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Page "Trent Affair" ¶ 33
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They and were
They crawled through the north fence and came on toward him, and now he saw that both were young, not more than nineteen or twenty.
They were dirty, their clothes were torn, and the girl was so exhausted that she fell when she was still twenty feet from the front door.
They were running from something.
They were a pair of lost, whipped kids, Morgan thought as he went to bed.
They passed ranches that were framed dark gray against the black hills.
They were tethered, army style, on stable lines.
They bawled questions that were not answered in the uproar.
They were about a mile off ; ;
They weren't sleeping, of course, but they thought they were doing him a favor by pretending.
They expected greater things from him, regardless of how trying the circumstances, and they were disappointed.
They were going to town, and they were both excited.
They were free.
They were in a fight, outweighed in both numbers and money.
They were sitting on their heels, rider-fashion, over by the still empty calf wagon.
They were considering it gravely, neither seeming to like what he planned.
They were silent for a little while, each looking glum.
They were all good men.
They were headed straight for each other on a collision course.
`` They were supposed to meet Thor at nine PM for a conference concerning the ad campaign for their soap, a new angle based on this SX-21 stuff ''.
They were married over the week-end, though he was easily sixty and she could not have been even thirty.
They were west of the Sabine, but only God knew where.
They were engulfed by the weird silence, broken only by the low, angry murmur of the river.
They were already swollen to bursting.

They and liken
They liken the prison industrial complex to any industry that needs more and more raw materials, prisoners being the material.

They and Confederate
They had one son, Col. William Preston Johnston, who would also serve in the Confederate Army.
They met often at the house of Maggie Branson, a known Confederate sympathizer, at 16 North Eutaw Street in Baltimore.
They commissioned him as a Lieutenant Colonel and authorized him to recruit and train a battalion of Confederate Mounted Rangers.
They chose to juxtapose Abraham Lincoln's inaugural address with that of Confederate president Jefferson Davis ; they debated removing Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and labor-leader César Chávez and rejected calls to include more Hispanic figures, in spite of the high Hispanic population in the state.
They formed the new Confederate States of America, which, in accord with Calhoun's theory, did not have any political parties.
None of the battles of the American Civil War were fought in or near Wilkes County, but it was here, on the site of the present Wilkes County Courthouse in downtown Washington, where President Jefferson Davis met for the final time with the Confederate Cabinet They officially dissolved the government of the Confederate States of America.
They succeeded in disabling several wagons before Confederate cavalry chased them away.
They were attacked by Confederate forces near Brackettville on August 10, 1862.
They finally surrendered June 1865, two months after Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia at Appomattox Court House in Virginia.
They talk while he plays the guitar, and watch as the steady stream of soldiers, both Union and Confederate, pass by the house and continue on down the road.
They then return to Mississippi to enlist in their University company where they join the Confederate Army and fight in the Civil War.
They had at least one child, Anna Hayes Johnson, who was the second wife of Romulus Mitchell Saunders and mother of Jane Claudia Saunders Johnson ( wife of General Bradley Tyler Johnson, Confederate Civil War General from Maryland.
They crossed from Brazos Santiago to the mainland across the Boca Chica Pass during a storm on the evening of May 11 and made a night march upriver to attack the Confederate encampment.
They are recounts of the role of Hispanic Confederate veterans and the treatment of black POWs in South Texas.
They were at risk for murder by Confederate soldiers, rather than being held as prisoners of war.
They comprised the more extreme wing of the " Peace Democrats " and were often informally called " Butternuts " ( for the color of the Confederate uniforms ).
They talked of helping Confederate prisoners of war seize their camps and escape.
They sometimes met with Confederate agents and took money.
They band together in an effort to prevent an attempt by former Confederate officers to involve the British government in a scheme to overthrow the United States government.
They were used as Human Shields in an attempt to silence the Confederate artillery at Fort Sumter and soon became known in the South as the Immortal Six Hundred.
They demanded harsher measures in the South, and more protection for the Freedmen, and more guarantees that the Confederate nationalism was totally eliminated.
They destroyed Confederate shipping and railroad bridges upriver.
They waited for an hour in concealment, then attacked, driving off or capturing the small Confederate guard detail without any casualties.

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