2633 examples of come of in sentences

One brought water to wash his feet, and one brought wine to chase away, with a refreshing sweetness, the sorrows that had come of late so thick upon him, and hurt his noble mind.

If this principle on the part of mothers in America in providing for their children were confined to such superficialities as their clothing, no appreciable harmor goodwould come of it.

Her feet were little, and her hands were soft and white; nor had toil and sorrow, and the weariness, and indifference to self, that come of them, as yet impaired the symmetry of her well-turned shape, or the elasticity of her free and graceful carriage.

But what if one should come of the same turn of mind as his own, and who sees much farther on his own way than he?

Among the pursuers spurred a certain patrician named Marcellus, who was come of a very noble house.

Thus the time passed away; accounts had already come of the death of Antigonus Doson, who had suddenly died nearly at the same time with Hasdrubal; in Cisalpine Gaul the establishment of fortresses was carried on by the Romans with redoubled rapidity and energy; preparations were made in Rome for putting a speedy end in the course of the next spring to the insurrection in Illyria.

Who knows, thought I to myself, but more may come of this plot, than I had even promised myself?

But I doubt if any good would come of this correspondence.

Often, and often, have I seen the sun rise ill the east, and no harm done; but little good can come of a day when the light first breaks in the west.

"Only God and my own heart know how far short I come of what I ought to be, and how often I mar the use He would make of me even when I would serve Him."

Because they come of strong peasant stock, and accomplish a large amount of work.

It was proposed at one time by some of the inhabitants, and again by Governor Stuyvesant, that negroes be armed with tomahawks and sent in punitive expeditions against the Indians, but nothing seems to have come of that.

we must be obliging to Americans, or who knows what may come of it?" It should be observed, however, that on a "field night" not one of the modes of admission which I have described will be of any service.

This illegitimate union of three contradictories fritters character away, breaks it up into discordant parts, and dissolves into mercurial fluidity that leavening sincerity and free and cheerful boldness, which come of harmonious principles of faith and action, and without which men can never walk as confident lovers of justice and truth.

It has been in his pleasure to place us in this extraordinary situation, and I hope that something good will come of it.

He understood why she had so eagerly taken up Henrietta Hastings's suggestion, made probably with no idea that anything would come of itHenrietta was full of schemes, evolved not for action, but simply to pass the time and to cause talk in the town.

" The eyes of each rested in the other's after the manner we know and the thought passed between them, that if further news was yet to come of the lost artillerist, any soul-reviving news, it would almost certainly come first to New Orleans and from the men in blue.

Thus, regarding miracles as means to fulfil a purpose, Mr. Mozley shows what has come of them.

What is the upshot which has come of these efforts, and whether the controversies of the moment have not in his case, as in others, diverted and absorbed faculties which might have been turned to calmer and more permanent tasks, we do not inquire.

New hope may bloom, And days may come Of milder, calmer beam,

I allers knew no good would come of my son joining 'em," the man shouted.

VII "A little school of Christian people stood Down at the farther end, in which there were A nest of children come of Christian blood, 45 That learnèd in that school from year to year Such sort of doctrine as men used there, That is to say, to sing and read also, As little children in their childhood do.

And then, of course, there was the secret thought of John's death and what might come of it.

Let us be glad, dear friends, let us rejoice while we walk here on this flowery earth; may the end never come of our flowers and songs, but may they continue in the mansion of the Giver of Life.

"I come of a race that pays little deference to monastic life, for we are refugees from the severity of Louis; but yet I never heard my father charge these females with being so regardless of their vows.

2633 examples of  come of  in sentences