The plaintiff seeks in this action of tort to recover for personal injuries received by falling into a coal hole, while travelling on a public way in Boston. At about half-past five o’clock, on the afternoon of a snowy day in early January, the plaintiff was walking along Arch Street, when he saw the defendant’s coal team at the sidewalk, and supposed that coal was being delivered from it into a coal hole. He went into the street to go around the horses’ heads, but finding the street slushy, returned to the sidewalk. The plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that the place was dark, that one could see an object, but could not tell a man’s face, that he walked close to the side of the building, and could not see any coal, but saw something black on the sidewalk, close to the rear of the team and a man poking a few pieces of coal left in the cart, and while thus going close to the building so that his shoulder was four or five inches from it, he fell into the coal hole; and that this hole was rectangular, twenty-two inches by thirty-four inches, while the ordinary coal hole is circular in shape, and twelve to fifteen inches in diameter. The defendant strongly argues that there was no sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care, basing this contention largely upon the plaintiff’s statement in his cross-examination that he “ went around the team to avoid disaster. The disaster might *473have been a coal heap. . . . He didn’t look to see if any coal hole was there.” Too much weight, however, cannot be attached to isolated expressions of a witness. His conduct as to due care must be determined in the light of all the circumstances of action and omission, and of the knowledge that he had or ought to have had at the time as well as of detached scraps of testimony, which the jury may regard as the result of too severe stress or strategic skill in cross-examination and weigh accordingly. The jury might have found upon this evidence that the sidewalk was a more convenient and reasonable place for pedestrians than the street, in the then existing weather, that the appearance of the sidewalk in connection with the cart in the dim light was such as to justify the inference, which the plaintiff testified he drew, that the delivery of the coal was finished, the lantern taken away and the coal hole closed, and that the plaintiff saw only the dark spot next the curbing and walked as near as he conveniently could to the building, where coal holes are not commonly found. These conditions, if found to exist, together with the fact that the opening was of different shape and of materially larger dimensions than the ordinary coal hole, and was not plainly visible nor seen by the plaintiff, are enough to sustain the finding that he was in the exercise of ordinary care. That he did not look for the coal hole may have been found to be due to the darkness being so dense that looking would not have disclosed it. His statement, that he went into the street to avoid disaster, and then, on finding it slushy, returned to the sidewalk, cannot be ruled as matter of law to have constituted knowledge of the danger and appreciation of its extent, but was rather a graphic way of stating his design in first leaving the sidewalk. In conjunction with his other testimony, it certainly did not fix him with knowledge of the existing danger. It was for the jury under all the circumstances to draw what inferences seemed reasonable to them, as men of experience in the common affairs of life, not only from what the plaintiff knew or could have known of the precise condition existing on the sidewalk, but also from his consciousness that the defendant in delivering coal owed a duty to those passing upon the sidewalk to see that the coal hole was properly guarded and protected so that pedestrians would not be liable to fall in. The case is well within recent *474decisions. French v. Boston Coal Co. 195 Mass. 334. Owens v. Harvard Brewing Co. 194 Mass. 498. Wakefield v. Boston Coal Co. 197 Mass. 527.
The defendant also complains of an illustration given by the judge, as being a charge upon the facts within the prohibition of R L. c. 173, § 80. There was conflicting evidence as to whether the plaintiff had been warned of danger by the defendant’s driver. One issue apparently was whether any warning, if given, was timely or too late. The illustration given is not open to objection. While it was picturesque and pointed, it was apposite to the evidence which the jury were to consider and to one of the questions which they must pass upon. It falls within the authority of the court in charging a jury, as stated at length in the cases of Whitney v. Wellesley & Boston Street Railway, 197 Mass. 495 and Plummer v. Boston Elevated Railway, 198 Mass. 499. These principles have been so recently and so fully discussed that it is not necessary now to amplify them further.
Exceptions overruled.