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A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 4
2 I am now in love with Miss Barkley.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 3
3 "Don't go, Helen," Miss Barkley said.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 5
4 Miss Barkley was sitting on a bench in the garden.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 5
5 After supper I would go and see Catherine Barkley.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 7
6 "I'll see you in a little while," Miss Barkley said.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 5
7 I would eat quickly and go and see Catherine Barkley.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 7
8 The next afternoon I went to call on Miss Barkley again.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 5
9 I saw Catherine Barkley coming down the hall, and stood up.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 6
10 Walking home Rinaldi said, "Miss Barkley prefers you to me."
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 4
11 We sat on the flat stone bench and I held Catherine Barkley's hand.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 6
12 I knew I did not love Catherine Barkley nor had any idea of loving her.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 6
13 He smiled, "I must make on Miss Barkley the impression of a man of sufficient wealth."
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 3
14 When I got home it was too late and I did not see Miss Barkley until the next evening.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 6
15 I drove back to Gorizia and our villa and, as I said, went to call on Miss Barkley, who was on duty.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 5
16 I would like to eat at the Cova and then walk down the Via Manzoni in the hot evening and cross over and turn off along the canal and go to the hotel with Catherine Barkley.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 7
17 I sat now in the chair and an orderly of some sort looked at me disapprovingly from behind a desk while I looked at the marble floor, the pillars with the marble busts, and the frescoes on the wall and waited for Miss Barkley.
A Farewell to ArmsBy Ernest Hemingway Context In BOOK 1: 6
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