Which preposition to use with digressions
The little girl was well able to find her way to the cottage and always went without attempting any digressions from the path.
The former, the gonado-centric personality, is a digression of growth, a deviated evolution of the individual because of the conflicting forces, some masculine and some feminine, in his make-up.
From this ode is struck out a digression on the nature of odes, and the comparative excellence of the ancients and moderns.
You will pardon this philosophic digression in respect to the peculiar feelings of a man who has just been "up in a balloon."
To return from this digression to my first essay in lecturing work.
Digressions for the traveller in England.
My office obliges me on this occasion to remark, that the regard due to the dignity of the house ought to restrain every member from digressions into private satire; for in proportion as we proceed with less decency, our determinations will have less influence.
The only reason we know for the digression about Perseus which occupies great part of this ode seems to be that Thorax, who engaged Pindar to write it for Hippokleas, and perhaps Hippokleas himself, belonged to the family of the Aleuadai, who were descended through Herakles from Perseus.
I have been led into this trifling digression by speaking of the houses now built in that suburb of Birmingham inhabited by the wealthier classes.
After this general view of the dialogues of Plato, let us in the next place consider their preambles, the digressions with which they abound, and the character of the style in which they are written.
The descriptions of this author are without minuteness, and the digressions without ostentation.