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Quotes from A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
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 Current Search - ice in A Farewell to Arms
1  Let them bring the ice separately.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 40
2  I would have to tell them not to put ice in the whiskey.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 40
3  I would get a bottle of whiskey and have them bring ice and soda.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 40
4  He brought the whiskey in a glass with ice and beside the glass on a tray a small bottle of soda.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 40
5  I went back to the papers and the war in the papers and poured the soda slowly over the ice into the whiskey.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 40
6  We drank dry white capri iced in a bucket; although we tried many of the other wines, fresa, barbera and the sweet white wines.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 2: 18
7  On a card table a little way beyond the light was a silver icing-bucket with the necks and corks of two champagne bottles showing above the ice.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 4: 35
8  Going up the road toward home the road was smooth and slippery for a while and the ice orange from the horses until the wood-hauling track turned off.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 39
9  We lived in a brown wooden house in the pine trees on the side of the mountain and at night there was frost so that there was thin ice over the water in the two pitchers on the dresser in the morning.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 38
10  Catherine wore heavy overshoes and I wore Mr. Guttingen's rubber-boots and we walked to the station under an umbrella, through the slush and the running water that was washing the ice of the roads bare, to stop at the pub before lunch for a vermouth.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 5: 40