Through skilful lighting and a specially formulated concrete these defer to the art they contain with good grace.
The works include among other things new pavings and new street lighting.
Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.
Lighting conditions in UK classrooms could be needlessly harming children's school performance, psychologists have claimed.
In a cigar store he saw a well-dressed man lighting a cigar at a swinging light.
1952 Freedom is just Chaos, with better lighting.
During the process they underwent sophisticated scans that mapped which parts of their brain were lighting up and timed how long it took them to respond to a joke.
But she has not been lighting up cinemas in the last 12 months, taking a series of supporting roles and cameo performances.
" She did not stop, however, till she had lit all the eighty, but Scheih Ibrahim was not conscious of this, and when, soon after that, Noureddin proposed to have some of the lustres lit, he answered: "You are more capable of lighting them than I, but not more than three.
Then lighting a fire upon the ground they hacked morsels from the bird, and proceeded to roast them while I stood by aghast.
One day, a fly insisted upon lighting on the Gardener's face, although he was brushed off again and again.
But the king's daughter knew nothing about lighting fires or cooking, and the beggar-man had to lend a hand himself to get anything fairly done.
And there came a bluish dazzling flash of lightning, a lighting up as if of the sun itself, which could burst blocks of rock asunder.
"The people were walking about, looking at the old and the new lighting.
It flashed across the lake in winding, zigzag lines, lighting it up on all sides; while the echoes of the thunder grew louder and stronger.
I blew up the fire in the coals on the hearth, and it threw a red glow on his ghastly white face, lighting it up with a glare, while his sunken eyes looked out wildly from their cavernous depths, and appeared to grow larger and more prominent, as if they would burst from their sockets.
" She kept lighting matches.
However, just as she was getting ready to justify to herself why it was OK to "skip" the first night's lighting - (A) she'd have to wait for the candles to burn out before she could leave for the library and (B) she had no clue as to where her candles were hiding - her conscience (and common sense) kicked in.