Slow processional dance common in Europe during the 16th century.
Music composed for dancing the pavane.
1So it was that Seregil found himself partnered with Atre for the pavane.
2The pavane in the Khaurenesaine progressed inexorably farther into the realm of dark fortune.
3The pavane had come to its first conclusion; the dancers bowed, preparing for the gavotte.
4It was here that I first heard Ferrabosco's pavane.
5You remember Ferrabosco's pavane which you liked so much-
6When he sank back into his chair, the musicians stumbled into the beginning of a pavane.
7The pavane was over, the gavotte finished.
8Moreover, he was interested in the revival of Palestrina at St. Joseph's, and he liked Ferrabosco's pavane.
9Joe Pareti had danced the educational pavane and had decided the tune was not nearly sprightly enough for him.
10They were dancing with the light, and she could hear music, an aching, haunting music, solemn, like a pavane.
11Nevermind the meta, the pavane of family life in the front room is absorbing and funny in its own right.
12Would any one have expected to behold Gama, a grave man, as his portraits represent him, initiating the negroes into the charms of the pavane.
13Harris's book kept calling me back to a neglected classic of alternative history, Keith Roberts's Pavane.
14She had learnt the 'Prelude,' and had had one lesson, a fortnight before, on the 'Pavane.'
15Under the pope in Pavane, the world exists in a feudal state with an interdiction on innovation.
16Ascending staircases unfolded as vaingloriously as pavanes.