1 And, instead of turning her against him, it only made her more timidly gracious toward him because of her indignation at what she fancied was a gross injustice done him.
2 He gave most of the morning lectures, droning with equal unhappy facility about poetry, the Holy Land, and the injustice to employers in any system of profit-sharing.
3 The dim injustice of not being understood even by his son left him irritable.
4 Therefore, I saw that here was a sort of interregnum in Providence; for its even-handed equity never could have so gross an injustice.
5 She trusted she did them no injustice in thus condemning them as a race.
6 If my father has done you this injustice, show him how an Indian can forgive an injury, and take back his daughters.
The Last of the Mohicans By James Fenimore CooperContext Highlight In CHAPTER 11 7 he never used violence or injustice in his dealings with.
The Last of the Mohicans By James Fenimore CooperContext Highlight In CHAPTER 29 8 But in spite of him, and even in spite of myself, I continued to think, and to think about the injustice of my enslavement, and the means of escape.
9 He was trodden beneath the feet of an iron injustice.
10 He seemed to be deeply wounded at an injustice.
11 Dinah was a character in her own way, and it would be injustice to her memory not to give the reader a little idea of her.
12 What would be hardship and distress and injustice in his own class, is a cool matter of course in another one.
13 The injustice of his sentence was very flagrant; all Paris was indignant; and it was judged that his religion and wealth rather than the crime alleged against him had been the cause of his condemnation.
14 My sufferings were augmented also by the oppressive sense of the injustice and ingratitude of their infliction.
15 It requires more philosophy than I possess to bear this injustice with patience.