Each search starts from the first page. Its result is limited to the first 17 sentences. If you upgrade to a VIP account, you will see up to 500 sentences for one search.
1 The electric sky-signs effectively shut off the outer darkness.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter V
2 The sense of the Coming's imminence was like an electric tension in the air.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter V
3 The hum of the electric motor deepened by fractions of a tone as he turned the nuts.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter I
4 In the four thousand rooms of the Centre the four thousand electric clocks simultaneously struck four.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter III
5 Roses and electric shocks, the khaki of Deltas and a whiff of asafoetida--wedded indissolubly before the child can speak.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter II
6 He had emerged from that crimson twilight into the common electric glare with a self-consciousness intensified to the pitch of agony.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter V
7 The hands of all the four thousand electric clocks in all the Bloomsbury Centre's four thousand rooms marked twenty-seven minutes past two.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter X
8 But inexorably, every thirty seconds, the minute hand of the electric clock above his bed jumped forward with an almost imperceptible click.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter XII
9 Northwards, beyond and above the trees, the Internal and External Secretions factory glared with a fierce electric brilliance from every window of its twenty stories.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter V
10 Books and loud noises, flowers and electric shocks--already in the infant mind these couples were compromisingly linked; and after two hundred repetitions of the same or a similar lesson would be wedded indissolubly.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter II
11 Then the bearskin made a final appearance and, amid a blare of sexophones, the last stereoscopic kiss faded into darkness, the last electric titillation died on the lips like a dying moth that quivers, quivers, ever more feebly, ever more faintly, and at last is quite, quite still.
Brave New WorldBy Aldous Huxley Context In Chapter XI