2209 examples of grieve in sentences
To grieve the Gaul's perfidious head; The hours, thy offspring heav'nly fair, Their whitest wings should ever wear, And gentle joys on Albion shed.
"Do not grieve over the fate of the emperor on the island of Elba.
How didst thou grieve then, Adam,
Even your dear papa thinks so still, but I dare not grieve God by going back.
I shall not pity the country; I shall feel only for those who grieve with me at its abject state; or for posterity, if they do not, like other degraded nations, grow callously reconciled to their ignominy.
He thought me mistaken in my view "Of the nature of the sin and error which is supposed to grieve God.
The view of all the sin and misery in the world cannot grieve God any more than it can grieve you to see Digby fail in his first attempt to build a card-castle or a rabbit-hutch.
The view of all the sin and misery in the world cannot grieve God any more than it can grieve you to see Digby fail in his first attempt to build a card-castle or a rabbit-hutch.
Kit, I am almost disappointed in you, though, that you do not grieve more for the loss of that beautiful poem.
I grieve to bring such news, for your cousin was a worthy gentleman and universally respected.
"A man had two sons, an' one obeyed him for fear o' the whip, an' the other, because he loved his father, an' could not bear to grieve him.
Though, madam, for your brother's loss I grieve, Yet let me beg Alm.
But I, the most unhappy of mankind, Ere I knew yours, have all my love resigned: 'Tis my own loss I grieve, who have no more: You go a-begging to a bankrupt's door.
What I have heard I blush to hear: And grieve, Those words you spoke I must your words believe.
I joy in you less than for her I grieve.
I grieve to see it.
someone who had a greater claim on your time than the poor exile ..." "Nay! 'tis unkind thus to grieve me," she said with tender reproach as she felt the hot tears gather in her eyes.
Don't grieve about me.
And we did covet, and we did grieve.
There was, we grieve to say, much of joy but more of laughter at the rectory when this letter was received.
Mary ever wrote so as to satisfy the most exacting disposition; but it required all Mrs. Hamilton's eloquence to persuade Emmeline she should rather rejoice than grieve that Mary had found some one to supply her place.
When comes that surge, or soon or late, May they in peace depart; And meet within the shining gate, No more to grieve or part.
'Tis useless now to speculate, Or grieve o'er that which might have been, My failures though they have been great, Are not the greatest I have seen.
There is a time to laugh and sing, A time to mourn and grieve as well; Then let your song and laughter ring, This is no time on griefs to dwell.
One cannot but grieve" "You had a proposition, for the brigantine?"
