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Person taking voyage South and all the qualms that she experiences before she takes her departure.
By Alice Frankforter The New Yorker, November 23 , 1929P. 54 Person taking voyage South and all the qualms that she experiences before she takes her departure.
The New Yorker, November 23, 1929 P. 54 Person taking voyage South and all the qualms that she experiences before she takes her departure.
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The ship is still seaworthy, and routinely takes voyages around Plymouth Harbor.
The diner who bites the food is taking a voyage through Achatz's lost time.
The problem, expressed metaphorically, is that receiving a souvenir from someone else's journey makes a poor substitute for taking that voyage for oneself.
Centering on unmoored young men and women taking fraught voyages of self-discovery, Brandon's first two novels — "Arkansas" and "Citrus County" — shuddered through strip-mall landscapes leafy with damaged adults, broken families, disintegrating plans and unrealized hopes.
"I've taken one voyage myself," she said.
All five Camaj brothers, most of them scattered around the globe, had taken the voyage together.
It's a moral obligation that they take this voyage (with Williams standing in for the audience as we travel with Tarzan).
Just before he took a voyage to the mountain, he wrote to a friend, "I must get that Mt. for future reason of fame and success".
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