Dependency Tree

Universal Dependencies - English - LinES

LanguageEnglish
ProjectLinES
Corpus Parttrain
AnnotationAhrenberg, Lars

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Showing 402 - 501 of 454 • previous

s-402 But you're crazy, said Wentz gently.
s-403 Europe's wars, white men's killings among themselves. What's that to me?
s-404 You've just said one shouldn't burden oneself with suffering.
s-405 I don't have any feelings about Hitler.
s-406 Oh but you should, Mrs. Wentz said, almost dreaming.
s-407 No more and no less than you do about what happened to Africans.
s-408 It's all the same thing.
s-409 A slave in the hold of a ship in the eighteenth century and a Jew or a gipsy in a concentration camp in the nineteen-forties.
s-410 Well, I had my seventeenth and eighteenth birthdays in the detention camp at Fort Howard, the guest of Her Majesty's governor, said Odara, that I know.
s-411 Her two brothers died at Auschwitz, Hjalmar Wentz said;
s-412 but his wife was talking to Jo-Ann Pettigrew, who offered blobs of toasted marshmallow on the end of a long fork.
s-413 For God's sake, Timothy, stop baring your teeth and sink them into something.
s-414 Evelyn Odara spoke to her husband as no local woman would dare; yet he ignored it, as if turning the tables on her with his countrymen's assumption that what women said was not heard, anyway.
s-415 He said angrily to Wentz, directing the remark at the wife through the husband, What did you get in return that was worth it?
s-416 Margot Wentz said, looking at no one, That one can't say.
s-417 She waggled her fingers, sticky from the marshmallow, and her husband took his handkerchief from his pocket and gave it to her.
s-418 It was the evening when Bray, Neil, Evelyn Odara, one of the South African refugees, the Pettigrews, and a few others set off for the Sputnik Bar.
s-419 While Bray was standing about in the group with the Odaras and the Wentzes, Jo-Ann Pettigrew, having failed to get him to eat her last marshmallow, put it in her mouth and signalled to everyone there was something they must hear.
s-420 Rebecca's been to the Sputnik and she says it's terrific now.
s-421 They've knocked out a wall into that sort of yard thing and they have dancing.
s-422 With girls laid on.
s-423 Neil said, Hey?
s-424 And which one of us's been taking Rebecca to the Sputnik?
s-425 Laughter rose.
s-426 Well, why don't we all go, that's what I want t' know.
s-427 The young Pettigrew woman was always in a state of enthusiasm;
s-428 her long curly hair had sprung out, diademed with raindrops, because she had done her marshmallow toasting outside over the spit fire.
s-429 She was an anthropologist, and Bray accepted this as an explanation for her passion for arranging excursions, on which she carried her baby tied on her back, African style.
s-430 Who was it?
s-431 There was a roar again.
s-432 No, no well, Ras took her...
s-433 Oh Ras, was it?
s-434 Sputnik Bar, eh?
s-435 So that's it, now.
s-436 Rebecca Edwards came in from the veranda, smiling good-naturedly, inquiringly, under the remarks shied at her.
s-437 She said, There're bulbs like you see in films round the star's dressing-table, and they light up and spell INDEPENDENCE HURRAH.
s-438 In great confusion, there and then they decided to go.
s-439 Dando refused and Vivien had to go home to the children, and Rebecca Edwards protested that hers were alone too.
s-440 Neil insisted that Bray must come;
s-441 he was one of those people who, late at night, suddenly have a desperate need of certain companions.
s-442 But when Neil, Bray, Evelyn Odara and the South African got down to the second-class trading area, the others hadn't arrived.
s-443 They went into the Sputnik Bar for a moment, meeting music like a buffeting about the head, and then someone said that he thought the arrangement had been to meet at the railway crossing.
s-444 There began one of those chases about in the night that, Bray saw, Neil Bayley fiercely enjoyed.
s-445 They went all the way back into town to the flats where the Edwards girl lived...
s-446 Neil stood on the moonlit patch of earth in front of the dark building and called up, but there was no response.
s-447 They stopped somewhere to give a man a lift; he was caught in the lights, hat in hand; only his clean white shirt had shown on the dark road.
s-448 He answered Neil with a liberal use of Bwana, as a white man would expect if he were to do such a thing as stop for a black one on the road, and when he got into the car beside Bray and the South African, sat among these black and white city people like a hedgehog rolled into itself at a touch.
s-449 Bray, back in this country once more, again aware of his own height and size and pinkness almost like some form of aggression he wasn't responsible for, knew that the fellow was holding himself away from contact with him.
s-450 The voices of Evelyn, Neil, and the South African flew about the car;
s-451 they passed the shadows of the mango trees in the bright moonlight lying beneath the trees like sleeping beasts;
s-452 a donkey cropping among broken china on a refuse mound;
s-453 the colours on the mosque almost visible, the silvered burglar grilles on the elaborate houses of the Indian sector.
s-454 The second-class trading area had been laid out long ago and haphazardly; shops cropped up suddenly, streets met, the car plunged and rolled.

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