Resting on one knee, he placed the corpse on the other--and who could have believed, that even the most violent and cruel death could have wrought such a change on a face once so beautiful!
That is no dress for the Sabbath-day--soiled and savage-looking, and giving to the eyes that search an assurance of guilt.
His smaller poems are very inferior to those of Clare--but the Northamptonshire Peasant has written nothing in which all honest English hearts must delight, at all comparable with those truly rural compositions of the Suffolk shoemaker.
Old Aggy has borne that epithet for twenty years, and her daughter is not much under sixty.
Manse he had so often visited when a young and happy boy.
Whereas England, ungrateful ever to her men of genius, already often forgets the poetry of Southey; while Little Britain abuses his patriotism in his politics.
Now and then one meets a man eminent in a liberal profession, who has not been at any place that could easily be called a College.
On a leaf is written, in her own well-known hand, "The gift of Margaret Burnside!
True that Robert Burns has indited many songs that slip into the heart, just like light, no one knows how, filling its chambers sweetly and silently, and leaving it nothing more to desire for perfect contentment.
In-to that tyme the nobill King, With his flot and a few menyhe, Thre hundir I trow thai mycht weill be, 16 Is to the se, furth of Arane A litill forrow the evyn gane.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "flot" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.