"Bracing" Quotes from Famous Books
... (Vol. viii., p. 148.).—The former of these words is, I believe, obsolete, or nearly so. It means bracing-stakes: strut, in carpentry, is to brace; and stower is a small kind of stake, as distinguished from the "ten stakes" mentioned in the legend ... — Notes and Queries, Number 201, September 3, 1853 • Various
... for consumptive patients, though, indeed, many people simply needed the change of a bracing climate went there to spend a few months; and came, away wonderfully better for the mountain air. This was what Bernardine Holme hoped to do; she was broken down in every way, but it was thought that a prolonged stay in Petershof might help her back to a reasonable amount of health, or, ... — Ships That Pass In The Night • Beatrice Harraden
... less than to stand on his head on the mattress. He could rest his hands beside his head, at the outset, bracing his feet against the wall. So far ... — Dick Prescott's First Year at West Point • H. Irving Hancock
... debate must not last too long, and that nothing was more hazardous to final reputation than to be too slow in attempting to lay its first stone. Yet I felt some difficulty in every great question; and, after bracing my nerves for the onset, I always found my courage fail at the sight of the actual encounter. I felt as a young knight might have felt in some of the tilting-matches of old—master of his charger in the open field, and delighting in the pressure of his armour and the weight of his lance; ... — Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine -- Volume 57, No. 351, January 1845 • Various
... beside him not toward the drive, but away into the tree-grown sheltered wing of the garden. By interlacing paths, from the tremulous gray willows under the somber, clashing eucalyptus spears, under dark wings of cypress they were moving. She was bracing in every nerve against the unnerving ... — The Coast of Chance • Esther Chamberlain
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