FRESH in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
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 Current Search - fresh in Great Expectations
1  The freshness of her beauty was indeed gone, but its indescribable majesty and its indescribable charm remained.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter LIX
2  I wept to see her, and she wept to see me; I, because she looked so fresh and pleasant; she, because I looked so worn and white.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter LVIII
3  In his two cabin rooms at the top of the house, which were fresh and airy, and in which Mr. Barley was less audible than below, I found Provis comfortably settled.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XLVI
4  Our oarsmen were so fresh, by dint of having occasionally let her drive with the tide for a minute or two, that a quarter of an hour's rest proved full as much as they wanted.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter LIV
5  But, they tore up their handkerchiefs to make fresh bandages, and carefully replaced it in the sling, until we could get to the town and obtain some cooling lotion to put upon it.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter LIII
6  My bedstead, divested of its curtains, had been removed, with me upon it, into the sitting-room, as the airiest and largest, and the carpet had been taken away, and the room kept always fresh and wholesome night and day.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter LVII
7  It was furnished with fresh young remembrances too, and even at the same moment I fell into much the same confused division of mind between it and the better rooms to which I was going, as I had been in so often between the forge and Miss Havisham's, and Biddy and Estella.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XVIII
8  She turned her face to me for the first time since she had averted it, and, to my amazement, I may even add to my terror, dropped on her knees at my feet; with her folded hands raised to me in the manner in which, when her poor heart was young and fresh and whole, they must often have been raised to heaven from her mother's side.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XLIX