379 collocations for pitied

'What d'ye want here,' he said, 'pitying a man?

Nay, thou hast a hard task on't, to make Vows to all the Women he makes love to; Indeed I pity thee; ha, ha, ha.

Could I meet in Paris ze pitying eyes of friends?" * *

When I arrived at the village about sundown, the good people bestirred themselves, pitying my bedraggled condition as if I were some benumbed castaway snatched from the sea, while I, in turn, warm with excitement and reeking like the ground, pitied them for being dry and defrauded of all the glory that Nature had spread round about them that day.

You pity the girl.

Hazlitt, who boldly says all he feels, avows that not only he does not pity sick people, but he hates them.

"Is he alive?" Johnnie, generous soul, even in the intense preoccupation of her own pain, could pity the woman who looked and spoke thus.

"He is the son of God who, pitying creatures, came into the world and suffered death in their stead."

The Prussians seem determined to revenge themselves for the humiliation they suffered from the French during the time they occupied their country, and I sincerely pity by anticipation the fate of the French peasants upon whom these gentlemen may chance to be quartered.

The sincere sorrow that Oliver expressed for his offences made such a lively impression on the kind heart of Aliena, that she instantly fell in love with him; and Oliver observing how much she pitied the distress he told her he felt for his fault, he as suddenly fell in love with her.

And thou, still happy Academico, That still may'st rest upon the muses' bed, Enjoying there a quiet slumbering, When thou repair'st unto thy Granta's stream, Wonder at thine own bliss, pity our case, That still doth tread ill-fortune's endless maze; Wish them, that are preferment's almoners, To cherish gentle wits in their green bud; For had not Cambridge been to me unkind, I had not turn'd to gall a milky mind.

Many give freely of their abundance, pity the poor, comfort the afflicted, and make our city loved and honored in other lands as in our own.

" "It is true," interposed a Chief, probably pitying my ignorance.

they were very serious, and they have the truth from Hero, and seem to pity the lady.

When you saw Bobby in the Duke's Servant, you said, what a pity such a pretty fellow was only a servant.

I pity the misfortunes of Jemshíd, driven as he is by adversity from the splendor of a throne, and reduced to a state of destitution and ruin.

Murderers and thieves were his companions, yet even among them did he pursue his labors, until God, by means of a pious gentlewoman, who had seen and pitied his sufferings, relieved him.

O, PITY THE SLAVE MOTHER.

But this humble speech of Helena's did not at all move the haughty Bertram to pity his gentle wife, and he parted from her without even the common civility of a kind farewel.

How I pity that boy, Lyubóv dear!

She pitied me!by my soul, she pitied me!

As you crouch down within the shelter of your howdah, you can't help pitying the poor wretch, and incline to think that, after all, shooting in grass jungle has fewer drawbacks and is preferable to forest shooting.

The little one did not pity the blind children at all.

Who will not pity the 200,000 slaves of this State, who are at the "tender mercies" of these sanguinary men?

Oh, pity me, my Lord, pity my Youth; It is no Beggar, nor one basely born, That I have given my Heart to, but a Maid, Whose Birth, whose Beauty, and whose Education Merits the best of Men.

379 collocations for  pitied