Use guida in a sentence
Sentences starting with guida
- Guida turned round with a sharp cry. [11]
- Guida mine, I want you to marry me. [11]
- Guida was off there alone in Jersey-- alone. [11]
- Guida put by the wheel, and left the house. [11]
- Guida realised now that she must announce the marriage at once. [11]
- Guida and Philip stood looking after him in silence for a minute. [11]
- Guida knew the signals well. [11]
- Guida loved the sea; and she could sail a boat, and knew the tides and currents of the south coast as well as most fishermen. [11]
- Guida counted as one of the crew, for there was little in the handling of a boat she did not know. [11]
- Guida used Ranulph's name for Carterette, knowing that it would change the madcap's mood. [11]
Sentences ending with guida
- Of these last would have been Guida. [11]
- And as for what we'll think of this in another year, why, doesn't it hold to reason that we'll think it the best day of our lives-- as it is, Guida? [11]
- In the same way Ranulph knew of Guida. [11]
- An extra bead was there for Guida, and one for another than Guida. [11]
- Meanwhile Ranulph turned to Guida. [11]
- He had not therefore written to Guida. [11]
- I am speaking the truth to you now, Guida. [11]
- I should deserve that if I deceived you, Guida. [11]
- I should deserve that if ever I deceived you, Guida. [11]
- Meanwhile, from a spirit of delicacy, avoiding the Place du Vier Prison, he visited Maitresse Aimable, and from day to day learned all that happened to Guida. [11]
Short sentences using guida
- Detricand did not see Guida. [11]
- Where was Guida now? [11]
- Guida looked about her. [11]
- Guida rose to her feet. [11]
- Guida shook her head reprovingly. [11]
- Will you come, Guida? [11]
- Guida was unlike anybody else. [11]
- Guida was amazed and moved. [11]
- It was Guida. [11]
- Guida! [11]
Sentences containing guida two or more times
- You had a wife-- Guida d'Avranche, but Guida d'Avranche is dead. [11]
- He even figured to himself with what surprise Guida would greet his announcement that she was henceforth Princesse Guida d'Avranche, and in due time would be her serene highness the Duchesse de Bercy. [11]
- Near it was the summer-house where Guida and her mother used to sit and read, Guida on the three-legged stool, her mother on the low, wide seat covered with ferns. [11]
- The little world of Jersey no longer pointed the finger of scorn at Guida Landresse de Landresse, but bent the knee to Princess Guida d'Avranche. [11]
- Her name was no longer Guida Landresse de Landresse, but Guida d'Avranche. [11]
- Guida, my Guida, I love you! [11]
- She came to ask Guida to go with her and Jean to the island of Sark, twelve miles away, where Guida had never been. [11]
More example sentences with the word guida in them
- Guida, ma couzaine, you'll stay here, in the land of your birth. [11]
- But you, Guida, you see them clearly because your heart is clear. [11]
- He had not yet written to her, according to his parole: this issue was clear; he could not send a letter to Guida until he was freed from that condition. [11]
- Yet he would write to Guida now, and send the letter when he was released from parole. [11]
- The first few words had little or no significance for Guida, but presently she was held as by the fascination of a serpent. [11]
- With a sigh which was half bitter and mocking laughter, he seized the pouncebox, dried his letter to Guida, and put it in his pocket. [11]
- The plane on which Guida had moved was lowered. [11]
- He knew French well, but could speak almost no Jersey patois, so, in compliment to him, Jean Touzel, Ranulph, and Guida spoke in English. [11]
- Philip seemed to wear no mark of convention, and Guida spoke her thoughts freely to him. [11]
- In this latter way did she seem to lay her hand upon the lives of Philip d'Avranche and Guida Landresse. [11]
- To Guida, who was both of the sea and of the land, fearless as to either, it was neither terrible nor desolate to be alone with the storm. [11]
- This spot Guida used to "flourish" with flowers. [11]
- Only once or twice since that day on the Ecrehos, so fateful to them both, had Guida seen Ranulph. [11]
- He was angry too: angry at Detricand, angry at Guida for her very innocence, and because she had caught and held even the slight line of association Detricand had thrown. [11]
- Her eye wandered to the racllyi, with its flitches of bacon, to the dreschiaux and the sanded floor, to the great Elizabethan oak chair, and at last back to Guida, as though through her the lost voice might be charmed up again. [11]
- Then he took to humming a ditty the Jersey housewife used to sing as she spun, while Guida disposed of the sweet-smelling fruit. [11]
- Suddenly Guida said to herself: "My handkerchief--why did he take my handkerchief? [11]
- Getting no answer to her words, Guida went first to the hearth and stirred the fire, the old man sitting rigid in his chair and regarding her with fixed, watchful eyes. [11]
- Yet never but to her mother had Guida said so much to any human being as within these past few moments to Philip d'Avranche. [11]
- The invitation came to Guida like water to thirsty ground. [11]
- What had belonged to Guida belonged to her for ever, belonged to a past life with which henceforth he should have naught to do. [11]
- Guida, I want to go on telling you the same story for a long time--even till you or I die. [11]
- When you go to die, you will think and think and think of that beautiful Guida Landresse; you will think and think of the heart you kill, and you will call, and she will not come. [11]
- As he walked through the Vier Marchi with his officers, there flashed before his eyes the scene of sixteen years ago, when, through the grime and havoc of battle, he had run to save Guida from the scimitar of the garish Turk. [11]
- Guida, so Detricand thought, might break her heart and live on; this woman would break her heart and die: the one would grow larger through suffering, the other shrink to a numb coldness. [11]
- She had no thought that Guida had any vital interest in Philip, and ruthlessly, though unconsciously, she began to torture the young wife as few are tortured in this world. [11]
- Troubled in conscience thereby, yet I did marry the twain gladly, for I think a worthier maid never lived than this same Mistress Guida Landresse de Landresse, of the ancient family of the de Mauprats. [11]
- The eyes of the two met now, fairly, firmly; and Guida was conscious of a look in the other's face which she had never seen before. [11]
- He drove home the truth with bare unvarnished power--the wrong to Guida, the wrong to the Countess, the wrong to the Dukedom of Bercy, to that honour which should belong to those in high estate. [11]
- So this was the truth about Philip d'Avranche, about Guida, alas! [11]
- The air of the morning, the sport of using the elements for one's pleasure, had given Guida an elfish sprightliness of spirits. [11]
- When Ranulph entered the kitchen his greeting to the sieur and the chevalier was in French, but to Guida he said, rather stupidly in the patois--for late events had embarrassed him--"Ah bah! [11]
- This--this was not the Guida he had known! [11]
- So at last the end came like a sudden wind out of the north; and it was left to Guida Landresse de Landresse to fight the fight and finish the journey of womanhood alone. [11]
- The one letter the Chevalier did not read to Guida referred to Philip. [11]
- It delighted in the activity of his life, it was full of hope, of promise of happiness for them both in the future, but it had no solicitude for Guida in the present. [11]
- So it was that when, after months of waiting, the Chevalier suddenly left St. Heliers to join Detricand, Guida did not know the object of his journey. [11]
- Thus it was that now no human being in Jersey could vouch that Guida had been married. [11]
- He was a sovereign duke of Europe, as Guida had said. [11]
- His gaze was so fixed that every one turned to see--every one save Guida. [11]
- The pinch of snuff fell from the fingers of the old man on to the white stuff of his short-clothes, but as Guida entered the room and stood still a moment, he did not stir in his seat. [11]
- Nothing in the situation tallied with Ranulph's ideas of Guida and his knowledge of life. [11]
- Afterwards Guida would sit and think of what Detricand had said, and of the honesty of nature that never allowed him to deceive himself. [11]
- Perhaps, indeed, the singular and painful shyness--chill almost--with which Guida had received the fifty pounds now communicated itself to him by the intangible telegraphy of the mind and spirit. [11]
- Yet, try as she would in that supreme moment, Carterette could not feel all she once felt concerning Guida. [11]
- Why then should she think Guida would take the officer seriously where she herself held the sailor lightly? [11]
- He could not shake off oppressive thoughts concerning Guida and this betrothal. [11]
- Thus Guida had settled at Plemont, and there over four years of her life were passed. [11]
- Before breakfast was set upon the table, Guida saw the Narcissus sail round Noirmont Point and disappear. [11]
- Suppose, why, suppose--thoughtless scoundrel that he had been--suppose that there might come another than himself and Guida to bear his name! [11]
- He knew what scandal had said concerning Guida and Philip. [11]
- Once again at Saumur, a week later, Detricand wrote a long letter to Carterette Mattingley, in Jersey, in which he set forth these strange events at Bercy, and asked certain questions concerning Guida. [11]
- But at the same time she felt sure that what concerned Philip must interest Guida, she herself always cared to hear the fate of an old admirer, and this was what had brought her to the cottage to-day. [11]
- Of the true relations between Guida and Philip he knew nothing, but from that last day in Jersey he did know that Philip had roused in her emotions, perhaps less vital than love but certainly less equable than friendship. [11]
- Besides Guida and Ranulph, Jean and Jean's wife, there was a young English clergyman of the parish of St. Michael's, who had come from England to fill the place of the rector for a few months. [11]
- With this clear purpose in his mind colouring all that he might say, yet crippling the freedom of his thought, he sat down to write to Guida. [11]
- The feeling which possessed Guida as she looked at the Paternosters was almost like blank fear. [11]
- Seeing Guida seated on the veille, she came in quickly, her dancing dark eyes heralding great news. [11]
- What was going on in his mind neither she nor any in that Court might ever know, for in the pause, the Comtesse Chantavoine rose up, and passing steadily by Philip, came to Guida. [11]
- The dry cackle of the apprentice as he looked after Guida roused a mockery of indignation in the Master. [11]
- Upon the hill of Plemont above them, a stone taken from the chimney of the hut where Guida used to live, stood upright beside a little grave. [11]
- The straightforward issue of Guida or the duchy he had not been called upon to face. [11]
- At last Guida noticed Jean's look. [11]
- If Guida did not understand all now, there should come a time when she would understand. [11]
- The apprentice seemed not to hear, but kept on looking after Guida, a pitiless leer on his face. [11]
- But Guida was not of these. [11]
- Maitresse Aimable again nodded, and her arm drew closer about Guida. [11]
- He could wait no longer: he would ask Jean Touzel and his wife about Guida. [11]
- I know you never wanted revenge on me, Guida, but still you have it here. [11]
- She was so near that Guida could see the anchor a-cockbell, and the poop lanthorns. [11]
- When her grandmother, my wife, my Julie, when she was young--ah, she was fair, fairer than Guida, but not so tall--not quite so tall. [11]
- He felt he must say something, and in a sympathetic tone he replied: "Yes, Guida, but after a while we stop trying to follow and see and find, and we walk in the old paths and take things as they are. [11]
- She watched Guida moving about the kitchen abstractedly. [11]
- Guida glanced once more towards the man-o'-war: and then, with mischief in her eye, turned towards Jean. [11]
- Her main and mizzen masts were not visible, and her colours could not be seen, but Jean's quick eye had lighted on something which made him cast apprehensive glances at his wife and Guida. [11]
- Understanding then the meaning of their laughter, and the implied insult to Guida, Maitresse Aimable's voice came ravaging out of the silence where it lay hid so often and so long, and the signalmen went their ways shamefacedly. [11]
- One day of married life, or, in reality, a few hours of married life, with Guida had given the sensation more of a noble adventure than of a lasting condition. [11]
- She could not make head or tail of her thoughts now, nor see an inch before her nose; all she could feel was an aching heart for Guida. [11]
- To be sure, Maitresse Aimable came oftener; but, since that notable day at Sark, Guida had resolutely avoided reference, however oblique, to Philip and herself. [11]
- I thought I loved you, Guida, but I know now that it was not love--not real love. [11]
- They turned and looked; and Guida withdrew her hand. [11]
- The Comtesse Chantavoine looked at Philip, looked at Guida, and knew that here was the opening of the scroll she had not been able to unfold. [11]
- Carterette saw Ranulph little oftener than did Guida, but she knew what he was doing, being anxious to know, and every one's business being every one else's business in Jersey. [11]
- Then coming a little nearer to Guida, he said: "There's only one thing in life that really hurts--playing false. [11]
- Guida gave a little cry of astonishment. [11]
- He had never liked Guida, for in the first days of his importance she had, for a rudeness upon his part meant as a compliment, thrown his hat--the Lieutenant-Bailly's hat--into the Fauxbie by the Vier Prison. [11]
- To Guida the letters of the word seemed to stand out from the paper like shining hieroglyphs on a misty grey curtain. [11]
- Dormy had of late haunted the precincts of the Place du Vier Prison, and was the only person besides Maitresse Aimable whom Guida welcomed. [11]
- Twice within the last month Jean had given her ear a friendly pinch, and now Guida had kissed her--surely she had reason to carry her weight more lightly. [11]
- Guida, you don't know what a life it has been for me these four years. [11]
- Now he should know the truth, now he should be sure that they had lied about his little Guida, those slanderers of the Vier Marchi. [11]
- Yet too he knew that as things had been with Guida he could never have stayed away. [11]
- Under his directions, Jean Touzel had removed the few things that Guida took with her to Plemont; and instructed by him, Elie Mattingley sold her furniture. [11]
- But suppose--suppose that it was so--suppose that through Guida the further succession might presently be made sure, and suppose he went to the Prince and told him all; that might win his favour for her; and the rest would be easy. [11]
- As for Guida, it was not grief she felt in the presence of this tragedy. [11]
- By another evening--that is, at the hour when Guida arrived home after her secret marriage with Philip d'Avranche--he saw the lights of the army of de la Rochejaquelein in the valley of the Vendee. [11]
- Having issued her invitation, Maitresse Aimable smiled placidly and seemed about to leave, when, all at once, without any warning, she lowered herself like a vast crate upon the veille, and sat there looking at Guida. [11]
- Guida, after the instincts of her nature, had at once sought the highest point on the rocky islet, and there she drank in the joy of sight and sound and feeling. [11]
- With her woman's instinct she knew that he loved Guida, but she also knew that nothing which might have happened between them could have brought this look of shame and shrinking into his face. [11]
- I was always in too great a hurry; I was too ambitious, Guida. [11]
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