28 examples of vagabondage in sentences

The blood warms and the nerves tingle after the tensions and heats of a quarter of a century as those days of sublime vagabondage come back.

Homeless all of them; their common vagabondage is only a matter of degrees of decency.

Through these Iliads of vagabondage ran an irresponsible gaiety, a non-morality, and a kind of unbrave zest for adventure.

Thus the coco-tree would seem to play an essential part in the ocean vagabondage of Malaysia and Polynesia.

After a spell of "philosophic vagabondage" on the Continent, he settled in London in 1756, earned money in various ways, and spent it all.

It is a pity that he cannot get back to sea, but he has had the fever, and no master seems to want him, and he has been forced into vagabondage.

But beyond all that, she rejoiced in him; in his emancipation from the line and precept which had so tightly confined her; in his very vagabondage.

* * DIEGO DE MENDOZA Lazarillo de Tormes Don Diego Hurtado de Mendoza's career was hardly of a kind that would be ordinarily associated with a lively romance of vagabondage.

It was true that the old man scarcely represented the usual worthless, criminal type that took to vagabondage.

The narrator of the episode attributed the impulse for suicide to the taste for vagabondage and the hatred for work which the negroes had acquired from the bandit.

R59420. CHANGE PARTNERS, a vagabondage, by Horace Annesley Vachell.

Intellectual vagabondage.

Intellectual vagabondage.

Having no more to do in their own prince's service, they had spread abroad over France, which they called "their apartment," and recommenced, in the countries between the Seine and the Loire, their life of vagabondage and pillage.

Rabelais relapsed into his life of embarrassment and vagabondage; on leaving France he had recourse, first at Metz and afterwards in Italy, to the assistance of his old and ever well-disposed patron, Cardinal John Du Bellay.

ON A PERFECT VAGABONDAGE 3.

II NIGHTS OUT ON A PERFECT VAGABONDAGE I I have been a whole season in the wilds, tramping or idling on the Black Sea shore, living for whole days together on wild fruit, sleeping for the most part under the stars, bathing every morning and evening in the clear warm sea.

Such was my night under the old yews, the first spent with these southern stars on a long vagabondage.

My long vagabondage she calls my Karma.

Graham has given us in this robust book a classic of educated yet wild vagabondage.

Such universal philanthropists, I have often suspected, are people of very cold hearts, who fancy they love the whole world, because they are incapable of loving any thing in it, and live in a state of "moral vagabondage," (as it is happily termed by Gregoire,) in order to be exempted from the ties of a settled residence.

"Le cosmopolytisme de systeme et de fait n'est qu'un vagabondage physique ou moral: nous devons un amour de preference a la societe politique dont nous sommes membres."

Such universal philanthropists, I have often suspected, are people of very cold hearts, who fancy they love the whole world, because they are incapable of loving any thing in it, and live in a state of "moral vagabondage," (as it is happily termed by Gregoire,) in order to be exempted from the ties of a settled residence.

"Le cosmopolytisme de systeme et de fait n'est qu'un vagabondage physique ou moral: nous devons un amour de preference a la societe politique dont nous sommes membres."

No man in the great Boston Jubilee got more out of Johann Strauss, in his "Kunstleben," that inimitable expression of inspired vagabondage, than he did.

28 examples of  vagabondage  in sentences