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Many felt that her cri de coeur had come too late.
It turns out his intervention was more a cri de coeur.
I support this cri de coeur from the Europe textile industry.
It is a cri de coeur with which he has not been unfamiliar of late.
This is not a cri de coeur for the failed and failing.
The thing reads like a single, protracted cri de coeur.
The book ends with the cri de coeur of the young soldier narrator.
Sad person’s cri de coeur touched something in our commenters’ hearts.
That the symphony begins with what sounds like a cri de coeur is almost to be expected.
It looks more like a publicity stunt than a popular cri de coeur.
That question serves as a cri de coeur in “Matrimony.”
Sometimes this stuff manifests as a cri de coeur.
She endured much and then invested the time to compose a long cri de coeur.
The recycling movement, as a mainstream cri de coeur, began to gain steam about 30 years ago.
Certainly the same monologue as a violent cri de coeur that is also, on some level, a cry for help.
Love asks us in his cri de coeur.
The appeal of “change” as a cri de coeur is that it sounds dynamic without committing you to anything in particular.
It is a cri de coeur by one of the most brilliant minds of our time.
That's when the self-hating cri de coeur is heard.
Frum’s cri de coeur got rave reviews, albeit not from the intended audience.
The director says he made "Herod's Law" as a cri de coeur against the political system.
Only later does the audience realize that what it has registered as a moment of sophisticated wit is really a cri de coeur.
Yet to claim as much is to ignore Stafford's plangent cri de coeur.
Much of his marginalia is “intimate, very personal, a cri de coeur,” Barkan said.
Given King's phenomenal success, it was hard to take that message as a genuine authorial cri de coeur.
I enjoy the sound of Wedde's wild ruminations and generous cris de coeur.
London newsstands are thick with confessional cris de coeur from stars of screens, sports and politics about the burdens of projecting mass appeal.
His performance turns what might have been karaoke imitation numbers into personal cris de coeur, and it rips through the synthetic fabric of a by-the-numbers biomusical.
Perhaps because they hear the cris de coeur of so many guilty and exhausted working mothers, the experts also tend to depict working motherhood as a grievous trial.
And Hitler's war machine was superior to Churchill's in almost every way, mostly because everyone had been ignoring Churchill's cris de coeur and calls to arms for years.
But Ms. Ebersole's voice, transformed by nasality from the gleaming soprano of the first act, finds textures of hope, resentment, resignation and enduring childishness that turn them into genuine cris de coeur.
There has been a plethora of books on the war - some are cris de coeur for the Bosnians, others dressed-up reporting describing burned-out villages and mutilated bodies, still others polemics blasting the West for its impotence.
Not surprisingly, the cultural events surrounding the 25th anniversary of the Stonewall uprising provided so many examples of self-analyzing cris de coeur, and in such dizzying variety, that anyone trying to follow them began to experience the battle fatigue of an overbooked psychiatrist.
Comprising 15 composers' solo violin interpretations of paintings by Edvard Munch, Henning Kraggerud's Munch Suite is tough going: it may not include The Scream, but these images - included as cards - are no less cris de coeur, and treated accordingly.
Anyone familiar with Benedict XVI's career will know of his many cris de coeur on behalf of traditionalists outraged by the loss of the Latin rite.