1.
Would you rather I didn’t?” he said and we didn’t say another word until we walked by the new harbor cemetery
2.
Kayaks were only useful in the harbor and lagoons most of the time
3.
They had a good duskmeal where they could hear the echo of that show across the harbor
4.
It has a little lake of its own giving it a square mile of harbor and a few more square miles of lon
5.
It was a couple miles to open water from this harbor
6.
Tiny Robot Archimedes calculated that his presence in the harbor with an eye patch ran numbers similar to a man who had a corgi puppy in a brothel
7.
As they went further along South Harbor Road, he worried that the cargo level wouldn't be tall enough to take the backbone of this rig
8.
Cargo was transferred from lake vessels to urban canal rafts in the outer harbor and then towed by rope into and thru the canals
9.
As one comes into the harbor from the upper Lhar, the city is framed in the opening
10.
Here they got to paddle down the old inner harbor for almost a mile, lit only by the bow lanterns of ships at dock
11.
There is one point where it opens out into a pond larger than the one in Yoonbarla, three different canals lead under ten floors of city out to the harbor, another goes back into the city and the ship canal
12.
Then they were out in North Harbor
13.
Mostly it was a looming leafy mound behind them as they made their way out across the harbor to KangDarceen
14.
The largest harbor in the world was 60 acres in Athens
15.
This city needed a Helen on duty in this harbor at all times to launch these thousand ships
16.
“A ship is safe in harbor, but that’s not what ships are for
17.
The great torches of the main docks were not quite visible, but their light showed on the faces of the harbor walls
18.
It's a good thing this wind is back or there'd be outbound traffic backed up, the current's the strongest you ever see on this river going into that harbor
19.
Now he brought up a vector field over all the nearby objects large enough to possibly harbor condensates
20.
Their fields were all over the other side of the harbor and behind the beach
21.
If she only had a view of the harbor, her med panel and some reading material, she would be OK to chill in this dungeon until whoever was running this game made their next move
22.
Well fed, dressed like the better class of peasant women, and with a much better ID, they set off on the road to the harbor and passage to the 57th century
23.
It should have been a two hour hike thru well cultivated farmlands til they reached the harbor
24.
If Ava really was mortal, she would have been aching and exhausted by the time they finally came into the harbor
25.
The breakwater that surrounded the harbor was barely visible now
26.
Yellelle took them to a lichen covered wooden cabin near the end of the harbor
27.
A sleek Brazilian jetliner took them the last three hundred and fifty years, flying around and around the harbor in a steep bank for forty five minutes before landing
28.
Along the inner cliffs there were much taller buildings and the track for a hanger that ran twenty floors above the harbor
29.
And that dark harbor too, maybe not AS bad, but it is a deserted and derelict place that she drew, I’m afraid she was feeling that inside
30.
And those remaining, very few, who through bigotry or sheer ignorance had despised the little family's presence in the village, now had to be very cautious indeed to at least never publicly hint at any lingering misgivings regarding the Livingsons they might still privately harbor
31.
He had the driver race up the harbor to beat her there
32.
The dock sign promised a safe harbor for a penny a week or tenner a year
33.
Two travelers without a home harbor, but with a well anticipated destination: the Livingson Bungalow Lodges, Tahoe City, California
34.
9He will not always accuse, nor will he harbor his anger forever;
35.
The Britainic sailed on schedule on the evening tide from the Chelsea Docks in New York harbor
36.
You can see all the way down to its mouth at Fourth Harbor if you look thru the leaves of the plaza's north rail
37.
That canal was where the products of the Hyadrain Valley's heavy industry were floated out to the great canal called Fourth Harbor
38.
"Oh I don't know about that, as I remember it, it was about like two trips to the harbor and back
39.
He got deep behind West Harbor, thru the collar by Rankor Hill and almost to the other plumbing district below the Hyadrain valley
40.
I can't see down to the harbor, but I can see horizon
41.
You can't see the Klehymnehorn til you're two miles down the docks on south harbor, but when you're on it, it's high
42.
From the bridge they had a great view of the back harbor where the Imoneea goes thru the great locks flanking Imoneea Island
43.
South Harbor Beach looked like part of the harbor since it was flat white sand while the island was tall
44.
By the time they reached the South Harbor Dockwall the torches were lit above the piers
45.
Kunae twinkled in the water of the harbor
46.
South Harbor spread miles of open water in all directions
47.
After she was out of sight he stayed and looked out over South Harbor from this rail forty stories above the docks
48.
The only other Desa he had any chance of tracking was the one who compiled a master tape for a little studio out toward fourth harbor
49.
I nearly got raped by a mondo-mama at a little tape studio over by Fourth Harbor but I wasn't that dedicated to the job
50.
They took a quick streetcar to a delicious repast in a tower overlooking East Harbor from the northern rim of the Fastness
51.
He was interested to know that the only planets that could be detected at so large a star were too big and cold to harbor life
52.
There were calculations that showed the star could theoretically have two planets that could harbor life
53.
It had been less than a year since the day she'd seen him at that show over West Harbor
54.
Ahead was a five mile long beach and miles of busy harbor beside it
55.
Father said he recognized the place from boyhood, when his own father anchored in its leeward harbor during a fierce storm
56.
Brynjolf watched the ships in Solitude’s harbor for more than an hour
57.
As he sat observing the harbor, the tones of surly sailors and cynical merchants rode the breeze as strangely reso-nant whispers
58.
that you harbor an unconscious resentfulness of
59.
The voyage to Boston took two days and, as we neared the harbor, I felt
60.
the road sign that read, “Back Bay Harbor
61.
her of Back Bay Harbor
62.
Fairhaven, a town across the harbor from New Bedford, was
63.
entered and dropped anchor in the harbor
64.
There was a lot of activity in the harbor at Montevideo that day and night, and Jessie heard music coming from one of the
65.
ships in the harbor
66.
that they thought were going to enter Charleston Harbor
67.
ironclads when they entered the harbor
68.
entered the harbor, and shortly thereafter, Waddell was ordered
69.
departed New Bedford Harbor for its journey to the North
70.
evening of April 24, the Milo took on a harbor pilot to guide the ship out to sea
71.
After four days of loading coal, painting, and other maintenance work, the Alabama steamed out of Cherbourg harbor in the morning of June 19, escorted by the French ironclad, Couronne
72.
At 4:00 PM in the afternoon, the harbor pilot went on board, guided the Milo out of the harbor, and was discharged at 5:00 PM
73.
Recall that General Jimmy Doolittle was not in favor of a carrier-based attack on Japan in retaliation for the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, maintaining as he did that such an attack would be both unnecessary and suicidal
74.
On December 7, the Shenandoah sailed out of the harbor
75.
One could make the case that America at least in some sense invited the Pearl Harbor attack by imposing the trade embargo on Japan and freezing their financial assets
76.
However, the American commanders were lucky to learn at the time that each Confederate vessel was being serviced for maintenance and repair and was in a harbor
77.
the harbor, there was no activity at all, and Waddell was now
78.
questioned about the safety of the harbor for anchorage, he said the harbor would be too confining for a ship the length of the
79.
With this information, Harrocke, the pilot, was instructed to anchor the Shenandoah inside a long reef, which extends almost across the entrance to the harbor, rendering the
80.
harbor and everyone on the island who this vessel was and that
81.
introduction to the king of Lea Harbor
82.
was held on board the Shenandoah in honor of His Majesty, the king of Lea Harbor, and some gifts were exchanged
83.
Following the ceremonies, the Shenandoah steamed out of the harbor and set a course for new opportunities to the north
84.
the harbor with steam power to prevent foreign ships from
85.
having a harbor pilot aboard to steer the ship into uncharted
86.
This was not the case until July 20, on which day the Milo arrived in San Francisco harbor
87.
San Francisco harbor until he had communicated with another
88.
As soon as the Milo arrived in San Francisco harbor, they were greeted by the harbor pilot who told Captain Hawes the news
89.
Anchors were weighed and a harbor pilot came on board early in the
90.
morning to guide the ship out of the misty San Francisco harbor
91.
As soon as they were clear of the harbor, the pilot was
92.
" Some people would ask, Why? I am here to tell you that the dumping of 300 casks of English tea into Boston Harbor in 1773 was only the head of the beast that protected us
93.
Check with the Harbor Master and see if the Greta Jean is anchored there
94.
I’d suggest going with the haddock—it’s fresh and our cook fries ‘em up better than anywhere in the harbor
95.
Sitting on some crates overlooking the harbor, Porge had a patch over one eye and a striped shirt, whereas Dumpus wore a tri-corner hat and a red scarf around his thick neck
96.
“As I was saying before we were interrupted, Bosco,” said Longleaf, looking sternly at Porge and Dumpus, but with a glint of humor in his eyes, “there are strange things afoot in the harbor of Water-Down
97.
” Longleaf ran to the window and began scanning the long row of ships in Water-Down’s harbor
98.
Without a word, Longleaf sprinted for the door, utterly perplexed as to why his own ship was leaving the harbor without him
99.
Many in the harbor, however, were amused to see a Man and three Halflings running across the wharves frantically, weaving in and out of the throngs
1.
Maybe little Euredon harbored a scholar’s soul
2.
Unlike Psatos, she harbored no pleasant memories of the voyage
3.
Imagine, what arrogance I’ve harbored
4.
proved that she’d harbored safely in the Gods’ favor
5.
We're pretty sure that's why Auntie sent us with you: partly to remove a potential challenge at court, partly to allow us to eliminate any hint or trace of doubt we may have harbored toward you
6.
In my defense, there were many ships harbored there
7.
In my life, up to that time, I had always harbored a sort of loneliness, a feeling that
8.
How depressing! I’d harbored thoughts of
9.
If any of his family harbored any doubts about who was ultimately to blame for the rocket attack, he needed to put the question to rest by explaining how his return to Jinotega in the midst of the war had been the catalyst
10.
harbored a deep seated hatred for God and religious believers
11.
I myself always harbored the suspicion that Jasper
12.
It harbored some newts, green turtles, snails and neon tetras
13.
He also trusted this curious old man from Eastern Europe, since Jason harbored his own share of forbidden
14.
If he could identify the plants, maybe even the chemicals they harbored, it might be big for the college, and for his own career
15.
Deep inside him, he had always harbored the wish to make that one big expedition
16.
I had no idea he harbored such thoughts
17.
If she had known that he had harbored her in his heart still, she would have definitely accepted his proposal
18.
In one short transaction, many months’ savings were exchanged for a small piece of carbon, but Ken harbored a feeling of joyful excitation as he walked along the muddy road with the small case in the pocket of his parka
19.
Marx, the apostate Jew-hating Jew, harbored in his core the very essence of Diaspora Judaism: Fear
20.
we have harbored any ill feelings or resentments towards a fellow
21.
Not as if he harbored any romantic feelings—she was in no way his type
22.
The nation's capital has harbored the worst drivers from 2008 to 2012, according to Allstate
23.
Their eyes harbored love long forgotten to me, the love my mother withheld within the depths of her stony heart
24.
A city that found and harbored you
25.
And then, as if to make a bad matter worse, he persistently harbored grudges and fostered such psychologic enemies as revenge and the generalized craving to "get even" with somebody for all his disappointments
26.
Until he surveyed Blondie’s ship, Greg had still harbored a lingering hope that he would
27.
Chris I scanned to see if he harbored any resentment against me because of his father
28.
"Cynthia, I don't think that nurse harbored any ill
29.
This tree harbored in its sap the knowledge of the first time he had felt her soft warm flesh under her summer dress
30.
I harbored no ill feelings
31.
The local police forces and governments were particularly hard hit: it seems that they harbored some of the most hardcore racists in the country and thus were affected most by the blue wave
32.
And the harbored ship
33.
The alley harbored garbage cans every 30 or 40
34.
” She’s harbored that fear since I
35.
A tree that harbored some sort of grudge, and had waited there in that one spot, growing, waiting for the day it could exact its revenge on some unsuspecting human
36.
However, we had no inkling that your Earth harbored intelligent life, that is until only a few of your months before the destruction of Shouria
37.
Our Ørlög is the manifestation of energies we have harbored, which our Norse ancestors called ―wyrd
38.
He still harbored the suspicion that these recent psychotic
39.
· We use words to express ourselves – to express what is harbored in our inner man
40.
from that day onward, he tried to very best to forget that pure love he harbored
41.
Although he harbored that wish but he
42.
you!” By now he had already noticed that the young man in gray harbored neither
43.
Jealous thoughts harbored and revisited over and over again, can lead to actions
44.
It was because he harbored a hope that the news that he had received was
45.
” She felt the resentment that she harbored against her father buried within her beginning to arise again
46.
” Ralf harbored his secret smile
47.
Yes, its practitioners wore the clothes of doctors and deceived people by exploiting the revered position that was harbored for doctors
48.
But we wonder: has the devil ever harbored good intentions? And has he ever tried to do good for anyone?? He is pleased only with wretchedness, disease, and the pain of others: “He said: ‘Provider! Since you have led me astray, I will adorn to them (mankind) this life on earth and tempt them all, except your true obedient followers from among them!’ ”
49.
Though Ellie harbored some doubts the woman was as shocked by the discovery of her husband’s actions as she’d claimed, there was simply not enough evidence to charge her as an accessory
50.
The woman harbored no further hope
51.
Although they were conciliatory, I knew deep in their hearts they harbored vengeful feelings and I’d be in a vast amount of trouble without Marcus and Natalia to protect me
52.
Across the fountains and lawns, past the residential roof tops, his gaze fell on the apartment building where his friends were harbored
53.
Long gone were the guilty inhibitions man had once harbored
54.
I learned that she harbored concerns over nursing
55.
I did not know that she harbored concerns as to
56.
It had harbored him and provided a sense of identity at such a young age, when he possessed little
57.
The pressure was unrelenting, the flimsy hope and optimism I harbored daily after my swim was constantly invalidated but more than anything, after the uprising and my tangle with the police, I had lost my will to fight
58.
Why was the American fleet stationed in Hawaii? Because America had harbored dreams of Empire just as the European nations
59.
I think he expected that but still harbored a hope
60.
ans that harbored serious doubts about their new gov-
61.
Carrie had harbored a faint hope that be-
62.
coming, but I have still harbored a hope that reason-
63.
Any fear that Jeff may have harbored about his own sexuality vanished when
64.
“The secret of the dream world, Joseph, is that here is harbored every moment of your waking life
65.
Of the several thousand people massed around the column of fire and water no one spoke and Kim said, “Once it was otherwise, but all of you have given up the false beliefs that some of you harbored and even such as a body of believers though we be not Jews by blood we are nonetheless grafted into the tree of life by our belief in Jesus Christ and thus we are spiritual Jews and heir to all the promises and provisions of God
66.
He harbored a woman that the entire state
67.
It was her decision that only one adult member of every household that harbored refugees would be taken into custody, that each household would decide who would take responsibility and who would stay behind
68.
Clearly he'd no idea that the mirror, whatever else it was capable of, harbored protean qualities
69.
He clearly harbored a wish to meet the child again
70.
When they came upon you, from above you, and from beneath you; and the eyes became dazed, and the hearts reached the throats, and you harbored doubts about God
71.
And he harbored fear of them
72.
Shumi projectiles, but they were saddened, too, because they had never harbored any ill-
73.
“I knew all along it wasn’t Ziggy!” she’d cried, but so exuberantly it was obvious she must have harbored some secret doubts
74.
In fact, there beneath my eyes was a town in ruins, demolished, overwhelmed, laid low, its roofs caved in, its temples pulled down, its arches dislocated, its columns stretching over the earth; in these ruins you could still detect the solid proportions of a sort of Tuscan architecture; farther off, the remains of a gigantic aqueduct; here, the caked heights of an acropolis along with the fluid forms of a Parthenon; there, the remnants of a wharf, as if some bygone port had long ago harbored merchant vessels and triple–tiered war galleys on the shores of some lost ocean; still farther off, long rows of collapsing walls, deserted thoroughfares, a whole Pompeii buried under the waters, which Captain Nemo had resurrected before my
75.
” There “will be no crying in the house,” Joe told Teddy and his siblings, so whatever fears Teddy harbored, he kept to himself
76.
Why should I pause to ask how much of my shrinking from Provis might be traced to Estella? Why should I loiter on my road, to compare the state of mind in which I had tried to rid myself of the stain of the prison before meeting her at the coach-office, with the state of mind in which I now reflected on the abyss between Estella in her pride and beauty, and the returned transport whom I harbored? The road would be none the smoother for it, the end would be none the better for it, he would not be helped, nor I extenuated
77.
Oh, if such a thought could present itself, I would stab myself to punish my heart for having for one instant harbored it
78.
And if any of the writers assembled on the ramp that day harbored any doubt that Ky Ebright was taking the Washington threat seriously, those doubts were put to rest directly
79.
in every suspicion she had ever harbored and every accusing word she had uttered
80.
“Don’t worry,” Jim said, “one of the great skills harbored in our Agency is that we are masters of disguise
81.
The first was that Mom had already harbored yearnings she must not have realized were legible there, in the resolutions that had been hanging in plain sight for the last 364 days, if only Dad would have thought to look
82.
If the people in that house in the Quarters had not shot first and asked questions later—if they’d all been informed that they harbored a rapist in their midst, if they’d known about the assault on the girl, and the legitimate reasons my clients had for going to Mr
83.
Trying to convict her, he told her she had worn him out, had caused his quarrel with his son, had harbored nasty suspicions of him, making it the object of her life to poison his existence, and he drove her from his study telling her that if she did not go away it was all the same to him
84.
If the Count of the Redlands harbored any notion the Count of the Flowers was bluffing about crushing him, it fled
85.
Or at least impressed Stéphanie, who harbored a savage grievance against the Brokenhearts
86.
When this bar is gradually increased by storms, tides, or currents, or there is a subsidence of the waters, so that it reaches to the surface, that which was at first but an inclination in the shore in which a thought was harbored becomes an individual lake, cut off from the ocean, wherein the thought secures its own conditions—changes, perhaps, from salt to fresh, becomes a sweet sea, dead sea, or a marsh
87.
Across the field was the little house that harbored him, open doored and cheerful in the sunshine, and I boldly turned my face thither
1.
Heymon seems to be harboring quite a bit of animosity and I wouldn’t doubt he’s had a bug in his ear
2.
She could see that Jason Rendellyn might be harboring that belief, but most of the crew would know it was alien technology gone feral
3.
To dream that you or someone has sinned suggests that you are harboring some inner guilt that you are harboring
4.
The entire history of this galaxy, the rise of Consciousness in every system capable of harboring sapient life, everything we know---that is their legacy
5.
Such is often the case, however, with a number of ―reform‖ minded individuals or groups harboring a decided agenda or with political or social axes to grind
6.
A nation harboring hostile intentions against its neighbors requires an enemy, whether real or imaginary, in order to advance its domestic or geopolitical designs
7.
There was a time, (certainly before my time), when college professors harboring ―progressive‖ or insurgent designs, teaching in more conventionally-minded (academic) environments, had to raise ―false fronts‖; that is to say, ―operate‖ within the school‘s customary guidelines, in order to ―win‖ students over
8.
Such impressions, (oftentimes) guided by (opportunistic) political and social ―leaders‖ harboring a vested interest in maintaining the status quo in order to consolidate their political power base by forging racial alliances designed to sever popular accord, are unlikely to change anytime soon in the absence of alternative, more creditable viewpoints
9.
It was inconceivable that he would be harboring a gun
10.
“Or he’s joined the Allegiant, and they’re harboring him,” Therese says, slinging her body across one of the office chairs
11.
country created to fight the Russians, was harboring the Al-Qaeda
12.
It didn't sound like he was still harboring a secret crush on my sister, and I almost gave up until Akito said something that made my ears prick
13.
“Yes, I’ve seen you there as well,” she answered, her eyes harboring tales of
14.
Harboring guilt and resentment will only
15.
Harboring no ill-will for the unfortunate, tormented bull
16.
On the other hand, offensive actions and spoken, offensive words certainly can and do hurt others, but the point of this observation is to describe the deleterious effect of negative thinking upon the person harboring that thinking
17.
Anything fabricated ultimately benefited the evening harboring the editors in the growing field
18.
On the charge of deliberately harboring these three attitudes, I plead guilty!
19.
The wind gusted forcefully between the two mountains harboring the path
20.
I analyzed mine every thought to realize I secretly was harboring, “Our crossing o’er will be more difficult than not!”
21.
One must have Right Thoughts and attitude of mind—by renouncing sensory pleasures, by harboring kind thoughts opposed to ill will, and keep thoughts of harmlessness
22.
is a hard to deal with, right? The more anger you are harboring, the more altered
23.
I had been harboring two young men whom couldn’t have been much more than fifteen
24.
No doubt, this nurse was harboring ill feelings towards me
25.
Harboring the aspiration to gain Consummation sooner and in-
26.
Also, we should call a spade a spade and be ready to tell the Chinese to stop harboring the Vietminh, on pain of direct military actions against them
27.
Stealing and receiving stolen or lost property; buying from a son or slave of another man without witness or contract; harboring a runaway slave; owning a tavern in which conspirators met but weren’t delivered to the court; improperly constructing a house which falls in and kills the owner; stealing the minor son of another; not paying a mercenary that took one’s place in the army; and convincing a barber to cut the sign of a slave on a slave not to be sold were all acts for which the prescribed punishment was death
28.
―But what about the part about harboring bees?‖
29.
―The only story I am aware of about a monster harboring bees is Samson, who killed the lion with his bare hands and then the honeybees built a hive in the lion‘s body
30.
And it never failed that they got dirty because they never tired of lifting rocks and leaves and whatever else might be harboring toads and crickets and moths and slugs and centipedes and roly-poly’s and those ever-industrious ants
31.
the anger and resentment harboring within him
32.
all encompassing in reality, harboring a fulfillment
33.
However, the observations made during the approach had already indicated that it was peculiar in many ways, on top of harboring a huge quantity of frozen methane that would be able to sustain the human needs for hydrocarbons for centuries to come
34.
They might do that for harboring you here
35.
“The official story was he was killed in a shootout, along with his wife, in Johnson County, Arkansas, but the true story is the Feds came to the house that he was hiding in and murdered Collier and his wife and the couple that were harboring them
36.
“You are being charged with creating, harboring, and unleashing an intrusive and
37.
They are reporting that we are harboring a criminal and that the justice department ought to pick Jack up
38.
Ailia worried that Lucia would be bitter, harboring anger and resentment toward her since their parents had used her to protect Ailia
39.
My old slop-around moccasins not harboring any insect life at the moment, I slipped them on and went in to turn off the burner anyway
40.
hunting season, and that harboring vampires indoors is a felony and
41.
“Are you harboring vampires in this house?” Randal Scott asked
42.
As soon as she finished her story I knew that she was the one harboring resentment towards the others
43.
I’m sure harboring zombie vampires or conspiring with them is a felony,” Cyprian replied
44.
I wished I could share the secrets I was harboring, with her and Izzy
45.
It frightens me to think of the number of people who left the town harboring family members or friends that had been infected in recent attacks
46.
“What is the matter with you!” Deep within, Stephanie was harboring thoughts of her father, who’d taken her car away when she’d insisted on marrying Mitch–who, she’d always argued, wasn’t anything like her father
47.
A highly porous material capable of harboring
48.
The last shovel of dirt had been replaced in the hole harboring Mitsy’s body
49.
If any person claimed that a certain household was harboring a runaway slave then the authorities could enter the house without a search warrant
50.
They are not only incapable of even harboring the thought rebellion… but they actually are so in love with their masters, and symbols, and lies
51.
Early on there was some fear that the truck could be harboring a bomb, but reports in from the street are conflicting
52.
about morality and sex and harboring the greatest concentration of child rapists on the planet
53.
They are, after all, traitors for harboring and abetting you
54.
“I’ll set you down on your bare feet on this rough terrain and let the open wound on your foot come in contact with all the bacteria and who knows what else this sunken land is harboring
55.
A smile crossed his lips, “If it wasn’t you, then it had to be the evil one you’re harboring
56.
parents’ reaction to her news, she had also been harboring a deep
57.
He said a manhunt on an unprecedented scale is in effect for those people and anybody harboring them
58.
The good news was that by the time Shapiro located Aaron Hocksberg, still his only client from among the local Jews arrested at their homes the night of the roundup, Hocksberg had been taken before a federal magistrate, charged with harboring fugitives and released on his own recognizance, meaning he was not required to post bail
59.
Attorney Anderson’s press conference announcing that all of those arrested would be charged only with harboring fugitives and, in return for guilty pleas, his office would request fines and suspended jail sentences, went a long way toward defusing what had the potential to be an explosive situation in Massachusetts
60.
Ingrid was harboring hopes for him as well
61.
Ingrid, as well, was harboring hopes for him
62.
Jo glanced over her shoulder, and the little demon she was harboring said in her ear
63.
This condition is known as erotomania, in which an individual believes someone he or she admires is harboring the same feelings toward him/her
64.
Deep down I was harboring a grudge
65.
By harboring a fugitive you could be sent to DB
66.
“With the conduct of that wretched Butler man you’ve been harboring
67.
We selected a symbol that your culture most associates with war and death, and then we re-created an enormous replica of that symbol on the nearest celestial body in your solar system with conditions capable of harboring intelligent life
68.
Had he also been brooding, harboring anger as well? Was he enraged that the baby Tamara carried might be his brother, not his son?”
69.
He caught himself harboring such strange thoughts that he was frightened
70.
I caught myself harboring a feeling of hatred toward him which I vainly tried to overcome
71.
The transparency of market yields prevents bondholders from harboring excessive return expectations after a long bull market
72.
They contain round archipelagoes of romantic isles, even as the Polynesian waters do; in large part, are shored by two great contrasting nations, as the Atlantic is; they furnish long maritime approaches to our numerous territorial colonies from the East, dotted all round their banks; here and there are frowned upon by batteries, and by the goat-like craggy guns of lofty Mackinaw; they have heard the fleet thunderings of naval victories; at intervals, they yield their beaches to wild barbarians, whose red painted faces flash from out their peltry wigwams; for leagues and leagues are flanked by ancient and unentered forests, where the gaunt pines stand like serried lines of kings in Gothic genealogies; those same woods harboring wild Afric beasts of prey, and silken creatures whose exported furs give robes to Tartar Emperors; they mirror the paved capitals of Buffalo and Cleveland, as well as Winnebago villages; they float alike the full-rigged merchant ship, the armed cruiser of the State, the steamer, and the beech canoe; they are swept by Borean and dismasting blasts as direful as any that lash the salted wave; they know what shipwrecks are, for out of sight of land, however inland, they have drowned full many a midnight ship with all its shrieking crew
73.
We shook hands, and exchanged commonplaces in the friendliest way—I was harboring no resentment against him, and I wished him to realize that his assault had bothered me no more than the buzzing and battering of a summer fly
74.
With regard to apprentices, I very much fear, sir, that those who enlist will, for the greater part, be of that description for whom their masters have advertised six cents reward, and forewarned all persons from harboring them
75.
here drew a comparison between the practice of harboring slaves in some of our Northern cities, Philadelphia for instance, and the countenance given in this country to European emigrants
76.
Yet how could he argue and expostulate against himself? How arraign Sam of harboring murderous designs which he had himself implanted in his bosom? How, indeed, expect him to comprehend conversation so entirely foreign to his experience? It was an awkward dilemma
1.
Lmore and this band's music didn't show them much of Trenst the city, at least those parts around the ancient-crater harbors in the delta that have some solid ground and tall structure
2.
"What are all these ships in all these harbors?" Alan asked
3.
There were more luxury towers on the great cliffs and dozens of elevators whisking people from the outer harbors to the heights
4.
Ours is a generation that harbors an irrational fear of growing old
5.
) In Nicaragua, the US government mined the harbors and sponsored terrorists
6.
Loy facilitated the establishment of well trained, armed Regular and Reserve Coast Guard “Sea Marshals” who boarded ships in major harbors to inspect vessels and escort them into port under cutter protection (Johnson, St
7.
Life-Saving Service (USLSS) units were stationed near lighthouses locating treacherous waters at points where ships came close to shore to enter harbors
8.
In her exquisite book, Lake Superior (1944), Grace Lee Nute traced the economic histories of the Lake Superior Wisconsin ports of Superior, Ashland, and Bayfield; and the Minnesota ports of Duluth, Grand Marais, and Two Harbors
9.
Equally significant in Lake Superior history since the middle of the 19th century were the North Shore Split Rock and Two Harbors lighthouses, which furnished light and fog-horn signals to warn mariners of rocks and shore lines (Nute, p
10.
The Two Harbors (Minnesota) Lighthouse, built in 1892, guided ships to the local iron ore docks
11.
The Fresnel lens at Two Harbors Light was replaced by rotating electric lights in 1970
12.
Anchored in place, their mast lights guided vessels into shallow waters, channels, rivers and harbors
13.
The ports of Duluth and Superior presented serious ice problems due to rivers and bays that force 27-inch-thick ice into the harbors
14.
Seiners move into the town harbors ahead of the opening to stock up on supplies and equipment, prepare their nets and skiffs and await the signal to start fishing for herring
15.
Someone who harbors a grudge, who has been unhappy with his lot since the world was divided eons ago, whose kingdom would grow powerful with the deaths of millions
16.
As they approached the city's harbor, the young man was thrilled by the great lighthouse of Pharos, located on the island which Alexander had joined by a mole to the mainland, thus creating two magnificent harbors and thereby making Alexandria the maritime commercial crossroads of Africa, Asia, and Europe
17.
They traveled on a small boat which could be carried overland on a land track from one of Corinth's harbors to the other, a distance of ten miles
18.
Naturally God hears the petition of his child, but when the human heart deliberately and persistently harbors the concepts of iniquity, there gradually ensues the loss of personal communion between the earth child and his heavenly Father
19.
Here were few harbors and fewer ports, but the green plain was dotted with the cities of the Shemites; green sea, lapping the rim of the green plains, and the ziggurats of the cities gleaming whitely in the sun, some small in the distance
20.
The port was not crowded with ships, as were the harbors of Argos
21.
Close up all the safe harbors to seek repairs in
22.
and an aristocracy are born, and ordained by God to rule, harbors a lingering
23.
Who better to share it with than three hot biker chicks, my beautiful half-sister and two of Foggy Harbors most eligible bachelors
24.
The salty smell of the sea will fill our noses and we'll be setting sail to harbors unknown in search of sweaty adventure
25.
― A pitiful distraction, it harbors bees
26.
commonly referred to as safe harbors, for structuring reverse
27.
Faustocine harbors the growth of biological compounds that we introduce to the environment until they can survive on their own
28.
harbors around here?" he added
29.
open yourself to the possibility that it harbors the gateway to our total humanity
30.
quandary, whose happiness is more real, of more value, both to self and society: a junkie's or a hedgefund manager's? What heart harbors an ethic that debates such a question?
31.
Therefore, the harbors we should prepare are but to have recourse to Al'lah from now for this resorting will be of no use when the Hour becomes near at the door; where none but Al'lah can dispel its fright
32.
None of their harbors seems safe anymore
33.
There’s a road that will be easy on the horse, and there are a couple of harbors along the way, Morse Point and Punta Arena, where boats cruise with tourists to show them the sea lions and harbor seals
34.
In 1776, the British navy blockaded Martinique’s harbors and stopped export of
35.
The Zoarinians kept the much smaller, but still formidable fleet of the Tranquil Islanders, bottlenecked up within the harbors and inlets of their islands to keep them from coming to the Valley Landers aid
36.
Beaches, piers, harbors, riverbanks and lakes have become very popular for wedding receptions
37.
See forts on the shores of harbors, see ships sailing in and out;
38.
"You know the best harbors?"
39.
The strong, silent, dangerously attractive type that harbors a private, vast, brilliant inner landscape of knowledge, wisdom, and experience, and watches, always watches, learns, adapts, evolves
40.
The melody is allegedly so beautiful, transformative, and pure that if one who harbors evil in his heart hears it, he will be charred to ash where he stands
41.
Go but to Portsmouth or Southampton, and you will find the harbors crowded with the yachts belonging to such of the English as can afford the expense, and have the same liking for this amusement
42.
The book was full of detailed information on Japan’s ports, the ships in its harbors and the fuels they used, and the distances between cities and landmarks
43.
That meant Cheshyr had precious little interest in treason, yet its position meant it separated Rock Creek from Black Horse, while the same harbors made Cheshyr Bay an ideal place for the Imperial Charisian Navy to land the Imperial Charisian Army, or even just the Imperial Charisian Marine Corps to deal with any … unruliness
44.
Charisian galleons and schooners had flooded into Hsing-wu’s Passage as soon as the ice melted, and they’d been accompanied by more of the new sort of ironclads which had effectively demolished the harbors of Geyra, Malyktyn, and Desnair the City
45.
They came to the shore of an inlet which is still called Trestraou, but which now, I believe, harbors a casino or something of the sort
46.
Bridges rose and tugs chanted in the midnight harbors
47.
As I sounded through the ice I could determine the shape of the bottom with greater accuracy than is possible in surveying harbors which do not freeze over, and I was surprised at its general regularity
48.
For besides the great length of the whaling voyage, the numerous articles peculiar to the prosecution of the fishery, and the impossibility of replacing them at the remote harbors usually frequented, it must be remembered, that of all ships, whaling vessels are the most exposed to accidents of all kinds, and especially to the destruction and loss of the very things upon which the success of the voyage most depends
49.
of France, at his own personal expense, fit out whaling ships from Dunkirk, and politely invite to that town some score or two of families from our own island of Nantucket? Why did Britain between the years 1750 and 1788 pay to her whalemen in bounties upwards of L1,000,000? And lastly, how comes it that we whalemen of America now outnumber all the rest of the banded whalemen in the world; sail a navy of upwards of seven hundred vessels; manned by eighteen thousand men; yearly consuming 4,000,000 of dollars; the ships worth, at the time of sailing, $20,000,000! and every year importing into our harbors a well reaped harvest of $7,000,000
50.
If American and European men-of-war now peacefully ride in once savage harbors, let them fire salutes to the honour and glory of the whale-ship, which originally showed them the way, and first interpreted between them and the savages
51.
And never having been anywhere in the world but in Africa, Nantucket, and the pagan harbors most frequented by whalemen; and having now led for many years the bold life of the fishery in the ships of owners uncommonly heedful of what manner of men they shipped; Daggoo retained all his barbaric virtues, and erect as a giraffe, moved about the decks in all the pomp of six feet five in his socks
52.
So the pitch and sulphur-freighted brigs of the bold Hydriote, Canaris, issuing from their midnight harbors, with broad sheets of flame for sails, bore down upon the Turkish frigates, and folded them in conflagrations
53.
"Resolved, That the committee appointed on that part of the President's Message which relates to our foreign relations, be instructed to inquire into the expediency of excluding by law from the ports, harbors, and waters of the United States, all armed ships and vessels belonging to any of the belligerent powers having in force orders or decrees violating the lawful commerce of the United States as a nation
54.
I do not believe that I state any thing above the real fact, when I say that, on the day this Legislature assembled, one hundred vessels, at least, were lying in the different ports and harbors of New England loaded, riding at single anchor, ready and anxious for nothing so much as for your leave to depart
55.
By the second resolution we are called upon to declare "that it is expedient to prohibit, by law, the admission into the ports and harbors of the United States of all public or private armed or unarmed ships or vessels belonging to Great Britain or France, or to any other of the belligerents having in force orders or decrees violating the lawful commerce and neutral rights of the United States; and also the importation of any goods, wares, or merchandise, the growth, produce, or manufacture of the dominions of any of the said powers, or imported from any place in the possession of either
56.
Could not a single foreign frigate enter almost any of our harbors now and batter down our towns? Could not even a single gunboat sweep some of them? Mr
57.
If we had a navy, it would form the strongest temptation for attack upon our ports and harbors
58.
Story) had even gone so far as to say that a single gunboat could sweep one-half of our harbors
59.
If a single gunboat could now sweep most of our harbors, Mr
60.
concluded a speech of an hour and a half in length, with giving notice that he should move to amend the bill, when the present motion was decided, by striking out all that part of it relating to non-intercourse, and inserting a provision interdicting the entrance of our harbors to any vessels of Great Britain and France, and imposing an additional duty on all goods imported from those countries
61.
It excludes from our waters, ports, and harbors, all their vessels, public and private; it excludes from our country all their products and manufactures; and forbids our citizens to debase and degrade their country by a commercial intercourse which would stain and pollute them with the payment of an ignominious tribute to a foreign nation
62.
Mary's, to our vessels, and all that would then remain to our own vessels would be the profits of the coasting trade from our harbors to those ports of deposit
63.
The works of defence for our seaport towns and harbors have proceeded with as much activity as the season of the year and other circumstances would admit
64.
Leib, from the committee, appointed on the 20th instant, to inquire into the expediency of providing by law for the exclusion of foreign armed vessels from the ports and harbors of the United States, made report; which was read, as follows:
65.
The committee will not bring into view the many injuries and insults which the United States have sustained from the hospitable grant of their ports and harbors to belligerents; nor the facility which has thereby been afforded to them to lay our commerce under contribution
66.
There were many vessels on the coast, which, were they to enter our harbors, would fall within the description of the 4th, 5th, and 6th sections of the non-intercourse act
67.
There are many who would be willing to exclude the armed ships of every foreign power from our harbors and waters
68.
It was stated that there was not perhaps in the course of a year a single French public armed vessel in the harbors of the United States
69.
Does it comport with our honor and dignity to admit into our ports and harbors the very vessels destroying our commerce? Not to go into an inquiry what has been the fact heretofore, but what may be now—if you pass a law that a French frigate may come into your waters and partake of your hospitalities, where is the obligation that it may not take advantage of the opportunity to make its prey more sure by watching it in port and then going out and entrapping it? If, from the intoxication of the man who rules the destinies of the nations of Europe, he does not feel disposed to treat with us on terms of reciprocity, that circumstance should have no effect on our measures
70.
He said he felt a strong objection to the bill, because it admitted French vessels into our ports and harbors
71.
The state of the case now is, that your vessels shall not be cleared out to carry any thing to France, but your boats and every thing that sails may be employed to carry provisions to French armed ships in your harbors, and they may be completely loaded
72.
Smith of Maryland, it was agreed that the title of the bill be amended, to read as follows: "An act to interdict the public ships and vessels of France and Great Britain from the ports and harbors of the United States, and for other purposes
73.
Our ports were thrown open, and our vessels (then nearly all in our harbors) soon filled Great Britain with every thing she wanted at low prices; flour fell instantly in England to nine and a half and ten
74.
Resolved, That so much of the Message of the President of the United States as relates to the fortifications of the ports and harbors of the United States, be referred to a select committee
75.
I know it is all-important in us to defend our ports and harbors
76.
" In the Berlin decree there is an enumeration of real or pretended interpolations, on the part of Great Britain, in the law of nations; among which we discover these: "that England does not admit the right of nations as universally acknowledged by all civilized people; that she extends to ports not fortified, to harbors and mouths of rivers, the right of blockade, which, according to reason and the usage of civilized nations, is applicable only to strong or fortified ports
77.
The Emperor offers to give up his Berlin and Milan decrees, if the British will renounce their new system of blockade; and in these very decrees he explains what he means by this new system; that, besides paper blockades, it is the attempt to blockade the mouths of rivers and harbors, and ports not fortified
78.
As soon as this is done they become "harbors and ports not fortified," and have no longer to apprehend any inconvenience from the pressure of a naval force
79.
Chairman? The right of not being vexed or endangered by paper blockades? Yes, sir, and more; the right of not being interrupted in a commercial intercourse with cities situated on rivers, as Antwerp for instance; or to carry on a free trade with all the continental ports and harbors not fortified, although the whole British navy may be cruising at the mouth of the river, or in sight of the port
80.
In the friendly spirit of those disclosures, indemnity and redress for other wrongs have continued to be withheld; and our coasts, and the mouths of our harbors, have again witnessed scenes not less derogatory to the dearest of our national rights, than vexatious to the regular course of our trade
81.
The works of defence on our maritime frontier have accordingly been prosecuted with an activity leaving little to be added for the completion of the most important ones; and, as particularly suited for co-operation in emergencies, a portion of the gunboats have, in particular harbors, been ordered into use
82.
After the first years of that contest, the British forces were in possession of the principal ports and harbors of the United States, which made it extremely hazardous for our privateers to approach our own coasts, or enter our own harbors
83.
The amendments to the bill, entitled "An act laying an embargo on all ships and vessels in the ports and harbors of the United States for a limited time," having been reported by the committee correctly engrossed, the bill was read the third time
84.
President: The House of Representatives concur in the amendment of the Senate to the bill, entitled "An act laying an embargo on all ships and vessels in the ports and harbors of the United States, for a limited time
85.
, she seems to have been constantly and carefully feeling our pulse, to ascertain what potions we would bear; and if we go on submitting to one indignity after another, it will not be long before we shall see British subjects, not only taking our property in our harbors, but trampling on our persons in the streets of our cities
86.
Will you call upon her to leave your ports and harbors untouched, only just till you can return from Canada to defend them? The coast is to be left defenceless, whilst men of the interior are revelling in conquest and spoil
87.
What, sir! when their privateers are pent up in our harbors by the British bull-dogs, when they receive at our hands every rite of hospitality, from which their enemy is excluded, when they capture within our own waters, interdicted to British armed ships, American vessels; when such is their deportment towards you, under such circumstances, what could you expect if they were the uncontrolled lords of the ocean? Had those privateers at Savannah borne British commissions, or had your shipments of cotton, tobacco, ashes, and what not, to London and Liverpool, been confiscated, and the proceeds poured into the English Exchequer—my life upon it! you would never have listened to any miserable wire-drawn distinctions between "orders and decrees affecting our neutral rights," and "municipal decrees," confiscating in mass your whole property
88.
Not satisfied with refusing a redress for wrongs committed on our coasts and in the mouths of our harbors, our trade is annoyed, and our national rights invaded; and, to close the scene of insolence and injury, regardless of our moderation and our justice, she has brought home to the "threshold of our territory," measures of actual war
89.
Give up the export trade to Great Britain, and you will next be required to give up the coasting trade, and to admit her navigation act to as complete operation in our bays and harbors, as it now has round the limited shores of the British isles
90.
French cruisers waylaid the mouths of your harbors, and captured your vessels; and the first successful act of the United States after the quasi-war commenced, was, the taking of one of these cruisers in the mouth of one of our harbors
91.
The superior cheapness of naval defence seems to me to be satisfactorily established, and I am next to prove that the force proposed—I mean twelve seventy-fours and twenty frigates—are sufficient to protect us in our own seas, and defend our ports and harbors against the naval power of Great Britain
92.
History may be resorted to, with confidence, to prove that neither Great Britain, nor any other nation, has ever been able to station, for any length of time, in distant seas, a force equal to that which, in the opinion of naval men, is sufficient to accomplish the objects proposed by the committee—the dominion of the American seas, and the defence of our ports and harbors
93.
The committee have recommended such a navy as will give to the United States an ascendency in the American seas, and protect their ports and harbors
94.
I was in favor of repairing and putting into service the whole of our naval force, consisting of one hundred and sixty-two gunboats and upwards of fifteen frigates and smaller war vessels; because this naval force, united with our fortifications, would give security to our coasts and harbors, protect our coasting trade, and would be important in the present crisis to co-operate with privateers and individual enterprise against the commerce and plunder of Great Britain