Swore
in sentence
137 examples of Swore in a sentence
At last Leon
swore
he would not see Emma again, and he reproached himself with not having kept his word, considering all the worry and lectures this woman might still draw down upon him, without reckoning the jokes made by his companions as they sat round the stove in the morning.
Emma had sent her out to watch for Bovary in order to keep him off, and they hurriedly installed the man in possession under the roof, where he
swore
he would remain.
My hands are hot with your kisses, and there is the spot on the carpet where at my knees you
swore
an eternity of love!
She ventured to question him as to the portrait in which he took such an interest; Julien
swore
to her that it was that of a man.
These gentlemen enjoyed incomes of from six to eight thousand livres; four of them
swore
by the _Quotidienne_, and three by the _Gazette de France_.
I
swore
to him that I was your wife, and I am to have permission to see you every day.''That finishes everything,' thought Julien; 'I could not prevent it.
Harris began to think it rather strange himself, but he held on until, at last, they passed the half of a penny bun on the ground that Harris's cousin
swore
he had noticed there seven minutes ago.
He
swore
at us in German (which I should judge to be a singularly effective language for that purpose), and he danced, and shook his fists, and called us all the English he knew.
She even
swore
emphatically not to tell anyone the slightest about what had happened, even though no-one had asked that of her.
"Five years ago you drove me away from your father's kitchen one night, when I come to ask for something to eat, and you said I warn't there for any good; and when I
swore
I'd get even with you if it took a hundred years, your father had me jailed for a vagrant.
They
swore
in the signpainter's boy, told him the scheme, and asked his help.
So they
swore
again with dread solemnities.
A third witness
swore
he had often seen the knife in Potter's possession.
Of all the things that seem strange in that battle, now that I look back upon it, there is nothing that was queerer than the way in which it acted on my comrades; for some took it as though it had been their daily meat without question or change, and others pattered out prayers from the first gunfire to the last, and others again cursed and
swore
in a way that was creepy to listen to.
It lay all within his reach he said, and he
swore
violently to me that he would have it, if he broke down the house for it.
The people affirmed there did a man come in there, and
swore
they would break open the door.
Two men
swore
that they saw the man whom they pursued go into her house.
Stop thief!' some artists had, it seems, put a trick upon a shopkeeper, and being pursued, some of them fled one way, and some another; and one of them was, they said, dressed up in widow's weeds, upon which the mob gathered about me, and some said I was the person, others said no.Immediately came the mercer's journeyman, and he
swore
aloud I was the person, and so seized on me.
She sought out one or two of the jurymen, talked with them, and endeavoured to possess them with favourable dispositions, on account that nothing was taken away, and no house broken, etc.; but all would not do, they were over-ruled by the rest; the two wenches
swore
home to the fact, and the jury found the bill against me for robbery and house-breaking, that is, for felony and burglary.
The witnesses were the two wenches, a couple of hard-mouthed jades indeed, for though the thing was truth in the main, yet they aggravated it to the utmost extremity, and
swore
I had the goods wholly in my possession, that I had hid them among my clothes, that I was going off with them, that I had one foot over the threshold when they discovered themselves, and then I put t' other over, so that I was quite out of the house in the street with the goods before they took hold of me, and then they seized me, and brought me back again, and they took the goods upon me.
But it seems as he was taken with the gang, one hard-mouthed countryman
swore
home to him, and they were like to have others come in according to the publication they had made; so that they expected more evidence against him, and for that reason he was kept in hold.
Sancho took out some lint and ointment from the alforjas; but when Don Quixote came to see his helmet shattered, he was like to lose his senses, and clapping his hand upon his sword and raising his eyes to heaven, be said,"I swear by the Creator of all things and the four Gospels in their fullest extent, to do as the great Marquis of Mantua did when he
swore
to avenge the death of his nephew Baldwin (and that was not to eat bread from a table-cloth, nor embrace his wife, and other points which, though I cannot now call them to mind, I here grant as expressed) until I take complete vengeance upon him who has committed such an offence against me."
No account I make of dances, or of strains that pleased thee so, keeping thee awake from midnight till the cocks began to crow; or of how I roundly
swore
it that there's none so fair as thou; true it is, but as I said it, by the girls I'm hated now.
CHAPTER XIXOF THE SHREWD DISCOURSE WHICH SANCHO HELD WITH HIS MASTER, AND OF THE ADVENTURE THAT BEFELL HIM WITH A DEAD BODY, TOGETHER WITH OTHER NOTABLE OCCURRENCES"It seems to me, senor, that all these mishaps that have befallen us of late have been without any doubt a punishment for the offence committed by your worship against the order of chivalry in not keeping the oath you made not to eat bread off a tablecloth or embrace the queen, and all the rest of it that your worship
swore
to observe until you had taken that helmet of Malandrino's, or whatever the Moor is called, for I do not very well remember."
"The mischief," said Don Quixote, "lay in my going away; for I should not have gone until I had seen thee paid; because I ought to have known well by long experience that there is no clown who will keep his word if he finds it will not suit him to keep it; but thou rememberest, Andres, that I
swore
if he did not pay thee I would go and seek him, and find him though he were to hide himself in the whale's belly."
Anselmo said no more, but he had said enough to cover Lothario with shame and confusion, and he, feeling as it were his honour touched by having been detected in a lie,
swore
to Anselmo that he would from that moment devote himself to satisfying him without any deception, as he would see if he had the curiosity to watch; though he need not take the trouble, for the pains he would take to satisfy him would remove all suspicions from his mind.
The landlord was beside himself at the coolness of the squire and the mischievous doings of the master, and
swore
it should not be like the last time when they went without paying; and that their privileges of chivalry should not hold good this time to let one or other of them off without paying, even to the cost of the plugs that would have to be put to the damaged wine-skins.
Judge, sirs, whether we had reason for surprise and joy at the words of this paper; and both one and the other were so great, that the renegade perceived that the paper had not been found by chance, but had been in reality addressed to some one of us, and he begged us, if what he suspected were the truth, to trust him and tell him all, for he would risk his life for our freedom; and so saying he took out from his breast a metal crucifix, and with many tears
swore
by the God the image represented, in whom, sinful and wicked as he was, he truly and faithfully believed, to be loyal to us and keep secret whatever we chose to reveal to him; for he thought and almost foresaw that by means of her who had written that paper, he and all of us would obtain our liberty, and he himself obtain the object he so much desired, his restoration to the bosom of the Holy Mother Church, from which by his own sin and ignorance he was now severed like a corrupt limb.
The whole audience was thrown into confusion, the ape fled to the roof of the inn, the cousin was frightened, and even Sancho Panza himself was in mighty fear, for, as he
swore
after the storm was over, he had never seen his master in such a furious passion.
CHAPTER XXVIIWHEREIN IT IS SHOWN WHO MASTER PEDRO AND HIS APE WERE, TOGETHER WITH THE MISHAP DON QUIXOTE HAD IN THE BRAYING ADVENTURE, WHICH HE DID NOT CONCLUDE AS HE WOULD HAVE LIKED OR AS HE HAD EXPECTEDCide Hamete, the chronicler of this great history, begins this chapter with these words, "I swear as a Catholic Christian;" with regard to which his translator says that Cide Hamete's swearing as a Catholic Christian, he being—as no doubt he was—a Moor, only meant that, just as a Catholic Christian taking an oath swears, or ought to swear, what is true, and tell the truth in what he avers, so he was telling the truth, as much as if he
swore
as a Catholic Christian, in all he chose to write about Quixote, especially in declaring who Master Pedro was and what was the divining ape that astonished all the villages with his divinations.
Back
Related words
Would
There
Again
Which
Could
Their
Himself
Never
Other
Should
Against
About
Without
Might
Great
Going
Woman
While
Until
Others