1 I went with him and found the dugout, which was very good.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 9 2 It's only the first labor, which is almost always protracted.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 5: 41 3 This was a game, like bridge, in which you said things instead of playing cards.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 6 4 Across the street, which sloped steeply, was another hotel with a similar wall and garden.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 5: 40 5 When we came to the road which led back toward the main highway I pointed down it to the two girls.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 29 6 I had the feeling of a boy who thinks of what is happening at a certain hour at the schoolhouse from which he has played truant.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 4: 34 7 They brought the cars around to the front of the villa and we loaded them with the hospital equipment which was piled in the hallway.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 3: 27 8 This was a shrapnel shell used by the Austrians in the mountains with a nose-cap which went on after the burst and exploded on contact.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 2: 17 9 I thought he had a fine name and he came from Minnesota which made a lovely name: Ireland of Minnesota, Ireland of Wisconsin, Ireland of Michigan.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 7 10 The division for which we worked were to attack at a place up the river and the major told me that I would see about the posts for during the attack.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 4 11 That night a bat flew into the room through the open door that led onto the balcony and through which we watched the night over the roofs of the town.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 2: 16 12 He used a local anaesthetic called something or other "snow," which froze the tissue and avoided pain until the probe, the scalpel or the forceps got below the frozen portion.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 2: 15 13 It would have been impolite not to have known something of them when I had listened to such a splendid explanation of their causes which were, after all, it seemed, misunderstandings.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 7 14 I went along the narrow road down toward the river, left the car at the dressing station under the hill, crossed the pontoon bridge, which was protected by a shoulder of the mountain, and went through the trenches in the smashed-down town and along the edge of the slope.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest HemingwayContext In BOOK 1: 5 15 They talked too much at the mess and I drank wine because tonight we were not all brothers unless I drank a little and talked with the priest about Archbishop Ireland who was, it seemed, a noble man and with whose injustice, the injustices he had received and in which I participated as an American, and of which I had never heard, I feigned acquaintance.
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