These were not always the same two, but usually the two riding horses were the ones on picket.
There they found blood on the grass and a trail of blood leading down a littlesag to a ravine, where the man had crossed.
They had gone perhaps three-quarters of a mile, and had followed the sheep trail up to the crest of a little ridge, beyond which there seemed to be a sag which ran down into the narrow, rock-strewn valley.
Han havde derfor altid en stor Tilhørerkreds, og efter hans tidlig indtraadte Død var det en let Sagfor hans Venner at samle de fornødne Midler til at opreise et Monument for ham.
The whiteness of the deck attracted his attention, and turning to me he made, smiling, an observation in a language which I did not understand, but could not help desiring to hear its silvery sounds again.
He completely abandoned the child of his marriage with Adelaïda Ivanovna, not from malice, nor because of his matrimonial grievances, but simply because he forgot him.
Much is done already in you since you can so deeply and sincerely know yourself.
Only now, as you speak, I understand that I was really only seeking your approbation for my sincerity when I told you I could not endure ingratitude.
Barkup consented to this, and when the tickets were distributed the circus passed on.
Before he could free himself her deft fingers had removed the goggles.
Beg your pardon, Miss Faro, but I've got a curiosity to see your lover's eyes.
Let us now take our station where we can look down upon the town and over the surrounding scene of mingled island, sea and shore, and try to recall some of the thrilling events that give Sag Harbor its historical interest.
French, cared to repeat the experiment; so that within twenty years Sag Harbor has fallen from its position as the third or fourth whaling-port in the country to that in which we find it to-day.
Gardiner and his brother despatched on the same errand the first ship that ever sailed from Sag Harbor.
In the latter year Commodore Hardy sent a launch and two barges with a hundred men to plunder Sag Harbor, but the project utterly failed.
With the railroad brought through from Sag Harbor, Fort Pond Bay will be the point of arrival and departure of steamers plying between the island and the New England shore.
In Sag Harbor there lived a certain Captain David Hand, who died in 1840 at the age of eighty-one.
Captain Babcock, the lighthouse-keeper of Montauk, sailed six or seven years ago the brig Myra, the last whaler that left Sag Harbor.