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Literary notes about Mend (AI summary)

The word "mend" in literature often carries a dual significance, oscillating between a literal act of repair and a metaphorical call for improvement. Authors use it to depict the physical restoration of objects or bodily functions, as when characters fix carriages, linens, or broken implements ([1], [2], [3], [4]), while simultaneously employing the term in a figurative sense to urge moral, behavioral, or social reform, urging characters to mend their ways or lives ([5], [6], [7], [8]). This versatility allows writers—from Shakespeare to Austen—to explore themes of regeneration, whether in tangible objects or in the spirit of individuals and communities ([9], [10], [11], [12]).
  1. At the convent there was an old maid who came for a week each month to mend the linen.
    — from Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
  2. However, I could not manage it, my carriage broke down, and took five hours to mend, so I had to sleep at another posting station.
    — from The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, 1725-1798. Complete by Giacomo Casanova
  3. A servant came and told me that the wheelwright had arrived, and that he would take four hours to mend my carriage, so I went downstairs.
    — from The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, 1725-1798. Complete by Giacomo Casanova
  4. Lay carpets and mend clothing and upholstery.
    — from Boy Scouts Handbook by Boy Scouts of America
  5. I added a warning whose truth I felt intuitively: "Unless you mend your ways, someday you will be asked to leave this ashram.
    — from Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda
  6. This so grieved the father that he died; yet, in spite of his mother's tears and prayers, Aladdin did not mend his ways.
    — from The Arabian Nights Entertainments by Andrew Lang
  7. For mother's sake I implore you to mend your ways.
    — from Project Gutenberg Compilation of Short Stories by Chekhov by Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
  8. I thought I must endeavour to mend my life; for else, thought I, I am sure to be damned.
    — from The Pilgrim's Progress from this world to that which is to come by John Bunyan
  9. Over and beside Signior Baptista’s liberality, I’ll mend it with a largess.
    — from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare by William Shakespeare
  10. I have observed, Mrs. Elton, in the course of my life, that if things are going untowardly one month, they are sure to mend the next.”
    — from Emma by Jane Austen
  11. Then disturbances may destroy it, but revolutions cannot mend it: it needs a master, and not a liberator.
    — from The Social Contract & Discourses by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  12. Well, words will not mend the matter, and it is time that we were doing.”
    — from The Last of the Mohicans; A narrative of 1757 by James Fenimore Cooper

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