Which preposition to use with feeling
I experienced a queer, indescribable, little feeling of nervousness.
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.
He had been a diplomatist, was in Germany at the time of the Franco-German War, and like so many of his colleagues scattered over Germany, was quite aware of the growing hostile feeling in Germany to France and also of Bismarck's aims and ambitions.
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.
Thus, he condemned gratitude as a sentiment calculated to weaken the sense of justice, and to substitute feeling for reason.
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.
He had once imparted to us his feelings on that subject with a frank and tender simplicity, highly graceful in an upright and magnanimous being, conscious of no sentiment that he could wish to conceal.
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.
"I can't understand," he began, "why you should have this unkind feeling towards me.
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."
But now she insisted on showing it to him, and he read: 'DEAR BRUCE, 'I'm not going to make any appeal to your feelings with regard to your mother and the children, because if you had thought even of me a little this would not have happened.
"Oh, they express quite sufficiently the grief I feel on this occasion.
It is curious how long that hostile feeling toward Germany has lasted in France.
I don't think I had any feeling about this as I turned away from that common bustle of the railway which made my private preoccupations feel so strangely out of date.
The author of this extraordinary work proved himself a profound anatomist of feeling by the subtlety with which he dissected a woman's heart."
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.
He brushed away the snow, touching the thing with a mittened hand and a creepy feeling at his spine.
I even ventured to hint my feelings to the Brahmin; but he, gently rebuking my impatience, said "If to return home had been your only object, and not to see what not one of your nation or race has ever yet seen, you ought to have so informed me, that we might have arranged matters accordingly.
The personal feeling against the French Emperor, so often displayed in the columns of the Tribune, has frequently been a subject of comment.
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.
He assured the House that the sensation was repugnant to his feelings as a manmuch more as a Congressman.
No, we put a value on keepin' up good feeling between us and you, Mr. Donnegan.