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Current Search - execution in Nineteen Eighty-Four
1 'I think he was a little upset at not going to the execution,' said Winston.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 1: Chapter 5
2 They were executed, and their fate was recorded in the Party histories, a warning to posterity.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 1: Chapter 7
3 The espionage, the betrayals, the arrests, the tortures, the executions, the disappearances will never cease.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 3: Chapter 3
4 Sometimes they were released and allowed to remain at liberty for as much as a year or two years before being executed.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 1: Chapter 4
5 It is a problem of continuously moulding the consciousness both of the directing group and of the larger executive group that lies immediately below it.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 2: Chapter 9
6 He would talk with a disagreeable gloating satisfaction of helicopter raids on enemy villages, and trials and confessions of thought-criminals, the executions in the cellars of the Ministry of Love.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 1: Chapter 5
7 Goldstein had fled and was hiding no one knew where, and of the others, a few had simply disappeared, while the majority had been executed after spectacular public trials at which they made confession of their crimes.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 1: Chapter 7
8 Times beyond number, at Party rallies and spontaneous demonstrations, she had shouted at the top of her voice for the execution of people whose names she had never heard and in whose supposed crimes she had not the faintest belief.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 2: Chapter 5
9 You believed that three men, three one-time Party members named Jones, Aaronson, and Rutherford--men who were executed for treachery and sabotage after making the fullest possible confession--were not guilty of the crimes they were charged with.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 3: Chapter 2
10 The great purges involving thousands of people, with public trials of traitors and thought-criminals who made abject confession of their crimes and were afterwards executed, were special show-pieces not occurring oftener than once in a couple of years.
Nineteen Eighty-FourBy George Orwell ContextHighlight In PART 1: Chapter 4