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Inconsolable   Listen
Inconsolable

adjective
1.
Sad beyond comforting; incapable of being consoled.  Synonyms: disconsolate, unconsolable.






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"Inconsolable" Quotes from Famous Books



... drowsy, and turning himself on his face, expired. The sudden death of this statesman caused great grief to the nation. George I was exceedingly affected, and shut himself up for some hours in his closet, inconsolable for ...
— Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions - Vol. I • Charles Mackay

... bound his dear head with garlands of the amorous rosemary. The echoes of sea-caves would have chanted requiems until time should be no more. Embalmed in darkness the nightingale would nightly for ever pour forth her soul in profuse strains of inconsolable ecstasy; by day the dove should moan in the flickering shade until the sun should cease to ...
— Twenty-One Days in India; and, the Teapot Series • George Robert Aberigh-Mackay

... beg them to stop, not the noise (for that did not seem to strike her ear), but the bustle that was going on around her; then, hiding her face in her hands, lying back in her arm-chair and bringing her knees up almost to her breast, she would apparently give way to inconsolable despair. This silent grief, which could no longer control itself and no longer wished to be controlled; this powerful will, which had once been able to quell the most violent storms, and now going adrift ...
— Mauprat • George Sand

... girl was inconsolable. Her mother, she said, was dead, and her father had gone off to defend a pah which it was supposed would be attacked by the British. Jack promised to protect her to the best of his power. She seemed ...
— The Three Admirals • W.H.G. Kingston

... me penetrate—have been enacted, more undertakers arrive and proceed to prepare the body for decent burial. There is much lamentation when the coffin is finally borne from the house. The women shriek and swoon, grovel on the ground, and tear their hair. As for Dona Dolores—she is inconsolable, and continues to harangue the remains until her speech is inarticulate and she is carried away in a ...
— The Pearl of the Antilles, or An Artist in Cuba • Walter Goodman


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