1 And so it is we find this coffin empty.
2 It was empty, but that was as I expected.
3 Its emptiness spoke eloquent to make certain what I knew.
4 I opened that coffin, which was then sealed up, and we found it, as now, empty.
5 It made us think of the empty chair at home; so we got up and walked down Piccadilly.
6 The house is at present empty, but enclosed please find keys, all of which are labelled.
7 I crept behind It, and gave It my knife; but the knife went through It, empty as the air.
8 And when that owner come back from his holiday in Switzerland he find only an empty hole where his house had been.
9 I asked one or two of the grooms and helpers whom I saw around if they could tell me anything about the empty house.
10 Suddenly I became broad awake, and sat up, with a horrible sense of fear upon me, and of some feeling of emptiness around me.
11 In his pocket was a bottle, carefully corked, empty save for a little roll of paper, which proved to be the addendum to the log.
12 Since my rebuff of yesterday I have a sort of empty feeling; nothing in the world seems of sufficient importance to be worth the doing.
13 Jonathan thought it would interest me to go into the Row for a while, so we sat down; but there were very few people there, and it was sad-looking and desolate to see so many empty chairs.
14 The leiter-wagons contained great, square boxes, with handles of thick rope; these were evidently empty by the ease with which the Slovaks handled them, and by their resonance as they were roughly moved.
15 He went straight over to the window and brushed out the crumbs of sugar; then he took his fly-box, and emptied it outside, and threw away the box; then he shut the window, and crossing over, sat down on his bed.
16 Outrageous as it was to open a leaden coffin, to see if a woman dead nearly a week were really dead, it now seemed the height of folly to open the tomb again, when we knew, from the evidence of our own eyesight, that the coffin was empty.
17 No, no, my friend Jonathan, you go take the lock off a hundred empty house in this your London, or of any city in the world; and if you do it as such things are rightly done, and at the time such things are rightly done, no one will interfere.
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