In these parts of the bush the small hut of the out-settler may often be espied. |
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If you'd rather not endure my company, Miss, I espied a friend of mine on my way to this coach and can most certainly impose upon him. |
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As they crossed the length of the room, they finally espied her crew, barking raucous laughter and drinking deep of their pewter tankards. |
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The story of the rather over-refreshed and over-excited Englishman who espied the rather promising looking Latvian lurking in a semi-lit and semi-private place. |
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An evil essentialism can be espied in that commitment to timelessness, the new scholars of National Geographic believe. |
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The club adopted its famous blue and gold colours in 1907 when one of its members espied the Swedish flag perched on a boat moored in the port. |
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And Friday evening, Carlos, who was running an errand to Somerville, espied a little poster announcing Lost Dog! |
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Some of the connections they espied between the Baret and the Bard seem a little far-fetched. |
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He in the house espied there many a man asleep, a throng of kinsmen side by side, and band of youthful knights. |
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While a bit off by himself, Don espied a Peperomia species new to the flora growing inside a sinkhole, near the sinkhole mouth. |
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The gopi picture, he recalls with horror, was first unrolled for his view on a pavement while he espied a corner of a cannon drawing on a dealer's table and knew instantly it was for him. |
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But it's all done irreverently: one scene conflates the beach ending of The 400 Blows with Don't Look Now, while the famous close-up coffee cup in which Godard once espied the cosmos here becomes a bowl of cold custard. |
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The gopi picture, he recalls with horror, was first unrolled for his view on the public pavement while he espied a corner of the cannon drawing on a dealer's table and knew instantly that they were for him. |
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These days, though, there is a different kind of European colonization going on, one that can be espied in bars and on sidewalks from London to Berlin and southwards to Rome. |
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Suddenly, in the dim twilight, he espied on the sand the marks of human feet, marks which had not been completely effaced by the tide, and which led in a faint trail towards the St. Lawrence. |
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The queen espied it and was filled with longing, and when she thought that Solomon was asleep, she crept out of her bed and put her hand to the jar. |
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The masters of the carracks espied the bark, and found out to whom she belonged: the fame of Landolfo and his vast wealth had already reached them, and had excited their natural cupidity and rapacity. |
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