Monday, November 30, 2009

vivid.

Brown trout. color: body; brownish with large scales. Back; almost black. Belly; almost white. Fin's; bottom have white edges. Sides; red and black spots surrounded with lighter rings.
Average weight one pound.


deer. Body; reddish brown in summer. Grey in the winter. Rare if is white or black. Nose black. Horns greenish velvety in spring. Brown or reddish, or black rest of year. Belly and bottom of tail white.

Monday, November 16, 2009

The living REED.

Such shouts went up that the Chief of police rose from his seat and went to the door and made himself stiff and straight and hoped thereby to frighten them into silence. Far from this, they shouted more loudly than ever. He hesitated a moment and then shouted back at them, whereupon they shouted still more so that he could not be heard. He hesitated and then turned back into the room.


That had to be loud clamor. The crowd was mad enough to do an act of compulsion. this part is about a wife how was mistaken and was afflicted with being beat. And the crowd new her and was trying to stop it. Which in the end they did.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Don Quijote.

''Oh, flower of knighthood, why should one blow from a stick end such a well-spent life! Oh, honer of all your Noble ancestors, honor and glory of all La Mancha, and of the entire known world, which will now have to do without you and so will be full of evil-doers, unafraid of being punished for their wicked deeds! Oh, more generous than any Alexander, because for only eight months of service you would have given me the best island the seas encircle and the waves wash upon.



To me, that was a good friend. Or one who really needed him for his own benefit, that was and never did happen. He really can give a good complement, after the he thought Don Quijote was dead, but in fact woke up happy with his squire. That is the kind of friend I want around me, Only I would prefer having them give me complements like that when I am a live.

green is participial phrase.

Don Quijote.

The ox-cart driver yoked up his animals and made a place for Don Quijote on a bundle of hay, and then they plodded slowly along as usual, in the direction the priest pointed out, until after six days they arrived at Don Quote's village, which they reached just at midday, and as it happened on a Sunday, so that everyone was out in the middle of it. All the people came over to see who was in the cart, and were astonished to see their neighbor; a small boy ran to tell the knight's niece and his housekeeper that their uncle and master was coming home, weak and pale, stretched out on a pile of hay and traveling in an ox cart. It was pitiful, hearing the two good ladies' screaming and crying, and seeing how they slapped their own faces and, once they'd seen Don Quijote coming through the gate, they hurled new curses at all wicked books of chivalry.



The ox cart owner made a spot for Don Quijote and they left falling the priest orders, after six days they came in to town on Sunday, when all the people were in the village square.Then a small boy ran to tell the knights niece. When the niece saw him she screamed curses at books of chivalry.