The Story of a Life, Volume 1 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 88
Page 9
... carried the coffin out of the house on wide , embroidered hand straps . The priest went first . He looked straight in front of him with his quiet , gray eyes , saying Latin prayers in a low voice . When we had carried the coffin out ...
... carried the coffin out of the house on wide , embroidered hand straps . The priest went first . He looked straight in front of him with his quiet , gray eyes , saying Latin prayers in a low voice . When we had carried the coffin out ...
Page 288
... carry the badly wounded into the wards and the barracks scattered through the park around the main building . A little stream which smelled of chlorine could be heard at the bottom of a ravine in the park . We carried the wounded very ...
... carry the badly wounded into the wards and the barracks scattered through the park around the main building . A little stream which smelled of chlorine could be heard at the bottom of a ravine in the park . We carried the wounded very ...
Page 650
... carrying pails , jugs , and tea kettles . Only a few lucky ones - the owners of carts - could carry their water in ... carried water I used to watch the ground carefully , of course , and I came to know intimately all the pavements and ...
... carrying pails , jugs , and tea kettles . Only a few lucky ones - the owners of carts - could carry their water in ... carried water I used to watch the ground carefully , of course , and I came to know intimately all the pavements and ...
Contents
The Death of My Father | 3 |
My Grandfather Maxim Grigorievich | 10 |
Carp | 16 |
Copyright | |
51 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alushta answered Antoshchenko asked Aunt Marusya Baranovichi began Belaya Tserkov blue Borya Bryansk Cherkasy Cherpunov cold Cossack courtyard crowd dark Denikin Dima Dnieper door dress everything eyes face father fire flowers frightened front Galya Gelendzhik girl Grandmother gray grew gymnasium hand happy head heard hetman horses hung Kiev knew laughing Lelya light little boy lived looked Lyuba Mama morning Moscow moved Nesvizh never night noise Odessa officer overcoat Pavlia Petliura pince-nez quiet quietly Red Guards river Romanin rubles Rumyantsev Russia seemed Sevastopol shouted Simbirsk sitting smell smiled smoke Sokolovsky soldiers started station stood stopped street Suboch suddenly Taganrog talk theater things told took train trees trolley turned Tverskoi Boulevard Ukraine Ukrainian Uncle Kolya Uncle Yusia Velyaminov village voice waiting walked wall wanted whistle wind window woman yelled yellow young