The light that never was on sea or land fell upon the brickfield.
2
He suggested my shutting out the brickfield-ifI didn't like the brickfield-withtrees.
3
And yet, poor, foolish child, fresh from the Egyptian brickfield, you could not rest satisfied.
4
Golgotha was a grim garden compared with Paul's brickfield.
5
They laid the scene in the brickfield.
6
He went ahead with Barney Bill, whose queer side limp awoke poignant memories of the Bludston brickfield.
7
She had gone on, she said in her note, to an aunt and uncle who had a brickfield near Horsham.
8
Do you remember, sonny, when I left you alone that night and went to the other side of the brickfield?
9
I looked at the man clad in mean garments and foul from his labour in the brickfield, marvelling at his insolence.
10
He limped away across the dim brickfield and sat down at the edge of the hollow where the woman had been murdered.
11
Finally, one Sunday afternoon, a policeman wandering through some waste ground, a deserted brickfield behind Flowery End, came upon an unedifying spectacle.
12
Nature, by this process, has attained much the same result as that at which a human artificer arrives by his operations in a brickfield.
13
Like henbane, it is often seen on rubbish-heaps and in old brickfields.
14
He employs on his estate-inmines, brickfields, and plantations-overfour thousand men.
15
He would get up, and go out down to the brickfields.
16
And the air seemed always grey, and the smoke from the brickfields was grey.