1.
ploughman, though generally regarded as the pattern of stupidity and ignorance, is seldom
2.
24 Does the ploughman plough all
3.
“I have never wanted to know the extent of your involvement with the Ploughman and his rebellion,” he said
4.
I have given every penny I could spare to the Ploughman
5.
“They want the Ploughman to come for her,” Jerome said
6.
The Ploughman will not come here
7.
Libuse had gone to the tall man in a cloak, the one they called the Ploughman; Maggie would follow
8.
She would leave the city of Pravik and try to find the Ploughman
9.
With miserable clarity she realized that she had no idea how to find the Ploughman
10.
“I need to talk to that man,” Maggie said, pointing to the Ploughman
11.
“I wish to speak with the Ploughman!” Maggie called back as the man moved in front of them
12.
“Stand up, then,” the Ploughman said
13.
The Ploughman silenced her with a wave of his hand
14.
The princess went to the Ploughman and they whispered together for a moment
15.
Cook sat with the Ploughman and the princess at the other end
16.
The Ploughman placed his hand on Libuse’s arm, but she pulled away
17.
“There will be a trial,” the Ploughman said
18.
“Soon,” the Ploughman said
19.
“No!” the Ploughman said
20.
“They already know that he’s innocent,” the Ploughman said
21.
The Ploughman sighed heavily
22.
The Ploughman dropped into his seat
23.
“Libuse,” the Ploughman said, smiling gently, “you are not talking like a general
24.
The Ploughman looked into her eyes for a long moment
25.
The Ploughman stood and began to pace by the fire
26.
“Give it to the Ploughman,” Mrs
27.
Lamplight cut a path through the mist from the farmhouse door, and the Ploughman and Libuse, warmly dressed in woolen cloaks, stepped into the barnyard
28.
Korak stood behind them with a ladle in her meaty hand, scowling, watching as the Ploughman greeted his visitors
29.
They held respect for her as did the people of the city—but not, Maggie noticed, more than they held for the Ploughman
30.
A young boy led two horses into the yard and stood near the Ploughman, silently holding the reins
31.
The Ploughman turned and took hold of his tall black horse
32.
The Ploughman galloped over the field, and the men mounted up and followed
33.
In the center of the room the Ploughman stood, quarterstaff in hand, his face solemn
34.
“Your lives,” the Ploughman said
35.
The Ploughman motioned toward a group of thirty or so men: those who had gathered with him in the farmyard
36.
“Perhaps he will kill you,” the Ploughman said
37.
Libuse moved from the wall and came to stand by the Ploughman
38.
“I followed the Ploughman to council this morning
39.
Cook sat quietly while boots stamped and voices filled the next room where the Ploughman and his men gathered around the long table
40.
The question leaped into her head, though it didn’t come out her mouth—how long had the Ploughman been preparing to attack Pravik? He had fought the suggestion that he do so, yet he owned detailed maps of the city
41.
Self-consciously Maggie began to leave the room, but the Ploughman held up his hand
42.
“We have made the decision to rescue the professor, no matter what it cost us,” the Ploughman said
43.
The Ploughman looked across the room to Libuse, then nodded
44.
“When the Ploughman was very young, his parents were killed in an outbreak of disease
45.
Antonin Zarras is not much older than the Ploughman, you know
46.
“Looks like the Ploughman has returned,” she said
47.
The Ploughman sat in long silence when he read the letter, his fist crumpling around the paper
48.
They knew better than to expect the Ploughman to pull food out of thin air
49.
Maggie rubbed her stiff arms and yawned, picking up the wooden crutch she had brought from the house of the Ploughman
50.
“Another hundred or so with the Ploughman
51.
“I thought you were going to give that thing to the Ploughman,” Pat said
52.
The Ploughman sat by the fire, his eyes scanning the heavens
53.
“A sign,” the Ploughman said, turning to look on his love
54.
“We need more than courage now,” the Ploughman said
55.
“If there is such a One,” the Ploughman said, “I would give anything to have him riding beside me now
56.
The Ploughman reached out and took his lady’s hand
57.
Maggie reached into her coat pocket and fingered a small map the Ploughman had given her
58.
A column of armed men marched behind her, and the Ploughman stood at her side
59.
The Ploughman and his men pushed past the soldiers
60.
His eyes went from Libuse to the Ploughman and back again, as though he wasn’t sure which was worse
61.
The Ploughman stepped close to the Overlord
62.
He towered over Zarras, and the Overlord shook as the Ploughman drew his sword
63.
“There will be a trial today,” the Ploughman said, raising his voice so all the crowd could hear
64.
“No,” the Ploughman said
65.
“I trained them,” the Ploughman said
66.
“Trained by a madman,” the Overlord said, so quiet that no one heard him but the Ploughman
67.
The Ploughman bowed his head and hefted his sword
68.
He looked up at the Ploughman in terror
69.
“You should have tried to kill me,” the Ploughman said, his face golden with rage
70.
“Because you are in no condition to fight,” Libuse said, “and the Ploughman wished that you both be kept safe until the battle was over
71.
“The Ploughman wishes it,” she said
72.
“If the battle is lost,” Libuse said, “it means that the Ploughman is lost
73.
The Ploughman thought of Libuse as he fought
74.
The Ploughman watched and gripped his sword more fiercely
75.
As blackness rushed in on him and pain threatened to overwhelm his senses, the Ploughman lifted his spear desperately and aimed blindly for the monster’s head
76.
The horned warrior roared with pain and dropped the Ploughman
77.
The Ploughman pulled his spear free and raised it high, screaming his battle cry over the streets of the city
78.
The Ploughman fell to his knees, suddenly exhausted
79.
At the head of the line the Ploughman walked
80.
Maggie stood near Jerome’s coffin as the Ploughman stood in the midst of his people and spoke of the battle and the courage of those who had fought
81.
The Ploughman and Libuse; Mrs
82.
In a way it seemed that they were still sitting in the old Pravik: the Pravik where Libuse had longed for the days of her ancestors; where the Ploughman had lost his brother in a riot sparked by hopelessness; where Huss had battled the Empire by teaching secret truths to all who would listen
83.
The big ploughman, Jacques Morin, standing besides him against the guardrail, nodded his head in approval
84.
yoke rests on the oxen and yet the ploughman is the one who drives
85.
'He is the son of my ploughman
86.
He wonders if the ploughman would accept a payment for him
87.
noun; San —, SaintIsidro ("the Ploughman", was born in the 12th
88.
AS I WATCH THE PLOUGHMAN PLOUGHING
89.
As I watch'd the ploughman ploughing,
90.
The ploughman revived, but Justin's syncope still lasted, and his eyeballs disappeared in the pale sclerotics like blue flowers in milk
91.
Then to explain his visit he said that his ploughman, the man of the blood-letting, still suffered from giddiness
92.
He put his letter at the bottom under some vine leaves, and at once ordered Girard, his ploughman, to take it with care to Madame Bovary
93.
But she and Wulfric had been stuck in a hole for ten years, and Harry Ploughman of Outhenby was the first person to offer them a way out of it
94.
“He ’s just a ploughman
95.
But Harry Ploughman and the younger set were excited by the changes and glad to have help in the fields
96.
They were all walking home from the fields at sundown, the adults work-weary, the children running on ahead, and Harry Ploughman bringing up the rear with the unharnessed oxen
97.
Harry Ploughman said the privilege extended to all Outhenby residents
98.
“Invited by the ploughman,” the voice of Carl Shaftesbury interrupted
99.
It was Harry Ploughman
100.
She ignored a group of shepherds in a distant pasture: shrewd Harry Ploughman would not waste big Sam on such light work