﻿br	At last the pale streak right in front warned them that daylight was coming on fast, and they searched the country as they cantered on till away more to the north a rugged eminence clearly seen against the sky < suggested >  itself  as the sort of spot they required, and they now hurried their ponies on till they came to a rushing, bubbling stream running in the right direction. 
br	Several variations of these procedures may < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	This is barely a beginning, however, and other large issues immediately < suggest >  themselves  -- not least the nature of response to changing statutory frameworks which effectively removed the legal though not necessarily the social and communal obligation of church attendance and also the impact of theological change on both clerical and lay perceptions of the task of the Church. 
br	" Levertov wrote intoxicated poems about sexual desire, and her background as a dancer < suggests >  itself  in her attentiveness to the physical and the gestural. 
br	Questions which could not be followed up exhaustively in the book < suggested >  themselves  as I wrote. 
br	Teaching was, of course, the first thing that < suggested >  itself  . 
br	Miss Jessie began to tell me some more of the plans which had < suggested >  themselves  to her, and insensibly fell into talking of the days that were past and gone, and interested me so much I neither knew nor heeded how time passed. 
br	Two possible explanations < suggest >  themselves  : either their conversion to Nonconformity led them to play down the surviving elements of 'Popish superstition' as much as possible (against which maybe argued the fact that the Melchiors made no effort to suppress the cult); or, as the 'hereditary keepers' of the relic they may have been reluctant to expose the relic, and incidentally themselves, to the possible ridicule of 'enlightened' outsiders - numbers of similar ancient popular cults in Ireland came to a sudden end as a result of enlightened 19th-century interference. 
br	Two appealing characters had < suggested >  themselves  , a woman and a man, Alicia and Roman, who live in Wychwood, which is a city the size of Toronto, who clamour and romp and cling to the island that is their life's predicament - they long for love, but seffishly strive for self-preservation. 
br	"If one were looking for iconic images in Schlesinger's films, one that < suggests >  itself  is of a little boy lost in Waterloo station in Terminus , looking sad, then desperate, and finally breaking down in tears. 
br	Two general issues < suggest >  themselves  as important: firstly, the provision and uptake of places in vocational education and training; and secondly, an examination of the processes mediating the move from vocational education and training into employment. 
br	Onora O'Neill (1977) has argued that two different positions < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Three scenarios - selection, election or appointment - < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Three further disadvantages < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	To achieve that goal certain means necessarily < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	The lines from Â‘East Coker' did rather < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Mary had a very blunt intellect, although her feelings were warm and kind; and the instant she understood what Margaret's purpose was in coming to see them, she began to cry and sob with so little restraint that Margaret found it useless to say any of the thousand little things which had < suggested >  themselves  to her as she was coming along in the coach. 
br	A genuine, and novel resolution of the flags issue thus < suggests >  itself  . 
br	SIX CATEGORIES If we attempt to group the different sorts of removal in terms of the character of the area and the changes that the population movement has brought about, six tentative categories < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	An obvious question < suggests >  itself  , of course - if Howard is able to get away with such blatantly Â‘BlairiteÂ’ party management, why is Blair himself not throwing his weight around in his own party? 
br	Why he himself kept in the background, however, I could not conceive, and only sinister reasons would < suggest >  themselves  in explanation. 
br	When you wanted to turn the prosaic lorry of commerce into a feathered poem flitting through the verdure of a tropical forest, I knew you must be working up a sonnet, and Florrie was the only female name that < suggested >  itself  as rhyming with lorry. 
br	Several features of the economic and institutional history of this region < suggest >  themselves  for study. 
br	Of course Mr. Larkin would not put the case exactly that way, but no other way < suggested >  itself  to him, so he abstained from what he knew or felt would be the dangers of definition. 
br	It is a danger not always apparent to academics, for whom the citing of a URL in the course of a lecture, or as a footnote to a course handout, would < suggest >  itself  as sufficient. 
br	"I'm sure Kathleen's right but exceptions < suggest >  themselves  ; distinguished late developers include Bunting and Longley, distinguished recent late starters, Andrew Waterhouse and Glyn Wright. 
br	Hence a Roses match < suggested >  itself  , with the Derbyshire-born editor turning out for both teams. 
br	A binary < suggests >  itself  : duty and responsibility. 
br	Of course, the observation here very naturally < suggests >  itself  , that, if the colours and markings of species have a definite use (which, in some instances, is sufficiently obvious even to our comprehension), then, we might reasonably expect to find that resemblance which is found to subsist between those of species whose habits are almost the same. 
br	Furthermore, as I have argued elsewhere ( Pilcher, 1994a ), if the sociology of cohort influences on socio-political orientation is a sub-field of the sociology of knowledge, then a methodological approach suited to the interpretation of meaning < suggests >  itself  as the most appropriate method of investigation, with a particular focus on the words, vocabularies or discourses employed ( Mannheim, 1960 ; Mills, 1967a, 1967b ; Dant, 1991 ). 
br	He probably said to himself, moreover, that, even if he dismissed his army, he did not let it wholly out of his hand, and could in case of need still raise a force ready for battle sooner at any rate than any other party-chief; that the democracy was waiting in submissive attitude for his signal, and that he could deal with the refractory senate even without soldiers; and such further considerations as < suggested >  themselves  , in which there was exactly enough of truth to make them appear plausible to one who wished to deceive himself. 
br	"Various possibilities < suggested >  themselves  for Morse: retirement; marriage; failure; nervous breakdown; death whilst on duty; death whilst not on duty... 
br	" The remedy will easily < suggest >  itself  to THE M EN OF THE F UTURE . The poems in No. 4 we cannot quote from at present: but from the splendid dedication addressed to the political prisoners and exiles of 1848 we must take the following brilliant paragraphs:Â— F ELLOW S UFFERERS ,Â—Many of you cannot see these pages,Â—yet they will breathe your thoughts. 
br	My remit here is to concentrate mostly on green man type images, but if anything < suggests >  itself  as a suitable companion or possible analogue (such as the Sanctuary Knocker at Durham Cathedral and the Lincoln double-horn blower, which is often mistaken for a green man) then I'll include that too. 
br	Come on . (And no matter what my well-placed sources say, I don't believe it was a true "experiment" to go to the wine finishes: if the bourbon casks hadn't gone bad I just doubt the experiment would have ... < suggested >  itself  . 
br	The spring could have been adapted if necessary to provide a ready-made baptistery, and possible parallels with the former temple of Mercury at Uley < suggest >  themselves  [ Woodward 1992 , 100-105]. 
br	(2) The obvious explanation which < suggests >  itself  is ball lightning but this is itself a phenomenon which is still a mystery, as no one has been able to develop a coherent theory as to how the energy of a lightning ball could be contained. 
br	It might be a clever satire on British film comedy but it hardly < suggests >  itself  as a superior alternative. 
br	The citera & the pocket trumpet for example, which I first played together in real time on The Chapters Session , < suggested >  themselves  as a likely pairing. 
br	My immediately response to this sorry state of affairs was to think about a music which could use certain of the Durer woodcuts by way of illumination, and in mid October 2005 the material I was recording for Hinterlands < suggested >  itself  as a likely candidate. vi) How I related the Durer woodcuts to the landscapes of my Northumbrian childhood is consequent, no doubt, on a deeper yearning which I had no other way of experiencing at the time. 
br	But on stage, the name that < suggests >  itself  is Paul Rodgers of Bad Company, though arguably Thompson has more range and volume. 
br	It certainly seemed strange, but it was the only explanation that < suggested >  itself  ; so we had to agree to differ, she being convinced that she had seen a ghost, and that the shot had been inside the room, and I being equally convinced that she had been dreaming, and that the shot had been fired outside the house. 
br	A question, to which we shall recur in connexion with church bells, here < suggests >  itself  . 
br	There still remains one very important matter to be considered, which has already, no doubt, < suggested >  itself  to those who have had the patience to read these articles. 
br	Casey's own view is that 6:51-58 is 'a climax in the eucharist' but that this sacramental theology has been 'expounded in stages' throughout the earlier sections of John 6. 5 The starting points for both scholars are so different that it is hard not to feel there is something of a methodological impasse here; nevertheless, some criticisms of Casey's critique < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	The first explanation that < suggested >  itself  was that this tone is a combination tone. 
br	Contradictions Are Impossible Then the question very naturally < suggests >  itself  : Why did not God create us so that we could not think negative or destructive thoughts? 
br	The rest of the decisions followed in quick succession: something by one of the Symbolists immediately < suggested >  itself  . 
br	, within ten miles of the Whitby and Pickering Railway, at the town of Pickering, the idea naturally < suggests >  itself  that the iron districts of the West Riding of Yorkshire would afford the best market for this mineral, at any rate, it must be apparent to every one who knows anything of the neighbour, hood, that it is not very favourably situated for competing successfully with some other districts in supplying the markets of the north. 
br	Three levels of analysis < suggest >  themselves  here then (and here I draw loosely on Dowling, 1995). 
br	This diagram, which has been constructed to represent intuitively or semi-intuitively the same relations which are abstractly expressed in the premisses, is then observed, and a hypothesis < suggests >  itself  that there is a certain relation between some of its parts--or perhaps this hypothesis had already been suggested. 
br	Several possible further research projects immediately < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	To the stricken populace the question of responsibility immediately < suggested >  itself  . 
br	By neglected this step progress is retarded ... and good results are next to impossible" and again "Children must not be allowed to do as they please in the matter of holding their implements with the hope that eventually the best way will < suggest >  itself  to the child's mind. 
br	Viability Several questions as to the functional viability of the ECICR < suggest >  themselves  : Will states and protagonists actually make use of it? 
br	The precise relationship between these criteria is, of course, problematic, and a number of possibilities < suggest >  themselves  : The interpretation could be true even though the patient rejects it The interpretation may be false, according to, for instance, criterion (iii) even though the patient accepts it. 
br	It might be a clever satire on British film comedy but it hardly < suggests >  itself  as a superior alternative. 
br	This can be outlined briefly as offering three distinct stances in the act of communication: a locutionary act ('he said that'); an illocutionary act ('he argued that'); and a perlocutionary act ('he convinced me that'), which may be part of the same illocutionary act. 35 When this general understanding of speech-act theory is theologically and covenantally construed, then at least two important avenues of thought < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	"by right" are taken as a matter of right . The transition is from the belief that I may do something because it is right, in other words, to the belief that I may do something because I have a right to do it ... Thus the concept of rights joins the concept of the right . [9] The metaphorical moral usage of terms such as "right," "straight" and "upright" (in opposition to "crooked," "twisted" and "bent") readily < suggests >  itself  to the mind. 
br	Mediation < suggests >  itself  as a process which is more attuned to that preference. 
br	Early Urban Character Of Rome But in connection with this view of the position of Rome as the emporium of Latium another observation < suggests >  itself  . 
br	However, an interesting insight < suggests >  itself  from a political perspective, especially if political disruption caused by attempted economic liberalisation is likely to thwart economic reform itself. 
br	Within the European context, however, a number of measures < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	In conclusion, although this was something entirely new to us, the pedagogical methodology and ideas < suggested >  themselves  quite readily; the project highlighted the importance of tightly integrating any novel activities with the course structure; the biggest problems were essentially in overcoming anxieties in implementing something innovative into a set curriculum and attaching a value (i.e. assessment mark) to it. 
br	Occasionally a formal debate will < suggest >  itself  , and this should be handled precisely and formally. 
br	But Cormack's own violent incursions into Catholic neighbourhoods and combination of electoral intervention with control of the streets < suggested >  themselves  'at least an outline of a Protestant variety of fascism' (1) . THE DECLINE OF SCOTTISH UNIONISM Cormack remained a councilor in Leith for twenty years. 
br	Some 100 metres beyond the campsite jetty there was a small island in the bay that < suggested >  itself  as a night-dive site. 
br	Some possible answers < suggest >  themselves  but, at present, they are little more than speculation. 
br	We will encourage an awareness of new technology as it emerges, and where potential benefits < suggest >  themselves  , conduct pilot studies with a view to investment. 
br	Two general issues < suggest >  themselves  as important: firstly, the provision and uptake of places in vocational education and training; and secondly, an examination of the processes mediating the move from vocational education and training into employment. 
br	Consequently, global totals of public subsidy have been used to compensate for the perceived lack of a theatre practice instead of enhancing the practices which might, under a different system of categorisation, have < suggested >  themselves  as worthy of funding. 
br	MaxiVista was developed with laptops in mind although other scenarios < suggest >  themselves  , too. 
br	The implication of this seems to be that this new research area would not have < suggested >  itself  to her as a fruitful one for development if she had not been located in Norway where colleagues were undertaking work on other aspects of the same subject. 
br	Nonetheless, the overriding importance of developing an internationalised faculty as a prerequisite for development of the other three areas seems to < suggest >  itself  . 
br	Also, new services that will need higher bandwidths than those currently deployed have been slow to < suggest >  themselves  : currently, hopes lie in multiple video stream services. 
br	However, one place for such an insertion that < suggests >  itself  to me is clause 2(3) rather than clause 2(2). 
br	If one wonders about the function of such devices, the immediate answer that < suggests >  itself  is, of course, protection and, indeed, that is often an aspect. 
br	CHAIRMAN'S NEWS Topics for this Column tend to < suggest >  themselves  in conversations with Club members. 
br	New alliances of disciplinary and sectoral specialists < suggest >  themselves  . 
	If there's a thematic line running through his work, maybe it's the focus on heroes - Deckard in Blade Runner, Ripley in Alien, even girl gladiator Jordan O'Neil in GI Jane - who put their necks on the line for corrupt organisations that don't deserve their loyalty (an allegory of the sacrifice film-makers make for studios and the braying spectator mob < suggests >  itself  ). 
br	Here it would < suggest >  itself  to use rsync. 
br	Two answers < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Members of the conference warmly welcomed the British LibraryÂ’s promise to publish within a few weeks a list of what has gone, and to where: at the time of writing no list of any kind has appeared.From all this, one solution < suggests >  itself  - insofar as one can speak of any solution to an intractable and in some ways insoluble problem. 
br	How the camera can be held in this position (all sorts of jigs, templates and holders will < suggest >  themselves  ) can be left to the ingenuity of the operator. 
br	And the texture and light of the rock outcroppings and cuts in the hillsides you see alongside the highways - trees, tree bark, mosses, rocks, granite itself up-close, these are the 'natural sources' that < suggested >  themselves  after I had let the paintings settle into memory and imagination. 
br	I mean hip-hop and krautrock, or whatever category Faust's music falls into these days, don't < suggest >  themselves  immediately as likely partners. 
br	Taylor's title nods and winks in several directions at once- the comparison with Cubism < suggests >  itself  , but would be all too easy. 
br	Add the line of the Cotswold Way, however, and the three disjointed lines immediately < suggest >  themselves  as part of an overall pattern. 
br	The only solution that < suggested >  itself  to me was to resign! 
br	) Another venue which has < suggested >  itself  is the Whittington Center in Raton, New Mexico. 
br	The idea of some sort of compromise between the paternal and the judicial in God's treatment of us, very readily < suggests >  itself  . 
br	Many practical remarks < suggest >  themselves  in connection with the painful history which we have been considering - remarks applicable to parents and members of families, to individual Christians, to the ungodly, and to all. 
br	The first inquiry which will < suggest >  itself  to the thoughtful is whether any light upon this subject can be derived from the history of similar religious movements in the past. 
br	If then the supreme purpose of God is the exaltation of Christ, "that in all things He may have the pre-eminence," the startling question < suggests >  itself  whether the disasters which sometimes befall the best of men when they take up the cult of the Holy Spirit may not be due to the fact that this is a departure from the line of that divine purpose. 
br	Various resolutions of the paradox < suggested >  themselves  . 
br	Other people may want to develop, for themselves, the technological aspects, I am open to any collaborations that < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	The use of "hotword" links in TransIt-Tiger, from the source text to the support material, means that a web-based implementation < suggests >  itself  immediately, and one member of staff, Geoffrey Kantaris, has produced a web-based computer-assisted translation passage [ 3 ]. 
br	Thus, we could easily add the reference to Prov. 8; and other passages of Scripture would naturally < suggest >  themselves  , so that before long we would have quite a number of Bible references on the margin opposite our first verse. 
br	Further markings will < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Elements of many of the recent past's more lauded instrumental/post-rock bands < suggest >  themselves  : Godspeed You! 
br	For the duo records, besides the duo with Braxton on Leo already mentioned, there is Compatibles, the final collaboration with Derek Bailey still available on a Incus Lp, and it kind of sums up a very long and fruitful relationship; another Fmp, Chirps, with Lacy, < suggest >  itself  , but the very different Hall Of Mirrors with Walter Prati on electronics would be worth the search: in it Parker is confronted with a processed/ multiplied image built on a fragment of his own improvisation, with very intere sting results. 
br	One looks at the dingy little house, and listens to the gay songs of the birds hanging outside it in every available foot of space, and the contrast between the sordid tragedy of one of its former tenants and the glad singing of the imprisoned birds < suggests >  itself  at once. 
br	He was called to go up to God's house, and the question immediately < suggested >  itself  to his conscience whether his own house were it a fit condition to respond to such a call. 
br	In some old maps Salmon Lane is shown as Sermon Lane, and it may be that as the way was long and tedious to the old Parish Church, the variation of the name naturally < suggested >  itself  . 
br	According to Antonin Proust, the idea of the picture < suggested >  itself  to Manet when they were watching bathers at Argenteuil. 
br	The inquiry < suggests >  itself  , therefore, whether the conception of God be a true one which we have thus reached by escape from a wrong path. 
br	Once again his career as a scholar < suggests >  itself  as an excuse for not following his own direct interests: Â‘"A future mediator between science and the Russian public" that is what Shubin calls me; it is obvious that I have been destined to be a mediatorÂ’ [8, 86-7]. 
br	And other instances, mainly from The Dutchesse Of Malfy, will readily < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Language activities will < suggest >  themselves  based on the needs and interests of the learners involved, but if the writing and video stages of this project are seen within a task-based framework, ideas for structural, lexical or pronunciation work are likely to be generated. 
br	But now that we know how the voting went, another explanation < suggests >  itself  : that he was seeking to avoid an open difference of opinion with his new deputy at their first MPC meeting. 
br	Deeper and longer waves < suggest >  themselves  as the day rolls on, the rhythm of morning and afternoon light, of day and night of heat and cold, the longer tide as summer heat points towards autumn ripeness. 
br	The probability that < suggested >  itself  was that the schooner's fuel was exhausted. 
br	But his search ended in noth- ing; and the only plan that < suggested >  itself  was again to have recourse to Miss Herbey's red shawl, of which a frag- ment was wrapped around the head of the hammer. 
br	" As no better plan seemed to < suggest >  itself  , Curtis's proposal was unanimously accepted. 
br	It is a mistake to assume that these concepts present or < suggest >  themselves  , jump out of the documents that the historian is examining, or that they are culled from the pages of the history. 
br	Question 1c. The basic alternatives that < suggest >  themselves  here are a regulatory approach and a market tool approach. 
br	Many alterations, additions, and I trust, improvements, have < suggested >  themselves  during the laborious occupation. 
br	Bishop Conry, Bishop of the Diocese of Arundel and Brighton, said: "I have been involved in the National Conference of Priests for a long time and was its vice-chairman for a period so I suppose the choice < suggested >  itself  . 
br	Once, so to speak, this lack of absence is caught many problems fall away, new elements < suggest >  themselves  to occupy the space that reality has created: painting a person has turned into painting a picture. 
br	Two policy interventions < suggest >  themselves  ; the first is to investigate and document the range of assistance that a local authority might provide, exploring the powers and tools already at their disposal and identifying any that might usefully be added. 
br	In the dialogue about what action is to be taken will be found a deep basic conviction, that a common basis for action will < suggest >  itself  , when there are situations of need and dangers that have to be jointly overcome. 
br	The reflection < suggested >  itself  either that the thrower must have exercised great self-restraint, or that the head of the victim must have possessed great powers of passive resistance. 
br	The following lines of thought < suggests >  itself  . 
br	However, four ways < suggest >  themselves  in which our approach could be usefully modified in the light of the experience so far gained. 
br	"Germany will be hosting the World Cup 2006 and football is one of Germany's best known 'export goods', so the decision to link a German language event for schools with the beautiful game almost < suggested >  itself  . 
br	On the basis of the two near-equal line lengths 2 and 3, a lettered field < suggests >  itself  , 5' high by 12'6" long, a rectangle composed of two squares and a half-square. 
br	As a result of the whole series of tests, modifications of two fundamental factors in policy, namely, the rate of enrichment and the amount of regrinding, have < suggested >  themselves  . 
br	Time, however, will not allow me to dwell further on the many points which < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Nothing would < suggest >  itself  to him. 
br	II don't know if I started off with the intention to write a 'magical realist' story, but I suppose if you begin with a scenario in which a ghost teaches a boy to become a great goalkeeper on an impossible soccer pitch in the middle of a South American rain forest, it sort of just < suggests >  itself  . 
br	"With 52 per cent of the population Hindu, the country < suggested >  itself  ," he said. 
br	I have a preliminary idea in my mind of how I want the painting to turn out and I also have reference photos and sketches to hand, but it's in these initial stages, when the paint flows and merges across the canvas surface, that new possibilities < suggest >  themselves  and I often have to revise my plans. 
br	Given this clear account, two approaches to assessment immediately < suggest >  themselves  : One, the course participant presents evidence, and the assessors make a judgement of it against the learning outcomes and the underlying principles and values. 
br	Liszt's reputation as a writer for choirs, however, has curiously languished, even though several works < suggest >  themselves  for the repertoire: the Missa Choralis, Via Crucis, and a pair of Â“legendsÂ” relating events in the lives of two saints, St Elisabeth and St Stanislaus. 
br	I wanted a sense of claustrophobia, and a train carriage < suggested >  itself  to me. 
br	For example, one method of defuzzification < suggests >  itself  rather than the numerous ad hoc methods used in the literature. 
br	Servicemen, aid workers who had served in dangerous or exotic locations, men from the emergency services, sportsmen < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	Peter Nicol (Aberdeen), David Palmer (outback Australia) and Cassie Jackman (rural Norfolk) are immediate examples of places that perhaps wouldn't < suggest >  themselves  as ideal for the production of world champions. 
br	Whichever answer < suggests >  itself  , President Putin must not be allowed to get away with this bureaucratic and dictatorial act. 
br	This improvement, which possesses many advantages, had < suggested >  itself  about the same time to the learned Henry Briggs, then professor of geometry in Gresham college, one of the persons who had the merit of first appreciating the value of Napier's invention, and who certainly did more than any other to spread the knowledge of it, and also to contribute to its perfection. 
br	If we look around for features that make computers revolutionary, several features < suggest >  themselves  . 
br	It seems that she starts by coming up with a melody, repeating and repeating it until she gets a definite feeling or emotion from it, and from this the lyrics that correspond to those emotions almost seem to < suggest >  themselves  .
