1 That day I crossed the Venetian plain.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 31 2 On both sides of us stretched the wet plain.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 3 Ahead across the plain was the hill of Udine.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 4 Napoleon would have whipped the Austrians on the plains.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 2: 19 5 I knew there were plenty of side-roads across the plain.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 6 No one had bothered us when we were in plain sight along the railway.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 7 You were liable to arrest if you did not have one worn in plain sight.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 6 8 It was a long plain iron bridge across what was usually a dry river-bed.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 30 9 The fields were bare and wet; a long way away I could see a campanile rising out of the plain.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 31 10 In the late summer of that year we lived in a house in a village that looked across the river and the plain to the mountains.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 1 11 The plain was rich with crops; there were many orchards of fruit trees and beyond the plain the mountains were brown and bare.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 1 12 We could look across the plain and see farmhouses and the rich green farms with their irrigation ditches and the mountains to the north.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 2: 20 13 There was what was left of a railway station and a smashed permanent bridge that could not be repaired and used because it was in plain sight.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 5 14 Crossing the fields to the north I had seen a train pass on this railroad, visible a long way across the flat plain, and I thought a train might come from Portogruaro.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 31 15 I looked back down the road, the farmhouse was on a slight elevation above the plain, and we could see over the country, and saw the road, the hedges, the fields and the line of trees along the main road where the retreat was passing.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 28 16 We went on and passed the regiment about a mile ahead, then crossed the river, cloudy with snow-water and running fast through the spiles of the bridge, to ride along the road across the plain and deliver the wounded at the two hospitals.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 7 17 The mountain that was beyond the valley and the hillside where the chestnut forest grew was captured and there were victories beyond the plain on the plateau to the south and we crossed the river in August and lived in a house in Gorizia that had a fountain and many thick shady trees in a walled garden and a wistaria vine purple on the side of the house.
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