" The barge did not anchor, because an anchor is not part of a canal-boat's furniture, but she was moored with ropes fore and aft—and the ropes were made fast to the palings and to crowbars driven into the ground.
The schooners moored to the quay are trim and neat, the little town along the bay is white and urbane, and the flamboyants, scarlet against the blue sky, flaunt their colour like a cry of passion.
Slowly, but with no doubt or hesitation whatever, and in something of a solemn expectancy, the two animals passed through the broken tumultuous water and moored their boat at the flowery margin of the island.
The grub-boat of Dennis Corrigan, sub-contractor, was moored to a tree on the bank.
Meng Haoran Moored by a mist-befogged peninsula, When falling twilight thickens my dolor.
The boat, which includes a king sized bed, a bathroom with a double shower, concrete kitchen counter-tops and full height ceilings, is moored in a private marina in the Grand Union Canal, in north west London.
THE boat of the boatman Madhu is moored at the wharf of Rajgunj.
My job is to bring in the large luxury liners and stay with them until they are safely moored in their berths.
The only sound was the Sound — the waters of Queen Charlotte Sound, lapping against the pontoon, which, with its white uprights and the white yacht moored nearby, seemed to float in space against the flat, black bay.
Sweet funeral bells from some incalculable distance, wailing over the dead that die before the dawn, awakened me as I slept in a boat moored to some familiar shore.
My job is to bring in the large luxury liners and stay with them until they are safely moored in their berths.
At the sight of a moored boat, the swindler got an idea and planned to take action.
One night, Ai Zi had his boat moored near a small island Around midnight, he seemed to hear someone weeping or talking under the water.
Roused at dawn from a misty dream, I read, a year late, news from home -- And I remember the moon like smoke on the river And a fisher-boat moored there, under my door.
I travelled towards it, and was pleased to see a vessel moored about half a mile from shore.
"How delightful it must be to live there," said Babette, who again felt the greatest wish to visit the island; and an opportunity offered to gratify her wish at once, for on the shore lay a boat, and the rope by which it was moored could be very easily loosened.
The boat was moored; and the two men, after desiring the children to sit still, both went on shore.