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A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 2: 22
2 I was sick and Catherine was right.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 2: 17
3 I was cold and my leg hurt so that it made me sick.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 9
4 There would be many sick now the rains had started.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 3: 27
5 It was a hot afternoon and I was sick of lying in bed.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 2: 15
6 I felt sick in the night and in the morning after breakfast I was nauseated.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 2: 22
7 One of their drivers came over to me, brought by Gordini who looked very white and sick.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 9
8 It did not matter because the man on that side had been very sick on the floor several times before.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 12
9 I felt hollow and sick in my stomach and chest from the effort, and I held to the branches and waited.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 3: 31
10 When the sick feeling was gone I pulled into the willow bushes and rested again, my arms around some brush, holding tight with my hands to the branches.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 3: 31
11 I told him to get it and when it came I gave him the change and the man beside me and I got drunk and slept until past Vicenza where I woke up and was very sick on the floor.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 12
12 I came back the next afternoon from our first mountain post and stopped the car at the smistimento where the wounded and sick were sorted by their papers and the papers marked for the different hospitals.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 7
13 I had imagined that the condition of the cars, whether or not things were obtainable, the smooth functioning of the business of removing wounded and sick from the dressing stations, hauling them back from the mountains to the clearing station and then distributing them to the hospitals named on their papers, depended to a considerable extent on myself.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 4