She died, and left him broken-hearted and poor, impoverished by the doctors, and pauperized by the undertaker.
2
Amongst the middle classes he remains a canonized saint, the man who pauperized himself for their sakes.
3
In 1846, William Freeman, a pauperized and idiotic negro, was at Auburn, N.Y., on trial for murder.
4
It was made in 1720 when the "Bubbles" had burst and found thousands ruined and pauperized.
5
So we practically pauperized ourselves at first to see that they recovered too quickly for hate and fear.
6
What sort of earth or heaven would hold any spiritual wealth in it for souls pauperized by inaction?
7
This charm of pauperized vagabondage seems all along to have been Satan's most serious bait to human nature.
8
Almost all of them, if opportunity offered, stole what they could; they all presented the same pauperized, emaciated look.
9
Even in pocket you are suffering now-asall England is suffering-fromthe existence of heathens and savages, reckless, profligate, pauperized.
10
They are, however, poor, often in need, sometimes pauperized, and, as a general rule, their lives are short and miserable.
11
More likely the pauperized body, sucked clean of marrow and every vital fluid, was no longer strong enough to support itself.
12
He is stiff, obstinate, punctilious, with an extreme sense of honour, to gratify which, by-the-bye, he has just deliberately pauperized himself.
13
The pauperized bourgeois became rebels of the Right or Left; Schickelgruber and Djugashwili shared about equally the benefits of the social migration.
14
Nearly three millions of people had been completely pauperized, and, in one way or another, had to be supported at public expense.
15
The inevitable result followed: the lion and the lamb lay down together, with the lamb inside the lion, thousands of formerly well-to-do people were pauperized.
16
"I have given employment to many, and help to the pauperized."