Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Tess of the d'Urbervilles" ¶ 20
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

She and later
She thought again of her children, those two who had died young, before the later science which might have saved them could attach even a label to their separate malignancies.
She says later, but still within the opening five minutes, `` I keep thinking of a divorce but that's another emotional death ''.
She later divorced Graham, who is believed to have moved to Bolivia.
She had quarreled with Lucien, she had resisted his demands for money -- and if she died, by the provisions of her marriage contract, Lucien would inherit legally not only the immediate sum of gold under the floorboards in the office, but later, when the war was over, her father's entire estate.
She had activated one of her microscopic tools which she would later use for minute repairs to various parts of her control panel.
She later said her years at the home " were the happiest years " of her life ; many of the incidents in her novel Little Women ( 1868 ) are based on this period.
She later married to Turner Doughtry.
She then read Latin at Birmingham University and later attended Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, to read Philosophy, Politics and Economics ( PPE ).
She expressed reservations over the eventual winner David Cameron, feeling that he did not, like the other candidates, have a proven track record, and she was later a leading figure in parliamentary opposition to his A-List policy, which she has said is " an insult to women ".
She later starred in Jean-Luc Godard's 1963 film Le Mépris.
She was later a partner in the Washington, D. C. office of the Birmingham, Alabama law firm Balch & Bingham.
She later told the Avalanche-Journal:
Following some success illustrating cards and booklets, Potter wrote and illustrated The Tale of Peter Rabbit publishing it first privately in 1901, and a year later as a small, three-colour illustrated book with Frederick Warne & Co. She became unofficially engaged to her editor Norman Warne in 1905 despite the disapproval of her parents, but he died suddenly a month later, of leukemia.
She studied book illustration from a young age and developed her own tastes, but the work of the picture book triumvirate Walter Crane, Kate Greenaway and Randolph Caldecott, the last an illustrator whose work was later collected by her father, was a great influence.
She later had a brief solo music career in the early 2000s after the dissolution of Hole, releasing America's Sweetheart ( 2004 ), and went through several rehab sentences and run-ins with the law until achieving sobriety.
She died two years later.
She would later convert to Henry's faith when they married.
She would later become one of the few successful women theater promoters on Broadway.
She was convinced that: " The divine Spirit had wrought the miracle a miracle which later I found to be in perfect scientific accord with divine law.
She is later spotted by Tommy Duckworth in late August.
She did not ally herself with Eakins ' ardent student supporters, and later wrote, " A curious instinct of self-preservation kept me outside the magic circle.
She was well suited to the precise work but later wrote, " this was the lowest depth I ever reached in commercial art, and although it was a period when youth and romance were in their first attendance on me, I remember it with gloom and record it with shame.
She later claims to have been bitten on the chest, although no wounds are found on her.
She had a strong religious upbringing and developed a faith that would play a major role in later life.

She and sees
She sees that there is a cup of steaming hot coffee awaiting him and the two chat informally as she presents the rules of the center and explains procedures.
She sees sectors of education such as courses for business executives as being " more lucrative than traditional markets ".
She is unused to such behavior, however, and sees the pageant and its participants as " outdated and antifeminist ".
America sees the absurdities -- she sees the kingdoms of Europe, disturbed by wrangling sectaries, or their commerce, population and improvements of every kind cramped and retarded, because the human mind like the body is fettered ' and bound fast by the chords of policy and superstition ': She laughs at their folly and shuns their errors: She founds her empire upon the idea of universal toleration: She admits all religions into her bosom ; She secures the sacred rights of every individual ; and ( astonishing absurdity to Europeans!
She has a tendency to get carried away fixing or improving anything she sees inefficient.
She asks Suzuki why she is crying, and then she sees Sharpless and the woman in the garden.
She sees the best in people, and to begin with always seems ignorant of other people's malignant intentions.
She sees Almásy as saintlike and with the " hipbones of Christ ".
She plays hopscotch in the Villa and sees the patient as a noble hero who is suffering.
She finally reveals the whole story ( as she sees it ).
She sees it.
She has a certain amount of dislike for Gina, whom she sees as her competition.
She has criticised Muslims, for what she sees as their intents to impose their own values on the country.
She attends the court and sees him go though various transformations before becoming himself: a kind peaceful person.
) The story itself sees Mina Harker and Allan Quatermain now immortal after bathing in the fire of youth from She on their quest to recover the Black Dossier itself ( a confessed macguffin ), in a metafictional unravelling of the secret history of the now-disbanded League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
She confirms her suspicions when she sees that the initials engraved inside the emerald ring Uncle Charlie gave her match those of one of the recent victims.
She married Marama and lives in the sky during the daytime and rarely sees her husband.

0.171 seconds.