You go to luxuriate in its old-school resorts and daydream on its un-peopled beaches.
This is also a land peopled with giants, devils and saints, as Mr Causley saw them.
For now, Mr Nachman continues to spurn the ultra-orthodox Jews who have peopled much larger settlements.
It was promptly planted with vineyards and peopled by aristocrats who built many of the chateaux that still stand today.
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The Parliament has also called for legally binding training for bus and coach staff to enable them to assist disabled peopled.
Once the hideaway of Apache raiders, for the past half century it has been peopled only by wandering miners and goat herders.
Her essays are peopled with fellow readers, with friends, parents and children.
Obviously fascinated with families, he has written eloquently elsewhere about his relationship with his mother, and has peopled his fiction with fractured family relationships.
Then, bizarrely, it became clear from both genetics and archaeology that Europe was peopled later (after 40, 000 years ago) than Australia (before 50, 000 years ago).
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Then he makes them wade through a busy bazaar in what looks like the old city, peopled by loin-clothed turbaned men, wiry and harassed-looking policemen and ragged children.
Badama and nearby villages are peopled by Kols, tribal folk who migrated a few generations ago from Madhya Pradesh, a neighbouring state, to escape bondage to feudal lords.
This is especially evident in the first act, which is peopled with vapid stick figures who appear to be drawn not from real life but from an Eisenhower-era television sitcom.
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This area, as it happens, is heavily peopled with Armenians (Los Angeles has the second-biggest Armenian population of any city in the world), and many Armenians are targets of the investigation.
To bring the book up to date, there is an epilogue on Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund peopled by Wall Street wizards and Nobel prize-winning economists, which collapsed ignominiously last year.
One day Roland Emmerich will take a breather and give us a modest, thinly peopled costume drama in which, at the climax, somebody drops a teacup, but that day has not yet dawned.
Two miles away, though, a Yiddish-speaking culture of a different kind took root and thrived: a township called Kirias Joel peopled by the Hasidic Satmarer sect, Jews at their most pious and least worldly.
The surf of Western Australia's Margaret River is often described as "epic" while the other 12, 500km of the Indian Ocean coast has surreally un-peopled reef, point and beach breaks giving way to shimmering 10m tides up north.
Thus, Blair will propose this week in Warsaw that the European Council reassert itself as the governing institution in Europe and that the European Parliament should have an upper house peopled entirely by elected MPs deputed from national parliaments.
In his memoirs he describes a life not far removed from the fantasies of his novels, peopled by friends called Fluff, Bumble, Hilly, Fram, Monkey, Liddie, Pansy and a dentist called Sussman, who is for ever fixing Mr Powell's teeth.
Sparsely peopled by bedraggled settlers in the mid-18th century, it is today the fourth most populous state in the union, with more than 19 million polyglot citizens and 29 electoral votes, more than 10% of those needed to elect a president, as Al Gore can never forget.
Some of the best birding spots turn out to be smack in the middle of the most peopled places, like Philadelphia's Fairmount Park, San Francisco's Golden Gate Park and New York's Central Park, where well over 200 of America's 750 bird species pass each spring and fall as they migrate.
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