk had aroused Branson's instincts.
  • The project aroused tremendous community opposition in the mid-1980s and was initially denied a permit by the California Energy Commission.
  • Neither of these people, in either of the hypothetical situations, would be so placid and unaroused that his body would exhibit the peaceful physiology of sleep or daydreaming. Stress and the Manager
  • 279 Smote on his neck, his neck Unfenced, for he in haste aroused had cast An armet on. Medallion Vulcan | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • And if there was something in the exquisite sweetness of Leonard's voice, look, and manner, which the countess acknowledged to attain that perfection in high breeding, which, under the name of "suavity," steals its way into the heart, so her interest in him was aroused by a certain subdued melancholy which is rarely without distinction, and never without charm. My Novel — Complete
  • Christianovna had gone away on a visit to her cousin in Revel; a family of foreigners, known as 'living statues,' _des poses plastiques_, had come to Moscow, and the description of them in the _Moscow Gazette_ had aroused Anna Vassilyevna's liveliest curiosity. On the Eve
  • But events in the region had offended the West's democratic sensibilities and aroused fears of greater Soviet ambitions.
  • It follows, that the desire to be well must be excited simultaneously with any principle which shall be merely a modification of combativeness, but in the case of that something which I term perverseness, the desire to be well is not only aroused, but a strongly antagonistical sentiment exists. The Imp of the Perverse
  • Her promotion aroused intense jealousy among her colleagues.
  • So occupied were we with our paddling, our eyes fixed upon the other bank, that we knew nothing until aroused by a yell from the shore. CHAPTER XIII
  • Suspicions were aroused when he failed to return to work on Monday morning.
  • The correlatives of the signifieds aroused by such signifiers are emotional states; they remain private to each hearer and cannot be compared with each other, and so consensus cannot be achieved.
  • They are not easily aroused into the fearfulness which is so often the parent of thoughtlessness. The Epistles of St. Peter
  • Unhappily, the latter is the more vivid and unreasoning sentiment when once aroused.
  • We find a parallel in the old days in Shanghai, before the depredations of the American hetairai had aroused the hostility of the American judge, in 1907-8. Satyricon
  • In the middle, a tall negro. Curiosity aroused, the rider turned his horse and rode towards them.
  • And it is worth attention that when Clifford is aroused to sudden action by Judge Pyncheon's death, the coruscating play of his intellect is almost precisely that brilliant but defective kind of ratiocination which Poe so delights to display. A Study Of Hawthorne
  • In the last week, President-Elect Obama has aroused the frustration and ire of many social activists who never imagined him to be the epitome of a freshly-packaged neo-liberalist. Re: Obama is NOT King (And Martin Ain't Barack)
  • ‘Traitor, come out, ye are trapt at last,’ aroused Idylls of the King
  • Xue Jingmeng said, "Tainted food scandals have aroused nationwide concern.
  • Probably, had the black not killed the poor gogobera, we should have been aroused betimes in the morning; as it was, the man who was on watch at that time did not think it necessary to call us till the sun was above the horizon. Twice Lost
  • But the spectacle of a Turkish Pasha inciting Christian rayah against an army of Moslems aroused the wrath of the Faithful throughout the Empire. Twenty Years Of Balkan Tangle
  • Something to do with the West Lothian Question, a constitutional poser that once aroused great passion but is now lost in the mists of time.
  • No wonder my curiosity was aroused.
  • As geology has become the focus of more attention, it has aroused the curiosity of young people about nature in general.
  • It's a subject which has aroused a lot of interest.
  • Especial interest was aroused theoretically by his work on organic peroxides and oxonium compounds and on the connexion between constitution and colour. Adolf von Baeyer - Biography
  • Like Miltiades, he had aroused the suspicion of his people that he aimed at supreme power.
  • Third, to excite feelings of devotion, these being aroused more effectively by things seen than by things heard.
  • Here, in 1989, an exhibit of photographs by the late Robert Mapplethorpe aroused the wrath of art critics in Congress.
  • Some acquaintances coming along reported that they had not seen anything of the missing man; then suspicion began to be aroused that everything might not be right and a search was instituted, but no trace could be found of him or his kyak; no one along the coast seemed able to throw any light on his whereabouts, although they lent their aid by joining in with the searching party. Short Sketches from Oldest America
  • With the concept of virtual events to create a conflict with the concept, always aroused strong emotional behavioral responses organ of significant results.
  • He had toyed with the fantasy of sleeping with her; the rich smell aroused him.
  • She had piqued his curiosity, aroused his interest and disturbed by just a pin-prick his pachydermatous equanimity; she would not raise again before the draw. The Fifth Ace
  • But events in the region had offended the West's democratic sensibilities and aroused fears of greater Soviet ambitions.
  • The Conservative government of the 1980s has aroused profound anxiety by its policies of centralization and executive control.
  • Instead of justifying the expectations he had aroused by vigorously enforcing the principles of his letter of acceptance and inaugural address, the President, as if inthralled by some mysterious spell, had discredited his professions by his performances. A Political History of the State of New York, Volumes 1-3
  • This aroused their resentment, and consequently their respect.
  • Sahim had aroused Ajib, whom he had made insensible with henbane and had brought to his brother Gharib, the captive opened his eyes and, feeling himself bound and shackled, hung down his head earthwards. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • It comes most vividly to life when the chorus is aroused as, for example, when the ladies are stirred to anger by the antics of the strutting Lieutenant Zuniga.

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