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I and look
I would turn away from my writing in the hope of getting a good look at them but I never quite succeeded.
I felt strongly attached to the hall, however, and hardly a day passed when I did not go to look at it from a distance.
I was at once disappointed, although just what I had expected him to look like I could not have explained.
I didn't get a good look at him at all, his back was to me, and I was so scared It was just somebody in a man's suit.
I was aware of a humid look in her eyes that told me the time was opportune.
I turned to look at the lubra.
Yet this passion for passion, now that I look back on it with passion spent, seems somewhat overblown and operatic, though as a diva Miss Millay perfectly controlled her notes.
' I've found errors and I want you to look them over.
She used to tell me, `` When I stand there and look at the flag blowing this way and that way, I have the wonderful, safe feeling that Americans are protected no matter which way the wind blows ''.
I use this term to mean three things: a search for the human significance of an event or state of affairs, a tendency to look at wholes rather than parts, and a tendency to respond to these events and wholes with feeling.
I never had the courage to look at them, when my projected volume became hopeless, fearing they were poor, until now when I was obliged to do so.
We were almost the same age, she was fifteen, I was twelve, and where I felt there was a life to look forward to Lilly felt she had had as much of it as was necessary.
I could never forget the gaiety with which, when he was both blind and deaf, he let me lead him around his rooms to look at some of the pictures ; ;
Then, all but blind, he said there was nothing in Back to Methuselah --, -- `` G.B.S. ought to have known that '', -- and `` I look at my bookshelves despairingly, knowing that I can have nothing more to do with them ''.
Occasionally if I pushed him too far he'd give me a look out of narrowed eyes and the hard cruel bony skull would show through that smooth face of his.
I want to take a look.

I and forward
But I had looked forward so much to being with this church group.
Up until World War I some armies made artillery responsible for all forward ammunition supply because the load of small arms ammunition was trivial compared to artillery.
Marlborough wrote an appeal to the Duke of Württemberg, the commander of the Danish contingent – " I send you this express to request your Highness to bring forward by a double march your cavalry so as to join us at the earliest moment …" Additionally, the King in Prussia, Frederick I, had kept his troops in quarters behind the Rhine while his personal disputes with Vienna and the States-General at The Hague remained unresolved.
In the Meditations, Descartes phrases the conclusion of the argument as " that the proposition, I am, I exist, is necessarily true whenever it is put forward by me or conceived in my mind.
So, after considering everything very thoroughly, I must finally conclude that the proposition, I am, I exist, is necessarily true whenever it is put forward by me or conceived in my mind.
" Previously, during his Senate confirmation hearing in 2007, Mullen told lawmakers, " I really think it is for the American people to come forward, really through this body, to both debate that policy and make changes, if that's appropriate.
Stagg summed up his view as follows: " I have seen statements giving credit to certain people originating the forward pass.
The first season, 1906, I personally had sixty-four different forward pass patterns.
So, for them, I don't think that we have a way forward with talks or negotiations or contacts or anything as such.
The Princess Theatre musicals and other smart shows like Of Thee I Sing ( 1931 ) were artistic steps forward beyond revues and other frothy entertainments of the early 20th century and led to such groundbreaking works as Show Boat ( 1927 ) and Oklahoma!
" She went on to put forward the idea that this typically confirmed " some original, private experience, so that the most common experience of those who have named themselves pagan is something like ' I finally found a group that has the same religious perceptions I always had '.
Development of Space Quest VII was underway in 1996 when Sierra released The Space Quest Collection, which consisted of Space Quest I through 6 and included a brief trailer of Space Quest VII ( consisting of Roger strapping a giant rocket to his back and using it to push himself forward on roller skates in a scene reminiscent of Wile E. Coyote ).
I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.
Wharton's club came to an end in 1721 when George I, under the influence of Wharton's political enemies ( namely Robert Walpole ) put forward a Bill " against ' horrid impieties '" ( or immorality ), aimed at the Hellfire Club.
In a speech to the Hawarden Amateur Horticultural Society on 17 August 1876, Gladstone said that " I am delighted to see how many young boys and girls have come forward to obtain honourable marks of recognition on this occasion ,— if any effectual good is to be done to them, it must be done by teaching and encouraging them and helping them to help themselves.
' Then he said: ' Sirs, ye are my men, my companions and friends in this journey: I require you bring me so far forward, that I may strike one stroke with my sword.
This was seen as a move against Harold Harefoot, Cnut's son by Ælfgifu of Northampton, who put himself forward as Harold I with the support of many of the English nobility.

I and extending
The aorta (; from Greek ἀορτή-aortē, from ἀείρω-aeirō " I lift, raise ") is the largest artery in the body, originating from the left ventricle of the heart and extending down to the abdomen, where it bifurcates into two smaller arteries ( the common iliacs ).
Innocent I lost no opportunity in maintaining and extending the authority of the Roman Empire.
* Louis I of Hungary defeats and captures Ivan Sratsimir of Bulgaria ; he conquers northern Bulgaria, extending his control over the Balkans.
James I of England had granted Virginia 400 miles of Atlantic coast centered on Cape Comfort, extending west to the Pacific Ocean to a company of colonists in a series of charters from 1606 to 1611.
While he was at first successful in extending the power of Savoy, in 1282 he was opposed by a coalition of King Rudolph I, Charles of Anjou ( who was also count of Provence ), the dauphin, and the counts of Geneva.
Borrowing a discovery from boats that extending a control surface's area forward of the hinge lightens the forces needed first appeared on ailerons during World War I when ailerons were extended beyond the wingtip and provided with a horn ahead of the hinge.
David I of Scotland spent time at the court of Henry I in the south, until he became the Earl of Huntingdon, and returned to Scotland with the intention of extending royal power across the country and modernising Scotland's military technology, including the introduction of castles.
He met King Henry I of England who granted him the rule of Llŷn, Eifionydd, Ardudwy and Arllechwedd, considerably extending his kingdom.
The Greek army, commanded by King Constantine I, had eight divisions and a cavalry brigade ( 117, 861 men ) with 176 artillery guns in a line extending from the Gulf of Orphano to the Djevjeli area.
Some have tried to avoid this problem by extending the conditions in the analysandum: instead of " There is a doorknob in front of me " one could have it that " There is a doorknob, and I am not paralyzed, etc.
* Declaration I: extending Declaration II from the 1899 Conference to other types of aircraft
Darkness gathers around, far distant thunder rolls over the trembling hills ; the black clouds with august majesty and power, moves slowly forwards, shading regions of towering hills, and threatening all the destructions of a thunderstorm ; all around is now still as death, not a whisper is heard, but a total inactivity and silence seems to pervade the earth ; the birds afraid to utter a chirrup, and in low tremulous voices take leave of each other, seeking covert and safety ; every insect is silenced, and nothing heard but the roaring of the approaching hurricane ; the mighty cloud now expands its sable wings, extending from North to South, and is driven irresistibly on by the tumultuous winds, spreading his livid wings around the gloomy concave, armed with terrors of thunder and fiery shafts of lightning ; now the lofty forests bend low beneath its fury, their limbs and wavy boughs are tossed about and catch hold of each other ; the mountains tremble and seem to reel about, and the ancient hills to be shaken to their foundations: the furious storm sweeps along, smoaking through the vale and over the resounding hills ; the face of the earth is obscured by the deluge descending from the firmament, and I am deafened by the din of thunder ; the tempestuous scene damps my spirits, and my horse sinks under me at the tremendous peals, as I hasten for the plain.
The 1910s, 1930s and 1940s saw three elections delayed due to World War I, the Great Depression and World War II, respectively: the 1919, 1935 and 1943 elections would otherwise have taken place in 1917, 1934 and 1941 ( Parliaments passed Acts extending their terms ).
** Beginning of talks about prolongation of ceasefire after World War I. German delegation is against extending it for Greater Poland, but France forces them to allow this condition.
I n early December the Government launched an offensive aimed at taking the last strongholds held by UNITA in Huambo and Kuito, this new war outbreak soon extending to other regions of the country.
It can also refer to the act of admitting defeat in a game like chess, indicated by the resigning player declaring " I resign ", turning his king on its side, extending his hand, or stopping the chess clock.
Title I ’ s biggest departure from the PWG Report recommendations was in extending most of the same exclusions to non-financial commodities that were not agricultural.
In the new 1620 charter granted by James I, the company was given rights of settlement in the area now designated as New England, which was the land previously part of the Virginia Colony north of the 40th parallel, and extending to the 48th parallel ( thus including all of present day New Brunswick and Nova Scotia ) Unlike the previous charter, the new charter specified colonial rights of the company " from sea to sea ".
The Gare de l ' Est is the terminus of a strategic railway network extending towards the eastern part of France, and it saw large mobilizations of French troops, most notably in 1914, at the beginning of World War I.
On the right was the I Corps ( from right to left the 82d, 90th, 5th, and 2d Divisions in line with the 78th in reserve ) covering a front from Pont-à-Mousson on the Moselle westward to Limey ; on the left, the IV Corps ( from right to left the 89th, 42d, and 1st Divisions in line with the 3rd in reserve ) extending along a front from Limey westward to Marvoisin.
TRS-DOS was primarily a way of extending the MBASIC ( BASIC in ROM ) with additional I / O ( input / output ) commands that worked with disk files rather than the cassette tapes that were used by most other TRS-80 systems.
I have taken the matter up and am promised the trees, but I thought perhaps it would be best to make an avenue of them, extending down to the turn in the road, as the other part ( beyond the railroad bridge Ed.

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