253 collocations for woven

These arose when they saw strangers, and ramped upon their hinder paws, and fawned upon Eurylochus and his men, who dreaded the effects of such monstrous kindness; and staying at the gate they heard the enchantress within, sitting at her loom, singing such strains as suspended all mortal faculties, while she wove a web, subtle and glorious, and of texture inimitable on earth, as all the housewiferies of the deities are.

There is a record of over five hundred pleas of the Gloucestershire fifty years later, and among all these there is outside the town of Gloucester but one case which deals with the lawful width for weaving cloth, and one or two as to the sale of bread, ale, or wine.

You cannot succeed as a writer of "lite comidy" if you continue to weave such tragic spells.

The spinsters and the knitters when they sit in the sun, and the young maids that weave their thread with bone, chaunt this song.

All the words in all the world Cannot tell you how I love you, All the little stars that shine To make a silver crown above you; "ALL THE WORDS IN ALL THE WORLD" All the flowers cannot weave A garland worthy of your hair, Not a bird in the four winds Can sing of you that is so fair.

Fate may have woven the patterns of our being.

Now amuse yourself by weaving a romance out of them and their owner.

They know how to weave baskets and make simple sandals.

If, then, Tracts for the Million seem a necessity, they also seem an impossibility; for what self-respecting man will sit down to weave that tissue of sophistry, special-pleading, violence, and vulgarity, which alone will serve the practical purpose with those to whom trenchency is everything and subtlety nothing?

Like nearly every other bayman, he had a one-room shanty, which he called the "shop," and where he played at building boats, and weaving nets, and making oars and tongs.

Why will he permit the cunning and rapacious spiders, which in the very sanctuary of ethics and religion are laboriously weaving webs from their own bowels, to catch him with their wretched sophistries?and devour him, body, soul, and substance? Let him know, as he must one day with shame and terror own, that whoever holds slaves is himself responsible for the relation, into which, whether reluctantly or willingly, he thus enters.

I too have woven my garment like another, but I shall try to keep warm in it, and shall be well content if it do not unbecome me.

Our author has woven his story without any reference to the play of circumstance upon his characters.

The morn and eve and named them day, Night comes with all its darkening fears; Regard Thy people's prayers and tears, Lest sunk in sin, and whelmed with strife, They lose the gift of endless life; While thinkingbut the thoughts of time, They weave new chains of woe and crime.

MUSGRAVE, ELIZABETH WORST How to weave linens.

1 'Weave the warp and weave the woof, The winding-sheet of Edward's race; Give ample room and verge enough The characters of hell to trace: Mark the year, and mark the night, When Severn shall re-echo with affright The shrieks of death through Berkley's roofs that ring, Shrieks of an agonizing king!

The dramatist takes the presence of the banjo as the central fact of his drama, and weaves his plot around it.

It opens like a fan, and discovers a frame such as they weave lace upon at Lyons and Chambery.

The Decameron fully revealed his genius, his ability to weave the tales of all lands and all ages into one harmonious whole; from the confused mass of legends of the Middle Ages, he evolved a world of human interest and dazzling beauty, fixed the kaleidoscopic picture of Italian society, and set it in the richest frame of romance.

1 'Weave the warp and weave the woof, The winding-sheet of Edward's race; Give ample room and verge enough The characters of hell to trace: Mark the year, and mark the night, When Severn shall re-echo with affright The shrieks of death through Berkley's roofs that ring, Shrieks of an agonizing king!

With fingers deft Celinda wove a wreath, in which were set The rose's rudy petals and the scented mignonette.

But however rough or illiterate this girl may be, I think she has a soul, a longing for something she does not possess," went on Mary, who was weaving fancies and theories together in quite a remarkable fashion for her.

Sleep no more, Venus, wrapped in purple woof Wake, violet-stoled queen, and weave the crown Of death,'tis

Then there is frail Wilhelmina Musgravethat famed beauty whose two-hundred-year-old story all Lichfield knows, and no genealogist has ever cared to detaileternally weaving flowers about her shepherd hat.

The underbrush had long interposed a veil between him and the Cedars above whose roofs smoke wreathed in the still air like fantastic figures weaving a shroud to lower over the time-stained, melancholy walls.

253 collocations for  woven