In Spanish prisons, it appears from Salillas's Vida Penal en España, quarrels and arrests are much more common in spring and summer than at any other season.
It is, as Salillas, from whose Vida penal en España I take the following remarks concerning it, observes, a convict city.
Kingdom Come, by Vida Sutton, shows the spirits of Russian peasants slain for refusing to fight, specters unaware that they are dead.
Darling Clyde was as merry and attentive as ever and Vida was still joyous.
Some entertainment Vida give me, telling this, setting on her bed under a light that showed up more lines than ever in her face.
He puts Clyde into a play in whichVida is the mother and Clyde is the noble son that takes the crime on his shoulders to screen the brother of the girl he loves, and it was an awful hit.
She was still the same Vida that wanted to mother every male human on earth.
Also I noticed we was eating a mighty good dinner; so darned good you didn't see how Vida could set it up at the price boarders usually pay.
Of course women are crazy about him; but that don't bother Vida a little bit.
The lad at the camera begun to turn a crank and Vida begun to act like she wasn't acting at all.
And the letters coming in by the bushel really make Vida proud.
Vida is kind of took off her feet, but mumbles "Yes, sir!
It come dinnertime; about a dozen boarders straggling in, with Vida in a pretty frock anxious because darling Clyde was ten minutes late and of course something fatal must of happened to him in crossing a crowded street.
Vida told him she had her two years' savings of three hundred and eighty good dollars and that I had promised to loan her a few dollars to piece out with.
I read it myself while Vida watched me, setting on her little iron bed after work one night.
The job is in a room about ninety feet long filled with boxes and sewing machines and shelves full of costumes, and Vida is to be assistant wardrobe mistress.
But Vida was by no means the most celebrated poet that adorned the age of Leo X.
Sometimes it was the beautiful voice ofVida Milholland which rang through the corridors of the dreary prison, with a stirring Irish ballad, a French love song, or the Woman's Marseillaise.
There are moments in "Del Sentimiento Trágico de la Vida" and in the "Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho" when in the rolling earthy Castilian phrases one can feel the brandishing of the sword of that very angel.
Here is his creed, one of his creeds, from the preface of the Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho: "There is no future: there is never a future.
And predominant in the Iberian mind is the thought La vida es sueño: "Life is a dream.
I know you are great at catching on with the girls," Bart observed; "but I swear I did not believe Vida Melburn was the sort to take up with a chance acquaintance, under any circumstances.
On the return to the lake Vida Melburn's nearly distracted father, uncle, and aunt were found, and the girl was restored to them.
You are right," the dark-haired lad confessed, "Vida would not be likely to do such a thing.
Vida and her father were stopping there, and Frank was urged to remain longer.
When Frank left Carson City Bart was the guest of Vida Melburn's uncle.
I do not believe she is the Vida Melburn you know.
Quien larga vida vive mucho mal vide=--To live long is to see much evil.
Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho and my cult of Quixotism as the national religion.
In one of my books (Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho, part ii.
Of such kind is human faith; of such kind was the heroic faith that Sancho Panza had in his master, the knight Don Quijote de la Mancha, as I think I have shown in my Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho; a faith based upon incertitude, upon doubt.
Here I searched out the tickets, put away only too carefully, and took a fleeting glance at the Vida Nueva, which urged all "men of heart" to celebrate the eve of its anniversary by their presence at this mass meeting.
On the fourteenth of May, last year, the Vida Nueva, this bold young periodical in the van of the Liberal cause, brought out an illustrated number devoted to "The Torments of Montjuich.
It seemed a little too considerate in the Vida Nueva to provide for the recreation of its subscribers, but I was growing accustomed to surprises of Spanish courtesy, and tucked the tickets away in a safe corner.
The second day of July was the first anniversary of the founding of a daring Madrid weekly, the Vida Nueva, to which, attracted by its literary values, as well as its political courage, I had subscribed.
The sheet is usually issued Sunday, but as I was on the point of going out one Saturday afternoon my Vida Nueva arrived, accompanied by two non-committal tickets.
Moving, he speaks to VIDA from the back of her armchair.
I'm sure when Vida sees a wedding ring she smells the battle afar off.
Mrs. Vida Phillimore's picture appears in every other issue of most of the evening papers.
VIDA comes in slowly, with the air of a spoiled beauty.
Fue tan renida i porfiada, que despues de la de Rebena, no se ha visto entre tan poca gente mas cruel batalla, donde hermanos a hermanos, ni deudos a deudos, ni amigos a amigos no se davan vida uno a otro.
Dicen ques mui buen christiano i hombre de buena vida i clerigo, i dicen que viene a estas partes con buena intencion i no quiso salario ninguno del Rey sino venir para poner paz en estos reynos con sus cristiandades.
Ribadeneira, who as a youth had been associated with the founder, wrote his Vida del S.
The idea of the book is not original to Ignatius At Montserrato he had found in use a popular translation of the Exercitatorio de la vida spiritual (1500), written in Latin by Abbot Garcias de Cisneros (d.
When Vida gave up her laughing remonstrance, Mrs. Fox-Moore thought her sister had also given up the idea.
But she's listening to the speech;' and Vida herself, with something of an effort, seemed now to be following the sordid experiences of a girl that the speaker had befriended some years before.
I don't know what that discontented creature, her sister, means by sayingVida is so unsympathetic about charity work.
No,' Vida helped her out with a laughing whisper; 'I agree she doesn't look big enough or bad enough or old enough or bold enough to be the mother of young women renowned for their dreadfulness.
Fourteen years before, when Vida Levering was only eighteen, she had tried to make something like a conventional maid out of the faithful Northumbrian.
When Borrodaile had said good-bye, Vida followed him to the top of the stairs.
You are very tired,' said Lord Borrodaile, looking atVida Levering's face.
Vida turned to the maid and met her superior smile.
Vida Levering turned her head away, and in so doing met Lord Borrodaile's eyes over the back of the bench.
Vida called out to the girl, drawing aside her gown.
Vida turned and found the Lady Sophia at her side.
The chief works of Antonio José da Silva are Vida do Grande D.
His own countrymen he likened to stupid beasts of burden: Que os Brasileiros são bestas, E estão sempre a trabalhar Toda a vida por manter Maganos de Portugal.
The first and last of the ten stanzas of Beijo Eterno epitomize the Dionysiac outburst; they are alike: Quero um beijo sem fim, Que dure a vida enteira e aplaque a meu desejo!
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vida" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.