844 collocations for viewed

While we were viewing this scene, a long wagon train came pulling up the hill, bound out from Fort Leavenworth to some distant frontier post.

We are not ignorant how far popular credulity will go, above all when it is under the influence of excited feelings, which makes it view all things in the same light.

Those under whom we served did not view the matter in the same light I did, however, for we kept the title we liked best during all the time we served in the army.

It was his desire to do the honours thoroughly which led him to remark after he had given her the main facts of the tragedy: "I'm sorry I cannot take you to view the body.

Father and one or two of the men went on to Fort Riley to view the country, and upon their return my uncle entertained the Pottawattamie Indians with a barbecue similar to the one given by father to the Kickapoos.

Thus viewing the subject, I have heretofore felt it my duty to recommend the adoption of some plan for the distribution of the surplus funds, which may at any time remain in the Treasury after the national debt shall have been paid, among the States, in proportion to the number of their Representatives, to be applied by them to objects of internal improvement.

For him, a dizzy plank is a pleasant belvedere from which to view the world.

But soon with alter'd looks askance They view his sable face and form, When they perceive the scornful glance Of the head boy, young Henry Orme.

The next few days I spent in viewing the sights of New York, everything being new and startling, convincing me that as yet I had seen but a small portion of the world.

As a matter of course we two lads followed, I making every effort to keep pace with him, lest those who were watching should suspect I was not as brave as I looked, and in a few moments we had shut out from view the houses of the settlement.

"Later on the detective went to view the place where the find had been made, and there conceived the plan upon which he built big cherished hopes.

I desire that the blessed Saviour may more and more be the medium through which I may view every object as worthy [or unworthy] the pursuit of a devoted Christian.

O thou dear witness of those charming Hours, How do I bless thee, how am I pleas'd to view thee After a tedious Age of Six Months Banishment.

My dearest Lady! view your slave, Behold him as your very Scrub; Eager to write, as authour grave, Or govern well, the brewing-tub.

He viewed his whole life now, in epitome, and much as you may see at night the hackneyed vista from your window leap to incisiveness under the lash of lightning.

I found tolerable quarters in a house on the plaza, and took the remaining hour of daylight to view the town.

Let us rest on our oars a moment, here in the bay, to view the scenery around us, as seen by the mellow moonlight.

Duchemin was grateful for the moonlight which alone enabled him to keep the road and avoid the worst of the goinguntil he remembered that without the moon there would have been no expedition that night to view the mock ruins of Montpellier by its unearthly light, and consequently no adventure to entangle him.

Duchemin saw him swerve from his first course and steer for a vehicle standing at some distanceevidently the conveyance which had brought the sightseers to view the spectacle of Montpellier-le-Vieux by moonlight.

The empress Matilda and her husband Geoffrey, unfortunately, were unpopular both in England and Normandy, the English barons especially viewing with disfavor the prospect of a woman occupying the throne.

Many of the wives and daughters of officers stationed at Annapolis turned out to view the work.

And so, secure in his position, he proceeded to view Henshaw's attempts to ingratiate himself with an amused equanimity.

Certainly he always viewed with amusement his victim's wonder.

That article, by depriving an arbitral award of finality and conferring the power of review on a political body with authority to order a rehearing, shows that the President believed that more complete justice would be rendered if the precepts and rules of international law were in a measure subordinated to political expediency and if the judges were not permitted to view the questions solely from the standpoint of legal justice.

He, who has been much accustomed to view men, need not be told that none are so arrogant with their inferiors, as those who are oppressed by their superiors; for poor human nature has a secret longing to revenge itself on the weak for all the injuries it receives from the strong.

844 collocations for  viewed