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A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 7
2 One evening I was short of money and George loaned me a hundred lire.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 2: 18
3 The breeze came in through the window and it was cooler with the evening.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 11
4 When I got home it was too late and I did not see Miss Barkley until the next evening.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 6
5 Then the road was clean-packed snow and led through the woods, and twice coming home in the evening, we saw foxes.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 5: 39
6 Mr. and Mrs. Guttingen lived downstairs and we would hear them talking sometimes in the evening and they were very happy together too.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 5: 38
7 I sent for the porter and when he came I told him in Italian to get me a bottle of Cinzano at the wine shop, a fiasco of chianti and the evening papers.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 2: 13
8 I would like to eat at the Cova and then walk down the Via Manzoni in the hot evening and cross over and turn off along the canal and go to the hotel with Catherine Barkley.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 7
9 They had brought the soup and afterward taken away the bowls and I was lying looking at the rows of beds and out the window at the tree-top that moved a little in the evening breeze.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 11
10 Downstairs there was a parlor where they sold wine and beer, and sometimes in the evening we would hear carts stop outside on the road and men come up the steps to go in the parlor to drink wine.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 5: 38
11 I did not see a place to sit, and a waiter came up to me and took my wet coat and hat and showed me a place at a table across from an elderly man who was drinking beer and reading the evening paper.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 5: 41
12 This was better than going every evening to the house for officers where the girls climbed all over you and put your cap on backward as a sign of affection between their trips upstairs with brother officers.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 6