10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «DESOLATINGLY»
Discover the use of
desolatingly in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
desolatingly and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Amelia and Dobbin, on the other hand, take their revenge on their creator by
making Vanity Fair, whenever they appear on the moving canvas, utterly, oh,
desolatingly dull! And they do it even when they are not on the canvas, for when
the ...
Ford Madox Ford, Max Saunders, Richard Stang, 2004
With the seventy-three pounds desolatingly clear in his mind, he quitted his desk
in order to reconnoiter the outer and larger portion of the counting-house. He
went as far as the archway, and saw black smoke being blown downwards from ...
Lee Foster Hartman, Frederick Lewis Allen, 1914
That the shanty never moved forward was worse than all else. Finished was the
fun of a new vagrancy every morning; this desolatingly stationary dwelling must
be swept and dusted. Worldly possessions, hereto~ fore so blesedly quiescent, ...
4
Memoirs, journal, and correspondence, ed. by lord J. Russell
The surgit amari aliquid is so desolatingly true ! Two of the speakers that
succeeded me very good, Murphy and Sheehan (editor of the "Mail"); the only
two I heard that struck me as likely to do in the House of Commons. Between four
and five, ...
Thomas Moore, John Russell (1st earl), 1854
5
Wise Parenthood, a Sequel to "Married Love": A Book for ...
... warm embrace and come down to the crudest material facts of douches and
chemicals at the moment when the whole relation should be one of tenderest
mutual feeling and repose, is desolatingly disillusioning to a romantic man or
woman.
Marie Charlotte Carmichael Stopes, 1919
6
Memoirs, journal, and correspondence
The surgit arnari 1 aliquid is so desolatingly true ! Two of the speakers that
succeeded me very good, Murphy and Sheehan (editor of the " Mail ") ; the only
two I heard that struck me as likely to do in the House of Commons. Between four
and ...
Thomas Moore, John Russell Russell (Earl), 1857
Convinced of his own weakness and inability to strike a blow so desolatingly
retaliatory as that for which his soul incessantly yearned, he determined to ally
himself to oue in whom he perceived the germs of lofty, proud, and glorious ...
8
The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art
... surrounded by clouds of sawdust and the gazing eyes of thousands, but in the
calm sanctuary of private life, where at least if he could find the courage, he might
pour forth the incense of his soul, and tell her how madly, how desolatingly he ...
9
The Eclectic Magazine: Foreign Literature
... surrounded by clouds of sawdust and the gazing eyes of thousands, but in the
calm sanctuary of private life, where at least if he could find the courage, he might
pour forth the incense of his soul, and tell her how madly, how desolatingly he ...
John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, 1847
10
Italy, France and Britain at war
It is not only the external equipment of our leaders that falls behind the times ; our
political and administrative services are in the hands of the same desolatingly
inadapt- able class. The British are still wearing spurs in Ireland; they are wearing
...
Herbert George Wells, 1917
4 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «DESOLATINGLY»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term
desolatingly is used in the context of the following news items.
SK Tremayne: The Ice Twins (HarperCollins)
The language is occasionally clunky as, for example, when a photo shows Kirstie and Lydia looking "desolatingly happy". Thankfully the locals ... «Herald Scotland, Feb 15»
Actors turned novelists: The good, bad and the terrible
What the critics said: "elegant, bleak, desolatingly sad", "its confidence and nuance indicates that it's probably time for him to try a novel" «Radio Times, Nov 14»
Tom Wright & Benedict Andrews - 'The War of the Roses', 2009
It was desolatingly beautiful, as exhilarating an act of theatre as I have seen. —Alison Croggon. About the author Alison Croggon. Alison Croggon is a poet and ... «The Monthly, Oct 11»
Con Houlihan: The moorland, the merrier
The moorland is beautiful in summer, but it is desolatingly lonely in winter. The people of the moorland love music and song, and, above all, ... «Herald.ie, May 11»