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How To Use Wretch In A Sentence

  • Davenport advances, Rubin absorbs wretched start to U.S. USATODAY.com - Davenport advances, Rubin absorbs wretched start to U.S. Open
  • And I am dreading having to look the people who have witnessed my wretched performance in the eye over dinner. Times, Sunday Times
  • Any dog not in harness was howling and yelping to be put in one, and even when harnessed they continued with their wretched wailing until they were off and running.
  • Here he connects to that discussion the situation of the wretched offspring who are undutiful toward their parents.
  • The picture of these poor mites could not be more wretched. Times, Sunday Times
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  • I must have cut a wretched figure, filthy and sunburnt, to the brother who heard my explanations about who I was and why I was here.
  • They will drink their wretched heartless stuff, such as they call claret, or wine of Medoc, or Bordeaux, or what not, with no more meaning than sour rennet, stirred with the pulp from the cider press, and strained through the cap of our Betty. Lorna Doone
  • Thereupon Shawahi came forward and kissing the ground before the Queen, took the hem of her garment and laid it on her head, saying, O Queen, by my claim for fosterage, be not hasty with him, more by token of thy knowledge that this poor wretch is a stranger, who hath adventured himself and suffered what none ever suffered before him, and Allah (to whom belong Might and The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Don't speak to me that way, you wretched fiend.
  • the poor tarred-and-feathered wretch
  • Such synecdoches are central to reformist representation, which relies on one ‘wretched woman’ to stand in for all.
  • He watched the poor wretch the commanding officer was lecturing, and looked on him with little pity.
  • However I'm not cured of the wretched cold and cough that have been my companions for over a week now.
  • The opening scene is an interview - about the wretchedness of conditions in the theatre, poking fun at the cumbersome bureaucracy which soils it.
  • Society on a small discovery which he had made by the aid of a "wretched microscope" to the effect that the so-called ova of Flustra were really larvæ and had the power of independent action by means of cilia. Alfred Russel Wallace: Letters and Reminiscences, Vol. 1
  • That be a wretched piece of luck. A Time of War
  • `I've spent most of the last years being a wretch to everyone, including myself. DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
  • To forget sb is pretty easy. Just don't see him/her, don't be a contemptible wretch.
  • You had far better all die -- _die immediately_, than live slaves, and entail your wretchedness upon your posterity. Walker's Appeal, with a Brief Sketch of His Life And Also Garnet's Address to the Slaves of the United States of America
  • It was quite a battle persuading them to look at my wretched video at all. Times, Sunday Times
  • From the window of the doomed wretch's apartments a derrick protrudes -- a crossarm with a pulley and a rope attached. Europe Revised
  • Do you realize what this means for me, you ungrateful wretch?
  • I suppose that wretched grommet of hers has upped sails and left port,' said Jake with a grunt. THE RIVAL QUEENS: A COUNTESS ASHBY DE LA ZOUCHE MYSTERY
  • Sustained by the truth received from her divine Founder, the Church has ever sought to fulfill holily the mission entrusted to her by God; unconquered by the difficulties on all sides surrounding her, she has never ceased to assert her liberty of teaching, and in this way the wretched superstition of paganism being dispelled, the wide world was renewed unto Christian wisdom. Libertas Praestantissimum
  • They try so hard to please their parents and even harder to understand them, and their resulting wretchedness is one of the most haunting subplots of the novel. Suburbs of Our Discontent
  • That wretched child I'll swing for him one of these days!
  • 'And shall I entitle the wretch to upbraid me with his generosity, and his pity; and perhaps to reproach me for having been capable of forgiving crimes of such a nature? Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 7
  • She would have wretched and thrown up at that very moment but luckily, she hadn't eaten anything today so she would be fit to scry.
  • He was wretched when he failed the examination.
  • The dog leaped away without a sound; the man, raising his voice a little, said with a slow laugh, ‘Look at that wretched cur,’ and directly afterwards we became separated by a lot of people pushing in.
  • Things actually have gotten better, and not just because we are no longer pictured exclusively as wretched suicides and guilt-ridden reprobates.
  • You have built up a huge property empire by buying from wretched people who had to sell or starve.
  • The first time we meet Victoria, she is wretching her guts into the toilet with her mother standing above her in dishabille, smoking a cigarette into her face while threatening to throw her out of the house. Kent Haruf discusses Plainsong
  • It has a few pitiful wretches for clubs, places which would, in Manchester, have been put out of their misery long ago.
  • I hope someone turns the wretches in to the police.
  • I knew it was a woman from the bungling, unmanlike way that pistol was laid in the dead hand; the only question I had to answer was _which_ woman -- Fifi, Lady Stavornell, or this wretched little hypocrite. Cleek, the Master Detective
  • 'Jesu,' he groaned and, feeling utterly wretched, pressed his forehead against the cold stone of the merlon. The Falcons of Montabard
  • To forget sb is pretty easy. Just don't see him/her, don't be a contemptible wretch.
  • When Patrick Douglas, the learned and honoured, but fortuneless soldier, found that his new competitor for the hand of the gentle Jolande was none other than his sovereign, he was dumb with despair, and the last, the miserable _hope_ which it imparts, and which maketh wretched, began to leave him. Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland Volume 17
  • It is true that the wretched weather has left them short of match practice and there is little cricket over the next few days in which to get their rhythm back.
  • Then we were subjected to a performance by some wretched tango orchestra. The Times Literary Supplement
  • After all, there's nothing particularly joyful about me when I eventually do get around to the whole wretched business.
  • I suppose that wretched grommet of hers has upped sails and left port,' said Jake with a grunt. THE RIVAL QUEENS: A COUNTESS ASHBY DE LA ZOUCHE MYSTERY
  • He has to wait in the church for the other confessors to finish, which leaves him plenty of time to keep meditating on the wretchedness of his sins.
  • What wretched ends on curs'd ambition wait I See! where, a prey, unboned Curio lies, The Works of the Greek and Roman Poets
  • The role of A Vijayaraghavan, MP, was significant in securing Indian citizenship for these wretched people.
  • A fanatic easily makes conquests among a wretched people.
  • Oh, do you think so, you seclusive wretch," the headman said, as other villagers closed in around them, each looking more surly than the others. Demons Don't Dream
  • I plopped onto the couch and that wretched dog hopped up next to me and began to bark.
  • Since none of these parties has the slightest chance of capturing an office higher than municipal dogcatcher, you'll never have to kick yourself when your dream candidate proves wretched once in power.
  • Good, as goodness might be measured in their particular class, hard-working for meagre wages and scorning the sale of self for easier ways, nervously desirous for some small pinch of happiness in the desert of existence, and facing a future that was a gamble between the ugliness of unending toil and the black pit of more terrible wretchedness, the way whereto being briefer though better paid. Chapter 6
  • After fluttering thus from branch to branch, like the poor birdling that cannot take its flight, discouraged by his wretched attempts at life, he plunged straight before him, hoping for nothing but a turn of luck, driving over the roads and fields, lending a hand to the farmers, sleeping in stables and garrets, or oftener in the open air; sometimes charitably sheltered in a kind man's barn, and perhaps -- oh bliss! Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 12, No. 29, August, 1873
  • He is wretched, weak, ugly, inspiring contempt and disgust in not only all the supposedly good-hearted characters but also the reader.
  • You know how wretched it is to eat something you shouldn't have and spend the next day and a half miserably expelling it from your body.
  • My hits did go up to about 200 since yesterday so why am I being an ungrateful wretch?
  • Back, thou wretch, to meet thy brother miscreants, who are hastening hitherward. Anne of Geierstein
  • The wretched survivors told rescuers the boat 's skipper abandoned them - although it was unclear last night how he managed to flee. The Sun
  • The only glimmer of hope for these wretched people is the emergence of organised resistance to the present policies.
  • Those are powerful emotions, and what do we do when we feel wretched? Times, Sunday Times
  • Wherfore we, wretched and miserable synners, render unto thee most humble and hartie thankes, that yt hath pleased thee to call us home to thy folde by thy Fatherly correction at this present, wheras in our prosperitie and libertie we dyd neglect thy graces offered unto us. The Testimony of the Rocks or, Geology in Its Bearings on the Two Theologies, Natural and Revealed
  • Two colliers, besmutted wretches, plodding homeward from the 'pit' which is half a mile away. A Life's Morning
  • How I pity the unhappy wretches who are doomed to dwell in such a place!
  • I never write 'valetudinarian' at all, for not even hunger and wretchedness can humble me to the point where I will do a word like that for seven cents; Mark Twain's Speeches
  • Under no circumstances could the poor wretch tell the tale or identify either the prisoners or their doomsman. Ben-Hur, a tale of the Christ
  • Can it be right to demand so much of such a young child, however great his talent appears and however wretched a life sold by his poverty-stricken mother to a pedlar who beat him he had led before? TV review: Leaving Amish Paradise; Kidult: Marathon Boy
  • He moved to plunge the dagger in but the weapon was wretched from his grip by a powerful hand as the other gripped his wrist and tore it away.
  • BOOK Xr. 4j Branded the wretch, and be his name abhorr'dj But after-ages fhall thy praife record. The works of the English poets; with prefaces, biographical and critical
  • Now he can return to his normal wretched existence as a very unfree man indeed. Times, Sunday Times
  • He understood now why the wretched diplomat could be persuaded to perjure himself. DOUBLE DECEIT
  • The house was in a wretched state.
  • These ungrateful wretches are apparently arguing that very few of them actually live beyond that age!
  • Poor Admiral Boxer has fallen a victim to its remorseless gripe, and is buried at the head of the harbour, where he worked so hard, early and late, to endeavour to rescue Balaklava from the plague-stricken wretchedness in which he found it a few months before. Journal Kept During The Russian War: From The Departure Of The Army From England In April 1854, To The Fall Of Sebastopol
  • Nicholas hardly dared to look out of the window; but he did so, and the very first object that met his eyes was the wretched Smike: so bedabbled with mud and rain, so haggard and worn, and wild, that, but for his garments being such as no scarecrow was ever seen to wear, he might have been doubtful, even then, of his identity. Nicholas Nickleby
  • wretched prisoners huddled in stinking cages
  • First it's blogger "sooey," asserting that middle-of-the-road blogger Marky Mark and the wretched anti-Semite "arthurdecco" are one and the same person -- and that they're probably both that other wretch, "shlemazl. Archive 2009-05-01
  • A typical heder enrolled forty to fifty boys, often in wretched physical quarters, after public school hours to learn mechanical reading of Hebrew, siddur, hummash, and Mishnah. Education of Jewish Girls in the United States.
  • Thus at St. Isabel or Clarence, Fernando Po, where the land-wind or the sea-breeze ever blows, the vicious little wretches are hardly known; on the forested background of mountain they are troublesome as at Nigerian Nufe. Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
  • Not so much 'dark tourism' as an enlightening account of a wretched tsarist penal system. The Times Literary Supplement
  • He sits on the bank and, wretched, stares into the purling water.
  • The horse thus vicariously fulfilling the functions of a plate of soup was a wretched glandered beast -- not old, but shunned on account of the contagious nature of his disease. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 12, No. 29, August, 1873
  • After another blast of the wretched conditions that have blighted this season's major championships, a motley crew of contenders have lined up at Hazeltine to exploit the uncertainty.
  • I was trotted out at these wretched award banquets like the March of Dimes child.
  • The first comer is a wretch, Femme — woman — rhymes with infame, — infamous. Les Miserables
  • That will certainly impair your sleep, and leave you feeling wretched the next day. Times, Sunday Times
  • That wretched apology of a creature stripped from me my dirt-encrusted shirt that I had worn since my entrance to solitary, and exposed my poor wasted body, the skin ridged like brown parchment over the ribs and sore-infested from the many bouts with the jacket The examination was shamelessly perfunctory. Chapter 10
  • I should have your throat cut for cowardice you miserable wretch!
  • I will make life so hard for these wretched lummoxes who pass for my servants that the atrocities of Ivan the Terrible will seem like a fairy-picnic!
  • Everybody in this wretched place was looking out for Ken. The Sun
  • Most live in conditions so abject that there is little to distinguish them from the most wretched chattel slaves of the past.
  • The poor wretch had no idea what he was getting into.
  • The wretchedness of her expression wrenched his heart, but he made no move toward her. The Unforgiven
  • He would not creep about the country with moaning voice and melancholy eyes, with draggled dress and outward signs of wretchedness.
  • The wood that had been drawn for the fire was green, and it ignited too slowly to satisfy the shivering impatience of women and children; I vented mine in audibly grumbling over the wretched fire, at which I in vain endeavoured to thaw frozen bread, and to dress crying children. Roughing It in the Bush
  • As an 1825 poem has it: "Fearing the winters/ Endless and icy/ Nobody will visit/ This wretched country/ This vast prison house for exiles.
  • On its simplest level, it traces two calamitous marriages: one between the sweet, idealistic Dorothea Brooke (Juliet Aubrey) and priggishly meanspirited Rev. Edward Casaubon (Patrick Malahide), the other pairing equally idealistic Dr. Tertius Lydgate (Douglas Hodge) with the wretchedly selfish Rosamond Vincy (Trevyn McDowell). By George, We've Got It
  • Ask the wretched hunter of chevreuil, the poor devourer of rehbraten, what they think of the noble English haunch, that, after bounding in the Park of Knole or Windsor, exposes its magnificent flank upon some broad silver platter at our tables? The Fitz-Boodle Papers
  • And thou, poor wretch, who to thy sorrow art wedding a king's daughter, little thinkest of the doom thou art bringing on thy children's life, or of the cruel death that waits thy bride. Medea
  • The movie also sketches in the five-year-long, globe-girdling voyage during which he collected the compendious data for his book, along with much peripheral information about his health (wretched), his relationship with his devoutly religious wife (strained) and his apparently never-ending connection to his dead 10-year-old daughter (feverish). Kurt Loder Reviews ‘Creation’ » MTV Movies Blog
  • In fact, they mattered more than her wretchedness, even more than my loved, lost and delinquent father who had put us in this situation.
  • They had heard so very little of this; yet it was enough to build up wretched dolorous dreams upon, there in the shade of the night.
  • But there were no fresh stains on that wall this morning, and the graves remained undug, though here and there were seen the first marks of spades where the wretched victims had begun to dig. Army Boys on German Soil Our Doughboys Quelling the Mobs
  • How wretched are lovers all," Hapless are lovers all e'en even in the sepulchre, tombed in their tombs, The Life of Sir Richard Burton
  • Needless to say, Zinfer's very first day on Planet Earth had turned out to be an unbelievably wretched experience for the poor little prince.
  • How Charles Davis survives in that wet, freezing, paint-scabbed room of iron in the 'midship-house is beyond me -- just as it is beyond me that the wretched sailors in the wretched forecastle do not lie down in their bunks and die, or, at least, refuse to answer the call of the watches. CHAPTER XXXVII
  • Shah Alam II ruled well until his eighties and died as a sightless wretch dressed in rags when an army from Bengal led by General Gerald Lake stormed Delhi and Agra.
  • Since then, though, their luck has been wretched. Times, Sunday Times
  • His picture of writers as frustrated, unpraised, unrewarded wretches, pitied at parties and whispered about among families, drew laughter and wry nods.
  • Some - optimistically - argued that it was a lack of 'guyliner' that was making him look so wretched. Times, Sunday Times
  • In less than a minute, he could destroy me utterly, reducing me to a tearful, trembling wreck, consumed with a wretched, self-loathing misery.
  • What was it specially that he called wretchedness? The Argonauts
  • Our hearts were wrung at this wretched sight and we longed to help; we even thought of giving it part of a drop of chlorodyne much diluted, but, fortunately for us, dared not do so, for my husband said to them, 'I do not think the child will live long.' Southern Arabia
  • He is wretched, weak, ugly, inspiring contempt and disgust in not only all the supposedly good-hearted characters but also the reader.
  • By such an estimate, nearly the whole number are accounted for by wretchedness, that is by economic causes, alone Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 Sex in Relation to Society
  • There are no prizes for guessing the political leanings of the wretched dog. The Sun
  • I could tell of the murder of that poor son of Zeus, whom Procne, mother of an only child, slew and offered to the Muses; but thou hadst three children, wretched parent, and all of them hast thou in thy frenzy slain. Heracles
  • It is he that makes the sinner see all the deformity and filthiness that is within; it is he that pulleth off all the sinner's rags, and makes him see his naked and wretched condition; it is he that shows us the blindness of the mind, the stubbornness of the will, the disorderedness of the affections, the searedness of the conscience, the plague of our hearts, and the sin of our natures, and therein the desperateness of our state. The Almost Christian Discovered; or, the False Professor Tried and Cast.
  • Though we have here the register and certificate of the sentence of every one of these wretches, this is no time to take them out or read them; come and ask themselves; they can tell if they choose, and they will, for these fellows take a pleasure in doing and talking about rascalities. Don Quixote
  • Instead, we get reasoned debates on how to force the world to love us or assurances that the ungrateful wretches should love us for their own good.
  • More than anything else, this wretched film has about it an intense air of unreality.
  • Having once tasted the sweet wine prepared from honey or flowers, how can a woman, I fancy, relish the wretched arrak from rice? ' The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 1 Books 1, 2 and 3
  • Has he actually looked at the wretched things? Times, Sunday Times
  • The priestesses and priests turning towards the setting sun, the dwelling of the infernal gods, devoted with curses the sacrilegious wretch.
  • They were no longer the oppressed, wretched teen menials who must take orders, toe the line.
  • Such was the people's peaceless token, the suffering of the _wretched_." l. Notes and Queries, Number 27, May 4, 1850
  • In Bolton they pigged it in a wretched artisans' dwelling in Davenport Street. The project was none the less immensely successful.
  • I asked Miss D' Lish to send us a little info to help out those unfortunate wretches who might not be familiar with her life and work.
  • [4] Johnson, in his Dictionary, defines EXCISE "a hateful tax, levied upon commodities, and adjudged not by the _common judges_ of property, but by _wretches_ hired by those to whom excise is paid;" and, in the _Idler_ (No. 65) he calls a _commissioner of excise_ "one of the _lowest_ of all human beings. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 20, No. 572, October 20, 1832
  • Comparison, more than reality, makes men happy or wretched. Thomas Fuller 
  • His son, Seebohm, had done more than anyone to expose the wretched living conditions of the poor in his 1901 treatise on the slums of York.
  • The women and girls who prostitute themselves to these wretches are dissolute creatures.
  • USATODAY. com - Davenport advances, Rubin absorbs wretched start to U.S. USATODAY.com - Davenport advances, Rubin absorbs wretched start to U.S. Open
  • Guy felt wretched about it now.
  • I cannot claim particularly wretched luck. Times, Sunday Times
  • WHEN STEVE BRODIE dived from the Brooklyn Bridge in 1886, his name reached into a wretched Negro cabin in Galveston, Texas, and so stirred a ragged Negro boy of twelve that he made up his mind to go to New York and meet Brodie in person. World’s Great Men of Color
  • And there are certain crimes still that are so heinous, so wretched, and so abominable that, yes, they do cry out for vengeance, and they do cry out for the death penalty.
  • In Het huisje aan de sloot (The Cottage by the Creek, 1921), she describes the wretched state of Jewish life in the so-called Mediene (Dutch Jewry outside the main urban centers like Amsterdam) and the hostility of non-Jews towards people they saw as foreigners. Modern Netherlands.
  • He leaned against the carved doorframe, hugging himself wretchedly, wondering why he could feel almost nothing, not even real grief -- just a kind of hollowness that nothing, throughout the length of his life, would ever again fill. The Silent Tower
  • She decided to obliterate her rather embarrassing question about love - Roy, you wretch, make up your complex little mind, will you? SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • Younger brother Prince Khurram promptly had him killed, as fraternal ambitions were not to be encouraged, even though the wretched Prince Khusrau was blind.
  • “Pray, who mentioned money, Mr. Meiklewham?” said her ladyship. — “That wretched old pettifogger,” she added in Saint Ronan's Well
  • These poor wretches were stunted in their growth, their hideous faces bedaubed with white paint, their skins filthy and greasy, their hair entangled, their voices discordant, and their gestures violent.
  • Although they were all being tenderly cared for by wonderful nurses, with plenty of personal attention and attempts to comfort and stimulate them, they were absolutely wretched.
  • Workers and their families continued living in wretched conditions in the shadows of the buildings they had made.
  • They are then called upon to "weave the warp, and weave the woof," perhaps, with no great propriety; for it is by crossing the _woof_ with the _warp_ that men _weave_ the _web_ or piece; and the first line was dearly bought by the admission of its wretched correspondent, "give ample room and verge enough [198]. The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. in Nine Volumes Volume the Eighth: The Lives of the Poets, Volume II
  • The hateful dress was mocking me. Therefore, the last thing I ever did in that house was to fling that wretched dress into the cleansing fire.
  • United States not only believed in slavery, but bought and sold women and babes in the name of Jesus Christ, this infidel, this wretch who is now burning in the flames of hell, lifted his voice against human slavery and said: "It is robbery, and a slaveholder is a thief; the whipper of women is a barbarian; the seller of a child is a savage. Lectures of Col. R. G. Ingersoll - Latest
  • But Syjuco is only in his mid-30s, and he already possesses the wand of the enchanter, conjuring up striking scenes like this one: After buying a tiger for a pet, Salvador's blustering father decides to hand-feed the wretched animal some bacon. 'Ilustrado' by Miguel Syjuco, reviewed by Michael Dirda
  • Younger brother Prince Khurram promptly had him killed, as fraternal ambitions were not to be encouraged, even though the wretched Prince Khusrau was blind.
  • Half dead upon the spot where he was phlebotomized, the wretched animal was left to reflect under the shade of a tulip-tree on the cruelty of man, on their barbarous appetites; cursing with all his heart the poverty of Morvinian curates, their conceited hospitality, of which he was the victim, and their brutal affection for pig's blood. Le Morvan, [A District of France,] Its Wild Sports, Vineyards and Forests; with Legends, Antiquities, Rural and Local Sketches
  • There were no crumbs of comfort from this wretched display. The Sun
  • Off the bedevilled wretches pranced, and they kicked, they snorted, whinnied, rolled, galloped, outflying the wind, but not the dismal rider. Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • Except that this time we know he's not an ungrateful wretch; he's just a little happier than when we met him, and so are we.
  • But after a wretched start and a closing round of 74, he missed the final shake-out between the leading 75 players for the 35 places by three strokes.
  • Go here and send some letters, lets rid ourselves of this odious wretch: firedoglake/pickler Fire Nedra Pickler
  • Dad blows out his candles and opens presents and they devour slabs of cake while I sit there feeling wretched. Times, Sunday Times
  • I made a jest about the wretched bird, teasing Carra, like, and saying it was a sorcerer, most like. A TIME OF WAR
  • Comparison, more than reality, makes men happy or wretched. Thomas Fuller 
  • In fact, people in the developing world have become relatively poorer and more wretched.
  • he has compiled a record second to none in its wretchedness
  • I cannot claim particularly wretched luck. Times, Sunday Times
  • In our Pestchanka, I remember, pike used to be caught a yard long, and there were eel-pouts, and roach, and bream, and every fish had a presentable appearance; while nowadays, if you catch a wretched little pikelet or perch six inches long you have to be thankful. The Witch, and other stories
  • The orders for this occupation were made by General Kearney before he left, in pursuance of instructions from the War Department, merely to subserve a political end, for there were few or no people in Lower California, which is a miserable, wretched, dried-up peninsula. Memoirs of the Union's Three Great Civil War Generals
  • She said:'I had three months of treatment feeling wretched and absolutely nauseous last year. The Sun
  • Let him grow up poor in a wretched, arid land. Christianity Today
  • Eventually, the robbers left the bank with nothing more than their very queasy stomachs after having eaten a number of bowls of this wretched vanilla pudding.
  • Lawyers tend to be wretched writers, which is odd given that the written word is their stock in trade.
  • Say, whither art thou leading this glutton, —thou wretched swineherd, —this plaguy beggar, a kill-joy of the feast? Book XVII
  • Wretched brutes there at the cattlemarket waiting for the poleaxe to split their skulls open. November « 2008 « Sentence first
  • Ten minutes after roll-call the janitor let them out, and shortly afterwards a wretched procession of five emerged from Merishall's room with two hundred lines from Virgil hanging over each head for a missed call-over without excuse. Acton's Feud A Public School Story
  • Huge iron-clasped books lay before this ominous specimen of pinguitude -- the records of the realm of misery, in which office he officiated as prime minister; and had Peveril come thither as an unconcerned visitor, his heart would have sunk within him at considering the mass of human wretchedness which must needs be registered in these fatal volumes. Peveril of the Peak
  • Those who recall the agonies John faced when confronted with a single pyramid of leftover American cheese blocks after an Origins Awards reception may understand his shock and awe at the entire detritus of the convention left open to even badgeless wretches such as himself. Kenneth Hite's Journal
  • The most wretched people in the world are those who tell you they like every kind of music ‘except country.’
  • This picture has been recently wretchedly engraved in mezzotinto; all that is in the picture firm and hard, is in the print soft, fuzzy, and disagreeable. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 328, February, 1843
  • an unfeeling wretch
  • Age after age has passed away, for no other purpose than to behold their wretchedness. Thomas Paine 
  • He was a lonely, miserable wretch.
  • The seasonal molt of their woolly winter hair makes them look even more wretched.
  • But no sooner did he declare himself in form, than the gaudy wretch, as he was before with her, became a well-dressed gentleman; — the chattering magpie (for he talks and laughs much), quite conversable, and has something agreeable to say upon every subject. Pamela
  • The effect was electrical: the motion was carried by acclamation and there was a unanimous rush for the now wretched mariner whose false alarm at the masthead was the cause of our embarrassment, but on second thoughts it was decided to substitute Captain Troutbeck, as less generally useful and more undeviatingly in error. The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, Volume 8 Epigrams, On With the Dance, Negligible Tales
  • A wretch is to be hanged here for the crime this morning on his own confession, but it is believed that he was doomed to sacrifice himself by one of these societies, in order to screen the real murderers. The Golden Chersonese and the Way Thither
  • They operated and found this big, wretched, web-like cyst on my spine - a condition called spinal arachnoiditis. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is proposed to embank the famous old Tiber; and already the squalid quarter of the Ghetto has been invaded by the workmen, who are levelling the wretched dwellings that have for so many ages rendered its name a byword throughout the world, preparatory to the erection of new buildings. Fair Italy, the Riviera and Monte Carlo Comprising a Tour Through North and South Italy and Sicily with a Short Account of Malta
  • The Megiddo Modern Hebrew-English Dictionary, published in Israel, correctly defines shegetz as follows: ‘unclean animal; loathsome creature, abomination colloquial - pronounced shaygets wretch, unruly youngster; Gentile youngster’. Sha With The Shiksa! | Jewschool
  • Selling municipal bonds in Atlanta was unthinkably wretched.
  • You have built up a huge property empire by buying from wretched people who had to sell or starve.
  • The moonlight caught her eyes; eyes that were trying, like the lips, to smile, but that were really looking away into the future, which she saw stripped of companionship and love, and gray with the ashiness of wretched desolation. The Call of the Cumberlands
  • And this is a question which demands immediate attention -- _immediate_ attention; for more than £26,000,000 are paid by taxpayers each year to be spent in great part on our wretched system of poor laws. Memoir and Letters of Francis W. Newman
  • The title affixed to this bit of self-expression was Oh, Dearie, Round-Eyes Hara-Kiri: The Wretched Act. Over the Edge
  • But the statistics alone, as horrifying as they are, hardly convey the trauma, pain and wretchedness of the victims.
  • That wretched apology of a creature stripped from me my dirt - encrusted shirt that I had worn since my entrance to solitary, and exposed my poor wasted body, the skin ridged like brown parchment over the ribs and sore-infested from the many bouts with the jacket. Chapter 10
  • The economy is heavily dependent on massive production of cotton, the revenue from which brings almost no economic benefit to the wretches who pick it in conditions of serfdom.
  • She said:'I had three months of treatment feeling wretched and absolutely nauseous last year. The Sun
  • Desperately poor health conditions are distributed with a wretched evenness across the land.
  • The fishing-fleet, as they call their wretched tubs, will come home, with the usual fuss, to-night, and on Monday it shall be ashes. Springhaven
  • Comparison, more than reality, makes men happy or wretched. Thomas Fuller 
  • You aren't the complicated villain nor the wretched hero.
  • But in the attempt to incarnate and ensanguine it I failed wretchedly. Seven Men
  • That this whole wretched business has simply been one long, problematic excretion. GALILEE
  • As you, my dear, always turn pale when the word masquerade is mentioned; so, I warrant, will ABBEVILLE be a word of terror to these wretches, as long as they live. The History of Sir Charles Grandison, Volume 4 (of 7)
  • The wretch simply ran madly from his hovel and took chase through his so-called garden.

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