Example sentences of "he [vb past] [pn reflx] with [art] " in BNC.

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1 He aligned himself with the workers , the rebels at the barricades , with Zola and Michelet and the students of 1848 .
2 He aligned himself with the Social Christian Party for the 1990 elections , saying that Nicaragua should be free from the influence of the superpowers .
3 He aligned himself with the traditional view that the Scriptures describe unseen things by the form of visible things so as to stimulate reason in cognitive understanding , itself a spiritual reality which is an image of full contemplative knowledge .
4 On a more personal level , he concerned himself with a land bill for William Essex , who had married a Harcourt , acting as a feoffee for his Berkshire estate .
5 Simultaneously , he concerned himself with the idea that cities were necessary , not evil , but that ‘ without the life of the soil from which to draw its strength , the urban culture must lose its source of strength and rejuvenescence ’ .
6 One night , he found himself with a few other police enveloped in the hatred of a black township uprising .
7 He found himself with the duty of helping to make a vital decision for the Church of England at a moment in its destiny .
8 His sister 's death seemed to have affected him more deeply , though he bore himself with a kind of frightened dignity in front of his father .
9 Six years on , the family moved to Ugthorpe Lodge on the Whitby moors , a hotel with caravan site and smallholding where Mr Chance also had stables and where he involved himself with the Goathland Pony Club .
10 Like Cinderella , he told himself with a grin .
11 He busied himself with the electric kettle and a jar of instant coffee , and in a moment or two put the hot drink in front of her .
12 ‘ Mr Connon , ’ he said as he busied himself with the kettle and the jar of instant coffee , ‘ I did n't really have a chance last night to explain myself to you very fully .
13 He roused himself with an effort , sniffed and shook his head vigorously .
14 Thus , he acquainted himself with the meanings of the songs he heard them singing , songs of love and emigration ; with inheritances and alliances between these western chieftains ; with the size and topography of Raasay and its suitability for animal husbandry .
15 So there was a restlessness that could help explain his proneness to melancholia , and at the same time account for the extraordinary enthusiasm with which , in later life , he identified himself with the people of different parts of the Mediterranean coastline in turn : Greeks , Italians , Jews , Arabs .
16 Next time he went to sign on he armed himself with a photocopy of the relevant pages .
17 The heat haze rose from the ground as he flagellated himself with a cat o' nine chains .
18 He hid himself with the clothes again , jerking them about on their hangers .
19 The intense processing involved obviously exhausted too much of Gav 's thinly-stretch grey matter to allow speech in the near future , so he contented himself with a grunt and submerged again .
20 But in his two lectures he contented himself with a couple of scattered references to " Apolline clarity " and tragedy 's — actually Shakespearean tragedy 's — " Dionysiac " quality .
21 He cheered himself with the thought that there was not ‘ an idea I 've ever had that I have n't put down on paper . ’
22 If he surpassed himself with a full-scale mock-up of the ceiling for the Salla Romana with a snake-pit of interwoven flowers and exuberant garlands , he could be sure that a cursory glance by Ceauşescu would be followed by the demand , ‘ More flowers , more gold leaf . ’
23 When he was able , he fed himself with the meal he 'd prepared earlier , and stripped off the heavy insulating robe to dress himself in Tech-Green drab .
24 He satisfied himself with a few words of hurried consultation during a House of Commons debate .
25 When obliged to venture out , he covered himself with a Morocco robe and mask , and wore six pairs of stockings along with several fur hats .
26 He comforted himself with the fleeting thought that at least he had met Sir James Selkirk , who had found Alexander III 's corpse , and wryly concluded he would question him if the opportunity presented itself .
27 He comforted himself with the saying of Uncle Jan — ‘ the devil is never so black as he is painted ’ — and dreamed of what he might accomplish in the company of such a woman , in collaboration with her soft femaleness .
28 He claimed he associated himself with an abnormality that characterised the outstanding personalities of history , such as Confucius , Jesus Christ , Julius Caesar and Hitler .
29 It was in 1978 that he overreached himself with a little plan to sell illicit diamonds bought by his askaris from a diamond dealer in Lesotho .
30 It was to be another seven years before Franklin returned to his first love as commander of the Erebus on his most famous — and fatal — mission to find the legendary north-west passage from the polar seas to the north Pacific ; until then he occupied himself with the social and moral improvement of the colony under his charge .
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