1 I drove back up the narrow road.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 5 2 We started off down the narrow road.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 28 3 It was deep and slow there and quite narrow.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 4: 35 4 It was a narrow street and we kept on the right-hand side.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 2: 23 5 On a narrow street we passed a British Red Cross ambulance.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 25 6 Piani's and Bonello's cars could only move straight ahead down the narrow road.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 29 7 Ahead of us the road was narrow and muddy and there was a high hedge on either side.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 28 8 The attack would cross the river up above the narrow gorge and spread up the hillside.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 4 9 There were two windows in the roof, one was blocked with boards, the other was a narrow dormer window on the north side.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 10 I could not shadow-box in front of the narrow long mirror at first because it looked so strange to see a man with a beard boxing.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 5: 40 11 Bonello turned off and followed him and then Piani worked his way out and we followed the two ambulances ahead along the narrow road between hedges.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 28 12 The system was to bring everything down the new road and take the empty trucks, carts and loaded ambulances and all returning traffic up the old narrow road.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 5 13 The river was low and there were stretches of sand and pebbles with a narrow channel of water and sometimes the water spread like a sheen over the pebbly bed.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 8 14 We had each been drinking out of one of the bottles and I took my bottle with me and went over and lay flat on the hay and looked out the narrow window at the wet country.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 15 The wooden bridge was nearly three-quarters of a mile across, and the river, that usually ran in narrow channels in the wide stony bed far below the bridge, was close under the wooden planking.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 16 I went along the narrow road down toward the river, left the car at the dressing station under the hill, crossed the pontoon bridge, which was protected by a shoulder of the mountain, and went through the trenches in the smashed-down town and along the edge of the slope.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 5 17 They splashed more mud than the camions even and if one of the officers in the back was very small and sitting between two generals, he himself so small that you could not see his face but only the top of his cap and his narrow back, and if the car went especially fast it was probably the King.
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