Shall
in sentence
4098 examples of Shall in a sentence
They regard as the worst of evils, as the _king of terrors_, this duel to a fatal issue, of which I
shall
begin to think seriously only upon the day itself.
Notwithstanding all the promises of prudence made to her spiritual director and to her husband, no sooner had she arrived in Besancon than she wrote with her own hand to each of the thirty-six jurors:'I
shall
not appear in Court upon the day of the trial, Sir, because my presence might prejudice M. Sorel's case.
If I learn, Sir, that you have even the slightest hesitation in saving from the barbarity of our laws a person who is so little guilty, I
shall
leave my bed, to which I am confined solely by my husband's orders, and
shall
come to throw myself at your feet.
'As it is, I
shall
be all too long exposed as a spectacle to my enemies.
..And so, in three days, at this same hour, I
shall
know what to think of the _great hereafter_.'
And so I
shall
never see her any more!
It is right ...'Conte Altamira told me once that, on the eve of his death, Danton said in his loud voice: "It is strange, the verb to guillotine cannot be conjugated in all its tenses; one can say: I
shall
be guillotined, thou shalt be guillotined, but one does not say: I have been guillotined."
He will say to me perhaps: "Much
shall
be pardoned thee, because thou hast loved much ..."'Have I loved much?
'We do not know the source of the Nile,' Julien said to himself; 'it has not been granted to the eye of man to behold the King of Rivers in the form of a simple rivulet: similarly no human eye
shall
ever see Julien weak, if only because he is not weak.
'The lawyer, to make you sign your appeal.''I
shall
not appeal.'
And who can say that in two months' time, after a long confinement in this damp cell, I
shall
be so well prepared?
my sole comfort the imprecations of this madwoman ...Well, the day after tomorrow, I
shall
be fighting a duel in the morning with a man well known for his coolness and for his remarkable skill ...Very remarkable,' whispered Mephistopheles, 'he never misses his stroke.
'Very well, so be it, all's well that ends well.'(Mathilde's eloquence continued to flow.)'Begad, no,' he said to himself, 'I
shall
not appeal.'
I
shall
think it over.'
'I take back my word,' cried Julien, springing to his feet; 'I
shall
not appeal from the sentence of death, if by poison, knife, pistol, charcoal or any other means whatsoever, you seek to put an end to, or to endanger your life.'Madame de Renal's expression altered suddenly; the warmest affection gave place to a profound abstraction.
'Who knows what we
shall
find in our next life?' replied Julien; 'torments perhaps, perhaps nothing at all.
Never
shall
I have been so happy.''You will never have been so happy?''Never,' replied Julien with rapture, 'and I am speaking to you as I speak to myself.
I
shall
go myself to the Attorney-General.''Take care, you will compromise yourself.'
'Yes, my brethren,' he said to them, 'I
shall
spend the day here, and the night, and every day and night from now onwards.
I
shall
be said to have turned coward in this trial which they can all understand!'Julien was almost in despair.
I
shall
give a thousand francs to each of my brothers, and the remainder to you.''Very good,' said the old man, 'that remainder is my due; but since God has been graciously pleased to touch your heart, if you wish to die like a good Christian, you ought first to pay your debts.
Let such a thing never be said ...The tears which will flow at your conversion will annul the corrosive effect of ten editions of the impious works of Voltaire.''And what
shall
I have left,' replied Julien coldly, 'if I despise myself?
'I
shall
go to the King, I
shall
confess proudly that you are my lover: the life of a man, and of such a man as Julien, must outweigh all other considerations.
I
shall
say that it was out of jealousy that you attempted my life.
There are endless examples of poor young men who have been saved in such cases by the humanity of a jury, or by that of the King ...''I
shall
cease to see you, I
shall
bar the door of my prison against you,' cried Julien, 'and most certainly I
shall
kill myself in despair, the day after, unless you swear to me that you will take no step that will make us both a public spectacle.
Two days earlier, he had said to Fouque: 'For my emotions I cannot answer; this damp and hideous cell gives me moments of fever in which I am not myself; but fear, no; no one
shall
see me blench.'
'Arrange that the post-horses
shall
gallop all the time.
So, we'll go into work now,
shall
we?"
- I'll take him his soup first then,
shall
I?"And she poured the soup into a dish.
He
shall
have me.
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