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I went to my room and calmed myself with some invisible mending.
He calls it invisible mending, but I can always see it."
"Our aim was invisible mending," he said, when the new Psalter for the Church of England came out in 1963.
"You'll have to send that to Invisible Mending," said Pippi.
Invisible mending.'
The resident's stitching had been flawless, like the invisible mending of a fine tailor; mine was lumpy, uneven, overlapping.
'I've done some invisible mending.'
Siobhain Butterworth: The readers' editor on ... the invisible mending that happens every day.
Philip Davison's play, The Invisible Mending Company (Dublin, The Abbey Theatre, Peacock Stage) was first produced in 1996.
Official Pride Officials of the Louvre, who first tried to hush up and then belittle the June accident, are now taking evident pride in the invisible mending and the transformation of the work.
The protagonist of Invisible Mending (Southern Methodist University, $12.95), a recently reissued novel by Busch, is Zimmer, a middle-aged New Yorker struggling to make sense of his past, his Jewishness and his complicated love life.
I wish also to record my appreciation of the great skill and care which Mr Norman Tilley of Nene Phototypesetters has again brought to this particularly demanding text - including the 'invisible mending' of errors in my manuscript tables.
The book's linked series of short vignettes succeed in bringing the parents into focus but they provide few signs of the poetic sensibility that produced the powerful elegies from "The Vigil" (1997) or a poem like "Invisible Mending" from the Pulitzer Prize-winning collection, "Repair" (1999).