Evening
in sentence
2289 examples of Evening in a sentence
So that evening, when he recognised Madame Bovary in the "Hirondelle," the cure told her his dilemma, without, however, appearing to attach much importance to it, for he began praising a preacher who was doing wonders at the Cathedral, and whom all the ladies were rushing to hear.
That same
evening
she urged Bovary to write to his mother, to ask her to send as quickly as possible the whole of the balance due from the father's estate.
On Mid-Lent she did not return to Yonville, but in the
evening
went to a masked ball.
As a matter of fact, the
evening
before another paper had been brought that she had not yet seen, and she was stunned by these words—"By order of the king, law, and justice, to Madame Bovary."
During the
evening
Charles seemed to her careworn.
He waited till six in the
evening.
He was making his blood too thick by going to sleep every
evening
after dinner.
So bearing no grudge to poor Charles, he came back again in the
evening
to sit up with the body; bringing with him three volumes and a pocket-book for taking notes.
In the
evening
he had some visitors.
Despite their fatigue, Charles and his mother stayed very long that
evening
talking together.
For a week he was seen going to church in the
evening.
In the
evening
in summer he took his little girl with him and led her to the cemetery.
Read them in the evening, when you go and waste your time with the cure.'Julien, although stunned by the force of the blow, and bleeding profusely, went to take up his proper station beside the saw.
That evening, the whole of Verrieres flocked to M. de Renal's to behold the marvel.
That evening, as her maid was waiting upon her, she noticed that the girl was crying.
They formed the habit of spending the
evening
under a huge lime a few yards from the house.
One evening, Julien was talking with emphasis, he was revelling in the pleasure of talking well and to young married women; as he gesticulated, he touched the hand of Madame de Renal, who was leaning on the back of one of those chairs of painted wood that are placed in gardens.
CHAPTER 9 An
Evening
in the CountryM. Guerin's Dido, a charming sketch!
He greatly curtailed the children's lessons, and when, later on, the presence of Madame de Renal recalled him to the service of his own vanity, decided that it was absolutely essential that this
evening
she should allow her hand to remain in his.
Everything that they did this
evening
seemed strange to Julien.
Julien, ashamed of his cowardice, told himself: 'At the precise moment when ten o'clock strikes, I shall carry out the intention which, all day long, I have been promising myself that I would fulfil this evening, or I shall go up to my room and blow my brains out.'
Fortunately for him, this evening, his touching and emphatic speeches found favour with Madame Derville, who as a rule found him as awkward as a schoolboy, and by no means amusing.
When he went into the garden that evening, Julien was ready to listen with interest to the thoughts of the fair cousins.
That
evening
was delightful for them all, except for the Mayor of Verrieres, who could not forget the growing wealth of his competitors.
That
evening
she had tasted an unknown happiness; now she suddenly found herself plunged in appalling misery.
As she watched him go, overwhelmed by the sombre pride which she read in that glance, so friendly the
evening
before, her eldest son, who came running up from the other end of the garden, said to her as he embraced her:'We have a holiday, M. Julien is going on a journey.'
Without heeding it he saw fade and die, one after another, the last rays of
evening
light.
'You've quarrelled with your M. de Renal, then, that you come here of a sudden like this?'Julien related to him, with suitable omissions, the events of the previous
evening.
'You must not, on any account,' Madame Derville told her when she saw Julien return, 'feeling as you do, sit in the garden this evening, the damp air would make you worse.'Madame Derville was surprised to see that her friend, who was always being scolded by M. de Renal for the undue simplicity of her attire, had put on open-work stockings and a pair of charming little shoes that had arrived from Paris.
Far from his being proud, or even grateful for the affection which Madame de Renal betrayed this
evening
by unmistakable signs, beauty, elegance, freshness found him almost unconscious of their appeal.
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