The lights were nearly all extinguished in the passages, the iron gates were being closed with a jar and a rattle, and the dismal place was deserted until to-morrow morning's interest of gallows, pillory, whipping-post, and branding-iron, should
repeople it.
I wish to
repeople myself | on the other side of | with a friend | a
Lucas argued in 1888 that the West Indies were 'attractive' because they were 'mostly of small size, and therefore easy to deal with, to conquer, and to settle, easy to depopulate, easy to
repeople'.
In Ovid, didn't Pyrrha sow stones, the bones of the great mother, to
repeople a drowned world?
i: (as in bean) e ee ie ea ae y i eo ei ey ui oe defreeze piecemeal faeces completability Timorese
repeople preconceive Ceylonese Guianese synoekete (an insect that lives harmlessly with ants or other\ social insects)
Froissart is the locus classicus for the powerful story of the siege and capitulation of Calais, of Edward III's proposal, famously memorialized by Rodin, that the six most prominent citizens of Calais should be sacrificed to spare the city, Edward's subsequent victory, and his "menacing, enigmatic (perhaps incomprehensible) statement" for I wolde
repeople agayne the towne with pure Englysshmen (38).
It is thus with our race; we can never again
Repeople the forest, nor hope to regain The power of the past.
On the other, why a
repeople forced to live in no-goareas?
The birth summons up, for a moment at least, Hightower's hopeful imagining of how Lena will
repeople the earth from the very site of destruction and death, the aptly named Old Burden Place.
It is an easier move for Forster to
repeople Howards End with the Schlegel angels because he has sentimentalized his own childhood in the English countryside; Woolf, on the other hand, abandons her childhood residence through apostasy, after building a fictional crypt to her parents' consciousness.
This we was going to
repeople the world with friends so that there would be a "yes" wherever "people had said 'No' to people, wherever worlds had said 'No' to our world" (174).