1 The taxi stopped in front of a dark building.
2 And he pointed into a dark corner of the room.
3 He went to the window and looked once more down at the dark street.
4 It showed two sickly trees, well separated from each other in dark grass.
The Trial By Franz KafkaContextHighlight In Chapter Seven Lawyer - Manufacturer - Painter 5 "This way," said the carer, pointing to a dark trunk with a carved, wooden backrest.
6 , he felt her body against his chest and looked down on her rich, dark, tightly-bound hair.
7 Most of the windows on the other side of the street were also dark already, many of them had the curtains closed.
8 recognised the dark, slightly bulging eyes - stood in the hallway in a long white apron, holding a candle in her hand.
9 K tried hard to see into the darkness of one corner of the yard, where a few handcarts had been left behind one another.
10 In theory he was still free, he could have carried on walking, through one of three dark little wooden doors not far in front of him and away from there.
11 One of the men was clearly in charge, and attracted attention by being dressed in a kind of dark leather costume which left his neck and chest and his arms exposed.
12 The yard he looked down into was small and rectangular, all around it were offices, all the windows were now dark and only those at the very top caught a reflection of the moon.
13 The priest - there was no doubt that he was a priest, a young man with a smooth, dark face - was clearly going up there just to put the lamp out after somebody had lit it by mistake.
14 There was no direct source of light but it was not entirely dark as many of the departments, instead of solid walls, had just wooden bars reaching up to the ceiling to separate them from the corridor.
The Trial By Franz KafkaContextHighlight In Chapter Three In the empty Courtroom - The Student - The ... 15 To pass the time he opened the album and flicked through the pages a little but soon had to give up as it became so dark that when he looked up he could hardly make out anything in the side nave next to him.
16 It was as if, by flapping his hands about like short wings, he hoped to deflect any introductions and greetings, as if he wanted on no account to disturb the others by his presence and seemed to be exhorting them to leave him back in the dark and forget about his being there.
17 ought not to intrude in the middle of the night; that meant he would have to speak to her now, but, unfortunately, he had not put the electric light on in his room so that when he stepped out of the dark it would give the impression of being an attack and would certainly, at the very least, have been quite alarming.
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