...could he not even catch a glimpse of smoke...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...The action of the oars was prevented, and Pencroft was obliged to pushwith a pole...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...They were not even trying toreplace the ladder, by which it would have been easy to descend; perhapsin their terror they had forgotten this way of escape...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Employed in houses, they can wait attable, sweep rooms, brush clothes, clean boots, handle a knife, fork,and spoon properly, and even drink wine,...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
... not even knowing how they should preserve their miserablelives from the fury...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...Spilett and I will go and have a pig hunt, and even without Top I hopewe shall manage to catch a few!"...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...However, theprisoner did not struggle, nor even attempt to break his bonds...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...The result is that the gulf iscompletely sheltered on all sides, and I believe that even in thestormiest weather, the sea here must be as calm as a lake...
Jules Verne William Henry Giles Kingston 「Abandoned」
...A flirting woman on a public street is a sorrypicture; even one who stoops to notice hermust secretly know her measure...
James W. Donovan 「Don't Marry」
...At the shortest such a marchwould be about six hundred miles even in an air line, with prospect ofsomething like six hundred more before they reached the Mediterranean...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
...She had already brought to a miserable endevery one, even faithful defenders of Artaxerxês, concerned in the deathof her son Cyrus...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
...Butthe soldiers around him were so indignant at the proceeding ofSotêridas, that they reproached and even struck him, until theycompelled him to resume his shield as well as his place in the ranks...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
...We must even eat them raw, if in any way we can do so...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
...The statements of Xenophon himself give us a vivid idea of the internaldiscipline of the army, even as managed by a discreet and well-temperedofficer...
George Grote 「The Two Great Retreats of History」
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