1 But in the end there won't be any need even for that.
2 Each of them took a greasy metal tray from a pile at the end of the counter.
3 And above all, at the end, the tongue sticking right out, and blue--a quite bright blue.
4 No one who had once fallen into the hands of the Thought Police ever escaped in the end.
5 At one end of it a coloured poster, too large for indoor display, had been tacked to the wall.
6 For a second, two seconds, they had exchanged an equivocal glance, and that was the end of the story.
7 But luckily no child appeared, and in the end she agreed to give up trying, and soon afterwards they parted.
8 In the end the whole notion of goodness and badness will be covered by only six words--in reality, only one word.
9 I am authorized to say that the action we are now reporting may well bring the war within measurable distance of its end.
10 Actually, as Winston was aware, the chocolate ration was to be reduced from thirty grammes to twenty at the end of the present week.
11 Instead of being placed, as was normal, in the end wall, where it could command the whole room, it was in the longer wall, opposite the window.
12 The next moment a hideous, grinding speech, as of some monstrous machine running without oil, burst from the big telescreen at the end of the room.
13 Winston debated with himself whether to award Comrade Ogilvy the Order of Conspicuous Merit: in the end he decided against it because of the unnecessary cross-referencing that it would entail.
14 Quite likely the person at the next table was a spy of the Thought Police, and quite likely he would be in the cellars of the Ministry of Love within three days, but a cigarette end must not be wasted.
15 Great areas of it, even for a Party member, were neutral and non-political, a matter of slogging through dreary jobs, fighting for a place on the Tube, darning a worn-out sock, cadging a saccharine tablet, saving a cigarette end.
16 It was a lean Jewish face, with a great fuzzy aureole of white hair and a small goatee beard--a clever face, and yet somehow inherently despicable, with a kind of senile silliness in the long thin nose, near the end of which a pair of spectacles was perched.
17 Pursued by enemy jet planes while flying over the Indian Ocean with important despatches, he had weighted his body with his machine gun and leapt out of the helicopter into deep water, despatches and all--an end, said Big Brother, which it was impossible to contemplate without feelings of envy.
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