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sails cordage spars lobster
There were many things to be brought up from the beach and stored in the outhouse—as oars, nets, sails, cordage, spars, lobster-pots, bags of ballast, and the like; and though there was abundance of assistance rendered, there being not a pair of working hands on all that shore but would have laboured hard for Mr. Peggotty, and been well paid in being asked to do it, yet she persisted, all day long, in toiling under weights that she was quite unequal to, and fagging to and fro on all sorts of unnecessary errands.
— from David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

some crime so look
If I lose my temper I’m capable of committing some crime, so look out!
— from Plays by Anton Chekhov, Second Series by Anton Pavlovich Chekhov

some coppers she looked
She was seized with apprehension, and as she sought in her pocket for some coppers, she looked at the peasant with haggard eyes, while he himself looked at her with amazement, not understanding how such a present could so move anyone.
— from Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

so could say little
Up, and called upon by W. Howe, who went, with W. Hewer with me, by water, to the Temple; his business was to have my advice about a place he is going to buy—the Clerk of the Patent’s place, which I understand not, and so could say little to him, but fell to other talk, and setting him in at the Temple, we to White Hall, and there I to visit Lord Sandwich, who is now so reserved, or moped rather, I think, with his own business, that he bids welcome to no man, I think, to his satisfaction.
— from The Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete by Samuel Pepys

simply collecting such laws
But of the Sophists they who profess to teach it are plainly a long way off from doing so: in fact, they have no knowledge at all of its nature and objects; if they had, they would never have put it on the same footing with Rhetoric or even on a lower: neither would they have conceived it to be “an easy matter to legislate by simply collecting such laws as are famous because of course one could select the best,” as though the selection were not a matter of skill, and the judging aright a very great matter, as in Music: for they alone, who have practical knowledge of a thing, can judge the performances rightly or understand with what means and in what way they are accomplished, and what harmonises with what: the unlearned must be content with being able to discover whether the result is good or bad, as in painting.
— from The Ethics of Aristotle by Aristotle

some certain significance lurks
And some certain significance lurks in all things, else all things are little worth, and the round world itself but an empty cipher, except to sell by the cartload, as they do hills about Boston, to fill up some morass in the Milky Way.
— from Moby Dick; Or, The Whale by Herman Melville

sotto coltre sanza la
<>, disse 'l maestro; <sotto coltre; sanza la qual chi sua vita consuma, cotal vestigio in terra di se' lascia, qual fummo in aere e in acqua la schiuma.
— from Divina Commedia di Dante: Inferno by Dante Alighieri

such curt strenuous ladies
There are thousands of such curt, strenuous ladies in the offices of London, but the interest of these lay rather in their real than their apparent position.
— from The Innocence of Father Brown by G. K. (Gilbert Keith) Chesterton

she can stand long
England is a stubborn Country; but it was not by procedures of the Cumberland-Newcastle kind that England, and her Colonies, and Sea-and-Land Kingdoms, was built together; nor by these, except miracle intervene, that she can stand long against stress!
— from History of Friedrich II of Prussia — Volume 17 by Thomas Carlyle

Santa Cruz se le
“Orden del 18, para que á Luis de Guzman, soldado de á cauallo de la villa y fuerça de Maçarquivir, condenado á quatro años de destierro al Castillo de Santa Cruz, se le passe la plaça que goça en dicha fuerça del castillo” ibid.
— from Catalogue of the Manuscripts in the Spanish Language in the British Museum. Vol. 4 by Pascual de Gayangos

SEE Clemens Samuel Langhorne
SEE Clemens, Samuel Langhorne.
— from U.S. Copyright Renewals, 1959 January - June by Library of Congress. Copyright Office

state coach says Lady
After that came a coach drawn by four black horses, the finest state coach, says Lady Fanshawe, that ever { 500} came out of England, and to describe its grandeur nothing but the lady's own words will do justice.
— from The Court of Philip IV.: Spain in Decadence by Martin A. S. (Martin Andrew Sharp) Hume

shape certainly something like
In all these cases, except two just opposite me, I thought I could discern a brilliant shape, a human shape certainly, something like a statue of very pale bronze.
— from Atlantida by Pierre Benoît

she could see little
ter lib 'tel she got back whar she could see little Mose once mo'.
— from The Conjure Woman by Charles W. (Charles Waddell) Chesnutt


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