The largo is tranquilly beautiful, rich in its reverie, lovely in its tune.
2
You say that such a plan may jeopardize your largo property.
3
William Mason's adaptation of the words, "Hope in the Lord," to the Händel largo.
4
She could think of no tunes but dances-andantesturned scherzi, the Handelian largo became a Castilian tango.
5
Thence they looked down on the whole ship and a portion of the ocean in a largo circumference.
6
That speech undoubtedly represented the temper prevailing in the class of balancing electors which is so largo in England.
7
That 'cello-like largo with its noiseless suspension stays us for a moment in the courtyard of Chopin's House Beautiful.
8
First, a largo ship CII.
9
And once more, largo.
10
In the largo dry-goods establishment of Sauger & Brothers an immense show-window was skilfully and beautifully arranged in honor of the occasion.
11
The margin for experiment which was still theirs was not sufficiently largo to insure continued effort inspired by an interest in the work.
12
The "Nocturne" begins like Schumann, falls into the style of his second Novellette, thence to the largo of Beethoven's Sonata (op.
13
These expressions had spread in a rather largo circle of people who despised everything existing, and were seeking everything which was new and astonishing.
14
He was stout and strong, red-faced, and thick in the leg, always smoking a largo black-looking pipe, and wearing trousers very short and tight.
15
The peal of a hermit thrush filled the silence with its golden, largo chime and overtones and died away and rang out again and again.
16
Many of their inhabitants had imbibed a largo portion of that spirit which brought one tyrant to the block, and expelled another from his dominions.