To prove this we need only remember that history records many such voyages.
But every one who has read any primitive literature, or even the Homeric poems, will remember how easily times and distances and numbers that are not exactly known are expressed in loose phrases not to be taken as literal.
We must remember that at this time the New Found Land was the general name used for all the northern coast of America.
You remember the good ones we had on the diner coming home from Grandmother’s last summer?
You remember you have to ride on the train an hour or more before you get to St. Augustine.
Remember that pretty street we rode south on yesterday?
You remember we are going to stop a day with Uncle Will there.
Soon she was back, wearing an old denim skirt that the girls didn’t remember ever seeing.
You must remember that he had landed after a long, long sea voyage and fresh water, bubbling from the ground, looked more than usually good.
Alice, laughing at the recollection; “and remember the jelly fish and the crawdads, Mary Jane?
You’ll be playing pirate first thing you know--I remember I used to read about walking the plank in pirate books, though goodness knows it wasn’t anything like this!
These are some of the questions I have attempted to answer in this essay; and, in answering them, I have tried to remember that this is a history, not of critical literature, but of literary criticism.
I understood the idea was to keep away from our fellow countrymen, and as far as I can remember St. Goarshausen, it is not overrun with tourists--we should be quiet enough there.
I--er--will certainlyremember his name, if I require a guide.
Our readers who have been in Europe will certainlyremember the name of one of the best soups that can be made.
When an object is placed on the spit according to directions, remember that it cannot be basted too often.
Remember that the quicker the crust is formed, the more juicy and tender the meat.
Remember that during the whole operation of folding and rolling the paste down, you must dust the marble or paste-board with flour, very slightly and often; do the same on the top of the paste.
I do notremember to have heard the character of his political proclivities mentioned.
They shuddered to remember that they had so often bathed in the pond, and recoiled as if they had been friends of a murderer.
Mr. Ele was happy to remember a previous occasion upon which he had had the honor, etc.
There was a look of earnest, yearning entreaty in his eyes as he said, "Abel, you remember Milton's Comus?
Now young man," I says to Jemmy when we brought our chairs into the balcony that last evening, "you please to remember who was to 'top up.
Helen has told me a lot of botanical terms, but I forget them," "I try hard to remember everything I hear any one say about flowers or vegetables or planting now.
When you girls are old enough to drink tea you must remember that boiling water for tea is something more than putting on water in a saucepan or taking it out of a kettle on the stove.
Do you remember that girl who was with him at the Flower Festival?
Do I seem toremember a rule about using one teaspoonful of tea for each person and one for the pot?
But Mother told me one day that a person who was suffering didn't want to be treated as if she were in disgrace and not to be spoken to, and I've always tried to remember it.
Being a doctor's son I happen toremember that calendula, which takes the pain out of a cut finger most amazingly, has a yellow flower.
Don't you remember how those snowflakes we looked at under the magnifying glass on Ethel Blue's birthday burst into magnificent crystals?
The Glen Point people are pretty good about sending flowers, but the hospital is an old story with them and sometimes they don't remember when they might.
Do you remember what Bryant says about 'The Yellow Violet'?
Not all snakes are venomous; and, anyway, we ought to remember that every animal has some means of protecting himself and the snakes do it through their poison fangs.
I remember when people always made a bouquet perfectly round and of as many kinds of flowers as they could put into it.
One or two of the old people remember that the Leonard girl left, but nothing more.
The people still remember that it was danced there in honour of Sampiero; it was also produced in Vescovato in the time of Paoli.
Certainly the privileges of a free people are too valuable--their condition too fortunate, to be treated of in adequate terms; but enough is said if we rememberthat they excite the admiration of the greatest men.
To make a long story short, they will have a merry time of it at Benvenuta's wedding, and when long years have gone by, they will stillremember it in the Valley of Campo.
I have seen many a beautiful valley in Italy, but I remember none that wore a look so laughing and winsome as that fair vale of Luri.
Yes, I remember that," said James Bellingham, smiling for pleasure in it.
If Tom Corey had ever said a witty thing, no one could remember it; and yet the father had never said a witty thing to a more sympathetic listener than his own son.
And I don't remember just how it was that he said he came to come to me.
He not only could not remember what he was going to say, but he could not recall what they had been talking about.
Other authors on the same subject were equally silent, and Irene could only remember having heard, in some vague sort of way, that gentlemen did not wear gloves so much any more.
I see how you'd feel; and I hope that you'll remember who you've got to blame.
But remember that we are Essex County people, and that in savour we are just a little beyond the salt of the earth.
It must be," she repeated; "and I shall try to remember that.
Always remember me most sincerely to the Club, one and all.
Those who remember Mary Benjamin find it hard to speak of her in the common terms of praise which they award to the good and the lovely.
I remember that in our conversation I jokingly said that my wife could hardly forgive him for not making her hero, Henri IV.
If he confessed him, self-liable, like the rest of us, to mistakes and shortcomings, we mustremember that the great officers of the government who decreed his downfall were not less the subjects of human infirmity.
But those who remember Mr. Hawthorne's account of his consular experiences at Liverpool are fully aware to what intrusions and impertinences and impositions our national representatives in other countries are subjected.
I do not remember any other habitual trouble to which he was subject.
I remember the interview as if it had taken place yesterday.
Shelley was then a great favorite of his, and I remember that Praed's verses then appearing in the 'New Monthly' he thought very clever and brilliant, and was fond of repeating them.
Do you not remember that Wattasacompanum has promised to keep you in safety until Philip is ready to have you ransomed?
Once for all I forbid you to look at me with such sheep's eyes, remember that.
I remember we once had a Lieutenant-General Lvovich for the commander of our corps.
But remember now, to-day you are to be jolly and amiable.
Remember that if you fool me or deceive me I shall not survive it.
She found it difficult to remember what kind of life she had led before her marriage--hardly could she believe that she had ever lived at all.
I remember he once refused to meet a woman doctor in consultation.
II In his shivering, creaking little cabin, suspended, as it were, by the uncertain waters between two lives, Byrd forced himself to remember the America he had known before his Paris days.
I'll remember that," McEwan nodded; "coming round to see you.
In Michigan I rememberthem as the chief suburban decoration.
Do you remembermy telling you about Adolph Jensen's brother?
But remember you are a well-known artist now--the celebrated Stefan Byrd," and she courtesied to him.
I remember Mr. Gunther talking to me a little as you have been doing," she recalled, "when he came to model me.
But it will soon be April, and I remember the leaves in the Luxembourg for so many Aprils back.
Mary," he explained, all excitement, "you rememberthat picture at the magazine office?
This may seem a small thing, but you must remember that five months before not half a dozen of my men had had the slightest idea of a petrol-engine's insides.
Some of the men found it difficult to remember that, strictly speaking, Carrier companies were not "fighting troops.
You will remember that during the last season at Blangy-sur-Ternoise the company had made a name for itself in the football world, and we did not intend to allow this reputation to slip away.
You will remember that on the east of the Bullecourt front was the Queant Salient.
An order was published, informing us that although we were not "fighting troops," we should remember that discipline was useful.
Remember that nothing on earth has ever caused more deadly fear at the terrible hour of dawn than these grey sliding masses crammed with weary men.
I remember one special day when a paper had provided great food for excitement for two men who sat smoking in a corner and discussing matters of state over two cups of black coffee, which had been aided and abetted by two liqueurs.
In most cases that I remember there were no keys; either they had never been fitted with them, or else they had been found to be a superfluity and lost.
I remember on one occasion when remonstrating with the proprietor of a hotel, regarding the flavour of much keeping that hung about his new-laid eggs, he remarked that he only "took them as the poulets laid them down!
Passing through Bordeaux, I remember a very curiously sounding street-hawk note: it did not end at all as one expected it to end.
Formerly, when a youth, I remember I used to tremble at the very name of death!
We ought toremember that men, and especially Christian men, are free-men.
I remember also other acts of kindness that you have done me.
I well remember an instance of the kind, when an insulted warrior stepped out of the circle in which he was dancing, and struck dead the impudent boaster who had offended him.
They mark those whom they consider as their friends, and those whom they think to be their enemies, and are sure to remember them ever after.
Please don't joke me about her before the rest of the crowd," said Albert; "remember your promise!
The only thing I can remember is that her dress was tight-fitting and very plain.
I can still remember the sombre aisles of that house, the vault-like shadows, the magnificent window curtains that blotted out the windows.
I remember Mr. Sandsome chiefly as sitting at his desk, in a little room full of boys, a humming hive whose air was thick with dust, as the slanting sunbeams showed.
I remember she had three or four wood anemones in her hand--"wind stars" she called them, and I thought it a pretty name.
I remember in my early manhood going to Guildford on the Wey, and trying to find that unobtrusive rivulet.
I remember one day getting into a third-class smoking carriage on the Metropolitan Railway about one o'clock, and finding it full of rough working men.
I remember that on another occasion he went out of his way to promise a partially intoxicated man a drink; and taking him into a public-house ordered two lemon squashes!
I remember I admired it very much at the time, in spite of a slight headache, and it is still the only game of chess that I recall with undiluted pleasure.
Very close to the tragedy of life is the comedy, brightest upon the very edge of the dark, and I remember now with a queer touch of sympathetic amusement my dear departed self of the middle eighties.
I remember she corrected me once when I was very young.
Her china was the only thing with a touch of beauty in it--at least I remember nothing else--and each of her blessed plates was worth the happiness of a mortal for days together.
I remember rightly--and all that about amo, amas, amat.
When speaking of the dirtiness of their dwellings it would be as well to remember the slums of the great European cities, and the defective sanitation of the majority of their dwelling-places.
In times long ago, so long ago that no man knows any one who can remember them, it was the custom of the Sun to descend to earth and hold daily conversation with his younger brothers, the Emperor of China and the King of Siam.
They are helped in this matter by their wonderfully retentive memories which enable them to remember a large number of words and idioms.
There are old residents living in Bangkok who remember the day when the word of a native was as good as his bond.
I scarcely remember a bad result of hydriatic treatment undertaken by the parents and relations of the patient, without the assistance of any physician at all.
But, although I do not remember any harm done by such a process, I can scarcely recommend it, as long as there are milder and safer remedies at our disposal.
Græfenberg and other hydriatic establishments, and I scarcely remember a case of accident, whilst those treated in the usual mode by the best physicians would die in numbers.
I remember now that you told me long ago about a horrid child named Laura; but I never dreamed that she and Gladys were the same person.
Wouldn't you rather have people remember you with liking and respect?
Some of you will rememberthat Doctor Rhodes was ill last June at Commencement time.
And he said that after he got out of the hospital he had hunted for her just as long as he had had any money; but the poor old man who had left Sallie at the wrong school couldn't remember anything at all about it.
Perhaps some of the older girls will remember that I called them into my office immediately on their arrival last fall, told them a piece of very sad news and asked them to keep a secret for me.
Now that you know my name, see that you remember it.
I hope you remember what I happened to tell you about how to use it, because under the rules of the code, I'm not allowed to instruct you.