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1
Brother Scribe sighs like a broken bellows, and we
trudge
on
.
2
Still, we
trudge
on
,
boots full and soaked to the bone.
3
The sheep
trudge
on
stoically, oblivious to the weather.
4
We pass it and
trudge
on
in light marching order, carrying arms, blankets, haversacks, and canteens.
5
Leaving the place with reluctance, I left it late in the afternoon to
trudge
on
to Oxford.
6
Am I to travel with six white horses and silver bells, or
trudge
on
foot with a wallet?
7
After allowing me to cool for a moment, he repeats the last line written, and we
trudge
on
.
8
He had heard some things which would occupy his thoughts in his solitary
trudge
on
his way to Boston.
9
The horseman, who heard this, pulled up and cried, "Hullo, Hans why do you
trudge
on
foot?"
10
It is as if anyone who thinks lives in hell, while the passive majority
trudge
on
,
unburdened by thought.
11
She was thinking of Nicholas having to
trudge
on
foot all those miles back after his exertions on the sward.
12
He knew that the Babe would
trudge
on
till he dropped in his tracks before acknowledging that he was tired.
13
What right have you to ride in your coach or astride your spirited barb while I am forced to
trudge
on
foot?
14
A good many camels having been thus lost, Halliday, Ben, and I were compelled, as at first, to
trudge
on
on foot.
15
Though swept down for some distance, we got safe on shore at last, but we had to
trudge
on
in our wet clothes.
16
A poor creature belonging to a Tuatee, however, is forced always to
trudge
on
foot, although its master often takes a lift himself.
trudge
on
trudge