WOUNDED in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
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 Current Search - wounded in A Farewell to Arms
1  Because you are gravely wounded.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 10
2  There are much worse wounded than me.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 9
3  Still even wounded you do not see it.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 11
4  After I was wounded I never found him.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 8
5  I am very moved to see you badly wounded.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 10
6  When I was wounded we were talking about it.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 11
7  They carried wounded in and brought them out.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 9
8  Every week some one gets wounded by rock fragments.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 3
9  Some of the wounded were noisy but most were quiet.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 9
10  Manera and Gavuzzi each went off with a load of wounded.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 9
11  The driver came out of the door with the papers for the wounded in the car.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 7
12  He walked across to the dressing station, stepping carefully among the wounded.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 9
13  The dressing station was on the Austrian side of the river under the edge of the hill and stretcher-bearers would bring the wounded back across the pontoon bridge.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 5
14  But I found a place where the cars would be sheltered after they passed that last badlooking bit and could wait for the wounded to be brought across the pontoon bridge.
A Farewell to Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 5
15  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 Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 7
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 Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 7
17  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 Arms By Ernest Hemingway
Context   In BOOK 1: 4
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