1 And then I started talking in my sleep.
2 They could sleep with your daughters if they chose.
3 The most deadly danger of all was talking in your sleep.
4 Even in sleep he could not altogether escape from her image.
5 From her breathing it was evident that she was going off to sleep again.
6 He remembered them dimly, because they were spent chiefly in sleep or stupor.
7 She was one of those people who can go to sleep at any hour and in any position.
8 The young, strong body, now helpless in sleep, awoke in him a pitying, protecting feeling.
9 It was the law by which every capitalist had the right to sleep with any woman working in one of his factories.
10 Everyone in the Records Department worked eighteen hours in the twenty-four, with two three-hour snatches of sleep.
11 The sudden jerk out of sleep, the rough hand shaking your shoulder, the lights glaring in your eyes, the ring of hard faces round the bed.
12 There had been times when consciousness, even the sort of consciousness that one has in sleep, had stopped dead and started again after a blank interval.
13 It was he who decided when Winston should scream with pain, when he should have a respite, when he should be fed, when he should sleep, when the drugs should be pumped into his arm.
14 It was a dark, dirty, miserable place where hardly anybody had enough to eat and where hundreds and thousands of poor people had no boots on their feet and not even a roof to sleep under.
15 His friendships, his relaxations, his behaviour towards his wife and children, the expression of his face when he is alone, the words he mutters in sleep, even the characteristic movements of his body, are all jealously scrutinized.
16 He remembered a surly barber arriving to scrape his chin and crop his hair, and businesslike, unsympathetic men in white coats feeling his pulse, tapping his reflexes, turning up his eyelids, running harsh fingers over him in search for broken bones, and shooting needles into his arm to make him sleep.
17 The plan is, by a combination of fighting, bargaining, and well-timed strokes of treachery, to acquire a ring of bases completely encircling one or other of the rival states, and then to sign a pact of friendship with that rival and remain on peaceful terms for so many years as to lull suspicion to sleep.
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