Which preposition to use with feel
Seeing that it was useless to expect to make out anything, with the light so high, I felt in my pockets for a piece of twine, with which to lower it further into the opening.
On looking around, I found myself lying on what had been the ceiling of our chamber, which still, however, felt like the bottom.
Cautiously, I get upon my knees, and feel for the central bolt.
It was such an entirely different world from any I had been accustomed to that it took me some time to feel at home in my new milieu.
Mr. Barnett's very accurate explosivesSlade's insistenceyour risking your lives as you did, mites on the crust of a red-hot cheeseI hope you know how I feel about it all.
I have the queer, faint, pit-water smell of it in my nostrils now as I write, and my fingers have subconscious memories of the soft, "cloggy" feel of the long-damp pages.
Evidently, some of the brutes were feeling with their claw-hands, about the door, to discover whether there were any means of ingress.
He proposes a poem to be called "Elegiac Stanzas to a Sucking Pig," and of "Alice Fell" he writes that "if the publishing of such trash as this be not felt as an insult on the public taste, we are afraid it cannot be insulted."
"Oh, they express quite sufficiently the grief I feel on this occasion.
It is, I say, because I am forced to express the gratitude I then felt to the holy goddess who was the promiser and bestower of Love's delights.
The attraction he had, even from their first introduction, felt towards Miss Morriston had become quickly intensified by their strangely confidential talk on the previous evening.
"I reckon I've betrayed your confidence, sir," said MONTGOMERY, desperately; "but you must have known, from hearsay at least, how I have felt toward this young lady ever since our first meeting, and should not have exposed me to a temptation stronger than I could bear.
'tis losing time; For what is Death, a pain that's sooner ended Than what I felt from every frown of hers?
They felt under her pillow again, but never thought of looking at the shawls of the baby who lay so peacefully by her side; and then at last they crept away and closed the door gently behind them.
"The colossal remains of shattered mountain chains speak of the greatness of God; and man is encouraged and lifts himself up by them, feeling within himself the same spirit and power.
If you feel after this time still responsible, and that you have a certain duty, still remember, even so, you might be very unhappy together all your lives.
But one feels by day anything but good will to note the shorn shrubs and cropped blossom-tops.
At this moment a sudden and violent earthquake was felt through all the extensive scene.
After the death of St. Dominic the Inquisition gradually assumed a more definite and avowed character, and its repressive hand, inflicting terrible punishments upon accused heretics, was soon felt throughout Southern Europe, and later in the Netherlands, the order of St. Dominic at first furnishing its principal agents.
Republic, strength of feeling against the, in Paris "society;" enthusiasm of farmers over the; disappointment of statesmen in the; moderation of feeling in society circles toward the, at present time.
Tonnison was grumpy, and I felt out of sorts.
There is great tenderness felt over the stomach, followed by clammy perspirations and convulsions; the legs are often drawn up, and there is generally stupor, from which the patient, however, can easily be roused, and always great prostration of strength.
My twelve stone had dwindled to the weight of a small fowl, and hooking my little finger into the loop of a string hung from a peg fixed near the top of the stern wall, I found myself able thus to support my weight without any sense of fatigue for a quarter of an hour or more; in fact, I felt during that time absolutely no sense of muscular weariness.
In his sleep, he dreams that BUMSTEAD examines him closely, with a view to gaining some clue to the mystery of the light behind both their backs; and, on finding the lantern under him, and, studying it profoundly for some time, is suddenly moved to feel along his own back.
It sought its channel daintily, as streamlets do, feeling among the stones in eddies, quiet pools, miniature falls, and rapids.