671 examples of in the library in sentences

No. 5 is the facsimile of a signature to a letter which was written in the Library of the British Museum to "My dear Knolle"; the letter ends: "Believe me (in haste), yours most truly."

He said that when he got to Riversbrook there was a light in the library and he got over the fence and hid himself in the garden.

It must have been because I was never spoken to at all, that I forgot what was right and what was wrong, for I do not believe that I ever remembered I was doing wrong all the time I was reading in the library.

The next day, about the hour when the house was tranquil, from the circumstance that most of its inmates were abroad on their several avocations of boating, riding, shopping, or walking, Eve was in the library, her father having left it, a few minutes before, to mount his horse.

John Moseley eagerly profited by this opportunity, and the very day after the conversation in the library he went to Benfield Lodge as a dutiful nephew, to see his venerable uncle safely restored once more to the abode of his ancestors.

Her father was in the library, there was no sound in the house to drown the voice, the passionately pleading voice which rang in her ears.

Some day also I may tell how I came back into my rightful inheritance of Grosbois, which is still darkened to me by the thought of that terrible uncle of mine, and of what happened that night when Toussac stood at bay in the library.

In Professor Ebeling's copy, now in the library of Harvard College, is the continuation, in manuscript, [perhaps the original,] and which was never printed, by JOHN MARTIN BOLZIUS, dated January, 1765.

"Well, he was alone in the library for half an hour about five days before.

Of course, such a book has not been the work of a day, month, or, perhaps, a year; and its literature entitles it to a permanent place in the library, where we hope to see it stand auro perennius; were its fate to be otherwise, we should condemn the publicfor we hate ingratitude in every shapeand write in the first page the epitaphFor, O, for, O, the hobby-horse is forgot.

" In the library he set to reading Professor Giuccamini; but he found himself disagreeing with the professor.

in Paris in 1378.Fac-simile of a Miniature in the Description of this Interview, Manuscript of the Fifteenth Century, in the Library of the Arsenal of Paris.]

Hammond's MS. drafts are in the Library of Congress.]

in the Library of Congress.

These, arriving in succession, and with infinite rapidity, had been deposited at randomas the convenience of the moment dictatedsofas in the cellar, hampers of ale in the drawing-room, and fiddles and fish-sauce in the library.

The tension was relieved by the young son of our hostess in the library just beyond having overheard our conversation.

The body in the library.

In the library of the Monastery, which is built on the top of a mountain, and in the middle of the chief town, may be seen bulls from two of the Popes, and a protection from the Emperor Charles the Sixth, issued to protect the island from their incursions.

" "The day before yesterday, two Commissaries belonging to the section of Mutius Scaevola, entered my father-in-law's apartments; they found some law-books in the library, and, notwithstanding the decree which exempts from seizure the works of Domat and Charles Dumouin, (although they treat of feudal matters,) they proceeded to lay violent hands on one half of the collection, and loaded two porters with paternal spoils.

7. The best teachers are usually those who are free, competent, and willing to make original researches in the library and the laboratory.

[104] The MS. is now in the library of Caius College, Cambridge, and is contained in the volume numbered 595 in the catalogue.

Leaping 140 years, an odd tale is thus lovingly recorded of another sub-librarian, the Rev. A. Hackman, who died in 1874: 'During all the time of his service in the library (thirty-six years) he had used as a cushion in his plain wooden armchair a certain vellum-bound folio, which by its indented side, worn down by continual pressure, bore testimony to the use to which it had been put.

"You are wanted in the library, dearest Emmeline," said the young Countess St. Eval.

I reply, evasively, "that I shall be in the library, and that I will ring for ERNEST (I lay stress on the word ERNEST, as excluding the two others) when I am ready for him.

I read in the library until late, hearing the howl of the wind outside with satisfaction in the warmth and comfort of the great room.

671 examples of  in the library  in sentences