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The best is "City Point, Virginia, Headquarters of General Grant" (1865-73), a stirring picture of a Union supply depot.
There are just the two problems with the stirring picture of Gareth Bale on this page, in which he grasps the Team GB crest on his newly-minted Olympic football shirt.
In George Osborne's 2011 budget speech, he laid out a stirring picture of a new model for the British economy: one driven by a "march of the makers", such as Flimby's trainer-stitchers, instead of what he called "debt-fuelled" growth: buy-to-letters, non-stop shoppers and high-rolling City gamblers.
He wrote of Alexander von Humboldt as "perhaps the first ecologist" in that he "created a stirring picture of the plant and animal world as a whole, with its majestic settings and its complex interplay of forces".
His puppy-rescue is a stirring picture, especially considering that Perry's chief competitor is the man who drove to Canada with the family dog Seamus strapped to the roof of the car.
Gorky's books, which presented a stirring picture of Russian sufferings, had been widely praised in American publications; his trip to this country had been sponsored by a group of intellectuals who called themselves the A Club.
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These animals — when they die, and they do — have lived horrible lives that are recorded by the photographer Jo-Anne McArthur in stirring pictures, so stirring that, her agency tells her in a scene perfectly timed to introduce her and her cause, they can't be sold to commercial magazines in a PG-13 world.
But the craft is more than just a machine that takes stirring pictures of Earth.
With the accompanying book written by the guest curators — Martin Gayford, a British art writer, and Ann Lyles, a curator at Tate Britain in London — it tells a life story of which the revelations spelled out in words are expanded by some deeply stirring pictures.
The show traces other such indigenous motifs into the 20th century, from the pictographic Cubism of Joaquin torres-Garcia to Frida Kahlo's odd, stirring, intimate picture "Weeping Coconuts" (1951), with its doughty little Mexican flag inscribed, "Painted with all affection".
Naturally, the picture is stirring plenty of controversy, as the grainy image makes confirming any of the contents relatively impossible -- but peoples' curiosity certainly has been enticed as the Loch Ness Monster legend rages once more.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com