101. He was beginning to see a world that he could manage. 102. He just wanted to see the world. 103. He still saw the world in the static framework of Linnaeus, the Swedish naturalist for whom the system of classifying the plants and animals is named. 104. He wanted to travel, to see the world. 105. He was deaf, but Leon Lebor certainly got to see the world. 106. He sees the world like a litigator, a take-no-prisoners attitude that casts things in extreme terms even when the ideas are moderate. 107. He sees the world through a rose-colored face guard, greets the day with kind of a puppy-dog smile. 108. Here, we see the world on television or through magazine photographs. 109. He wants to see the world. 110. His diabetes made it difficult for him to travel, and he encouraged her to continue to see the world without him. |