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Unfettered by narrow system in matters of opinion or practice; broad, not exclusive, in matters of taste. Neither attached to nor constructing, choosing whatever is plausible. violently inflicting cutting away  a beastly battle, a bloody fight a rowdy confusion of chaos and disorder. not wishin' to cast nasturtiums on your worm A necessary tool of life raves, dance parties and such a type of committed, subjective journalism characterized by factual distortion and exaggerated rhetorical style transcends mundane concerns and speaks, as rock henceforth must speak, to universal themes alone. a blood-curdling yelp small, weird triumph with his gonzo psycho docudrama. wasn't just a passive observer but played his own freaked-out part as unofficial Tom O'Bedlam to the events he covered. toward hosannas that ever hoist and hallelujahs that ever roll. That half-world of hustlers, hoisters, screwsmen, bogeys, bird, bent gear and tom.    Wet with tears, ready to shed tears The moist of human frame the sun exhales; Winds scatter, thro' the mighty void, the dry. ‘the king's cord’ A kind of coarse, thick-ribbed cotton stuff, worn chiefly by labourers or persons engaged in rough work. Ribbed and furrowed equilibrium a lash, weal; also, in charters, used as a topographical term, perh. ridge, bank (of stone or earth). A sense ‘stripe’ appears to be implied by the derivative waled The mark or ridge raised on the flesh by the blow of a rod, lash, or the like. the ropes of a ship, the string of a bow, etc. Cf. also whip-cord, measuring-line, tract, region Now applied generally to a nerve trunk, and spec. to certain structures, esp. the spermatic cord, spinal cord, and umbilical cord, the vocal cords; see these words. Wo to you that inhabite the cord of the sea. I would 'twere something yt would fret the string, The Master-cord on's heart. Now applied generally to a nerve trunk, and spec. to certain structures, esp. the spermatic cord, spinal cord, and umbilical cord, the vocal cords; see these words.  A measure of cut wood, esp. that used for fuel (prob. so called because originally measured with a cord): a pile of wood, most frequently 8 feet long, 4 feet broad, and 4 feet high, but varying in different localities.