1 The path of its departure still is free.
2 'The path of my departure was free,' and there was none to lament my annihilation.
3 It moved slowly, but it enlightened my path, and I again went out in search of berries.
4 When my hunger was appeased, I directed my steps towards the well-known path that conducted to the cottage.
5 In other places human beings were seldom seen, and I generally subsisted on the wild animals that crossed my path.
6 A few incidents now and then directed me, and I possessed a map of the country; but I often wandered wide from my path.
7 But my plan was unsettled, and I wandered many hours round the confines of the town, uncertain what path I should pursue.
8 In a thousand ways he smoothed for me the path of knowledge and made the most abstruse inquiries clear and facile to my apprehension.
9 When I returned, as often as it was necessary, I cleared their path from the snow and performed those offices that I had seen done by Felix.
10 The ascent is precipitous, but the path is cut into continual and short windings, which enable you to surmount the perpendicularity of the mountain.
11 The sun sank lower in the heavens; we passed the river Drance and observed its path through the chasms of the higher and the glens of the lower hills.
12 Here I paused, not exactly knowing what path to pursue, when I heard the sound of voices, that induced me to conceal myself under the shade of a cypress.
13 I determined to go without a guide, for I was well acquainted with the path, and the presence of another would destroy the solitary grandeur of the scene.
14 Sometimes the peasants, scared by this horrid apparition, informed me of his path; sometimes he himself, who feared that if I lost all trace of him I should despair and die, left some mark to guide me.
15 One morning, however, finding that my path lay through a deep wood, I ventured to continue my journey after the sun had risen; the day, which was one of the first of spring, cheered even me by the loveliness of its sunshine and the balminess of the air.
16 Early in the morning, before she had risen, he cleared away the snow that obstructed her path to the milk-house, drew water from the well, and brought the wood from the outhouse, where, to his perpetual astonishment, he found his store always replenished by an invisible hand.
17 The path, as you ascend higher, is intersected by ravines of snow, down which stones continually roll from above; one of them is particularly dangerous, as the slightest sound, such as even speaking in a loud voice, produces a concussion of air sufficient to draw destruction upon the head of the speaker.
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