283 Verbs to Use for the Word horrors

I wonder have any ever felt the horror of life that I have come to know?

This remembered resemblance, or an instinctive sympathy, at once conveyed to me the consciousness that the absolute stillness of her attitude expressed a horror or an awe too deep for trembling.

Then I some way saw the horror, reflected in her face, and realized the requirements of leadership.

" I cannot make the feeblest attempt at describing the horror which took possession of me as I realized that we could make no effort toward saving the unfortunate men, who were not the less to be pitied because they had brought about their own misery, and, unable longer to gaze at what was so soon to be such a terrible scene, I turned away with a mind to shut myself up in the barracks.

"I had no pain," he observed afterwards, "and so little dejection in this dreadful state, that I wondered at my own apathy, and considered, that perhaps death itself, when it should come, would excite less horror than seems now to attend it."

They could have none of that wholly novel, strange, incalculable character which sometimes had given to the chances of my etherial voyage a vague horror and mystery that appalled imagination.

This brought with it instantly all the most frightful horrors of war.

How I got down the stair I do not know; but I, too, turned back along the lower hall, expecting any instant to come upon I knew not what horror; I reached an open door, passed through it, and found myself in the laundry, in the midst of a group of excited and indignant women, who greeted my appearance with a fresh series of screams.

But when the placid face of his friend met his, bathed in the fresh benediction of his altar servicenew each morning and never omittedhe forgot the horror with which he had been reasoning that Fra Paolo was hastening the curse upon Venice.

He lay or sat still, shivering every now and then as he remembered or imagined some horror.

The insurrectionary passion among the colored people was kindled, too, around Baltimore, Norfolk, Charleston, and New Orleans by certain Negroes who to escape the horrors of the political upheaval in Santo Domingo, immigrated into this country in 1793.

Direr still, hideous clamor of masked cannon, right in their very faces, added the horror of surprise to the disorder of attack, and the thick blue lines broke in irrestrainable confusion.

the cruel, toneless words!After my tedious recovery I made an effort to see Mrs. Weston, although I had conceived a horror of the woman, but she was gone.

It is impossible to leave them incessantly exposed to this disorder and license; but such is my destiny, and I am forced to endure the horror of it to the very end."

The death of Digby served to increase the horror of the Moseleys, and Jarvis himself felt rather uncomfortable, on more accounts than one, at the fatal termination of the unpleasant business.

What though ye suffer the grievous horror of a prison?

Who shall paint his horror and stupefaction at the sight of Gervais!

It is not, however, necessary for us to look beyond our own country, to find all the horrors of the slave traffic!

One prayer was in his heartone hopethat Wesley had escaped; but with shuddering horror he hastened with Barney back to the scene of blood and death.

Lucterius, who had witnessed the horrors of famine during the investment of that town, now took especial care of the provisions.

On March 25, 1919, Lloyd George presented the following memorandum to the conference: I When nations are exhausted by wars in which they have put forth all their strength and which leave them tired, bleeding and broken, it is not difficult to patch up a peace that may last until the generation which experienced the horrors of the war has passed away.

"Yes," said Sir Edward, a faint smile hovering about his lips as he remembered his horror of her advent; "she is taking charge of me this afternoon.

At last night sinks and hides the horrors of the day.

His message struck a horror, checked by love, through all the faculties of Calypso.

For that building, of which the side-front is still visible, is the brain of the British Army in France, and on the men who work there depend the fortunes of that distant line where our brothers and sons are meeting face to face the horrors and foulnesses of war.

283 Verbs to Use for the Word  horrors