diff --git "a/dev/11000/eval_librispeech_validation.other/hyp.trn" "b/dev/11000/eval_librispeech_validation.other/hyp.trn" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/dev/11000/eval_librispeech_validation.other/hyp.trn" @@ -0,0 +1,3072 @@ +drank as he had been used to do when he was at otter's court frequent atonements (utterance_0) +before deranged the scorch of the enemy i saw steeds white with foam and after the shout of a battle a fearful torrent (utterance_1) +these tidings came to urban (utterance_2) +not i by my confession unto heaven said she there is nothing more hateful unto me than this (utterance_3) +and the tears she said in the word she had spoken awoke him (utterance_4) +and evil betide me said he if thou returnest here until thou knowest whether i have lost my strength so completely as thou didst say (utterance_5) +then d'yrant went to see urban (utterance_6) +sir said he i am going upon a quest and i am not certain when i may come back (utterance_7) +take heed therefore unto thy possessions until my return (utterance_8) +but one person only will go at me (utterance_9) +and he desired enna to mount her horse and to ride forward and to keep a long way before him (utterance_10) +and unless i speak unto thee say not thou one word either (utterance_11) +and though thou shouldst desire to see my defeat in my death by the hands of those men yet do i feel no dread (utterance_12) +and he received him and that not feebly (utterance_13) +and say not one word unto me unless i speak first unto thee (utterance_14) +i will do as far as i can lord said she according to thy desire (utterance_15) +i made him said he it is vain to a tempestuing forward (utterance_16) +i cannot by any means refrain from sleep through weariness said he do thou therefore wash the horses and sleep not (utterance_17) +and when she saw the dawn of day appear she looked around her to see if you were waking and thereupon he woke (utterance_18) +and they left the wood and they came to an open country with metals on one hand and mow was mowing the meadows (utterance_19) +my lord he added will be displeasing to thee if i ask whence thou comest allsome (utterance_20) +wilt thou follow my council said the youth and take thy meal for me (utterance_21) +what sort of meal he inquired (utterance_22) +then they washed and took their repast (utterance_23) +i go now lord said he to meet the knight and to conduct him to his lodging (utterance_24) +i will do lord said she as thou sayest (utterance_25) +and after they had eaten and drank d'aray went to sleep and so did thei need also (utterance_26) +the date seem uninport but throughout the period the officers and men of the ship have been unremittingly busy (utterance_27) +bows attacked the ship's doors surveyed relisdon restowed them saving very much space by unstoic numerous cases and stoleing the contents in the lazarette (utterance_28) +without steam the leak cannot be kept under with the handpomp by two daily efforts of a quarter of an hour to twenty minutes (utterance_29) +as the ship was and in a present heavily laid in condition would certainly have taken three to four hours each day (utterance_30) +the large green tent was put up and propus supports made for it (utterance_31) +the engine rooms staff and antices people on the engines scientists were stolen their lavatories the cook refitting of galley and so forth not a single spot but had its band of workers (utterance_32) +the man's base such as it is therefore extends from the fore hatch the stem on the main deck (utterance_33) +under the forecastle of stalls of fifteen ponies the maxin in the space would hold the narrow irregular space in front is packed tight with faud (utterance_34) +meadly behind the forecastle bulkhead as a small boogy hatch the only inches of the men's mess deck and bad weather (utterance_35) +above the fore hatchet as the ice house (utterance_36) +we manage to get three tons of ice one hundred six or two caucases of mutton and three caucases of beef besides some boxes of sweet breads and kidneys into this space (utterance_37) +the sex containing this last add it to the goods already mentioned make a really heavy deck cago and one is naturally anxious concerning it but everything that can be done by lashing and scuring has been done (utterance_38) +forage i originally ordered thirty tons of compressed oatin hay from melbourne (utterance_39) +the scene is wholly enchanting in such a view from some sheltered sunny corner in a garden which blazes with masses of red and golden flowers tends to feelings of inexpressible satisfaction with all things (utterance_40) +a great mass of people assembled (utterance_41) +cay and i lunch with the party in the new zeal and companyship rupoo (utterance_42) +telegram to say tara nova had arised sunday night (utterance_43) +a third sledge stands across the brake of the poop in the space hitherto occupied by the after which (utterance_44) +the quantity is two in half tons and the space occupied considerable (utterance_45) +the ship was over two feet by the stern but this will soon be remedy (utterance_46) +they must perforce be chained up and they are given what shelters afforded on deck but their position is not enviable (utterance_47) +it is a pathetic attitude deeply significant of cold and misery cagily some poor beast admits a long pathetic wine (utterance_48) +there are gently one or two on watch which eases matters but it is a squash (utterance_49) +later in the day the wind has veered to the westward heading us slightly (utterance_50) +oats and atkinson with intimate and assistance from others were busy keeping the ponies on their legs (utterance_51) +there was nothing for it but to grapple with the evil and nearly all hands were laboring for hours in the weights of the ship heaving coal sacks overboard and relashing the petrol cases et cetera in the best man possible under such difficult and dangerous circumstances (utterance_52) +no sooner would some semblance of order restore than some exceptionally heavy way would tear away the lashing and the work had to be done all over again (utterance_53) +from this moment about four a m the engine room became the centre of interest (utterance_54) +the water gained in spite of every effort (utterance_55) +the outlook appeared grim (utterance_56) +the amount of water which was being made but the ship so roughly handled was most uncertain (utterance_57) +williams had to confess he was beaten and must draw fires what was to be done (utterance_58) +the bill's pampas depended on the main engine (utterance_59) +on one occasion i was waste deep when standing on the rail of the poop (utterance_60) +the after god were organized in two poddies by evans to work buckets the men were kept steadily going on the choked hand pumps this seemed all that could be done for the moment and what a measure to count as the soul save god of the ship from sinking practically an attempt to bale or out (utterance_61) +occasionally a heavy sea would bear one of the moaway and he was only save by his chain (utterance_62) +now this is how othor hunted the stag (utterance_63) +and the last dog that was let loose was a favorite dog of otter caval was his name (utterance_64) +then they sounded the duck horn for slaying and they all gathered round (utterance_65) +one wished that it should be given to the lady best beloved by him and another to the lady whom he loved best (utterance_66) +and after mid day they beheld an unshapely little man upon a horse and after him a day more damsel also on horseback and after her a knight of lodge stature bowed down and hanging his head low and sorrowfully in cloud and broken and worthless armour (utterance_67) +i know not who they are said he but i know said glenarva this is the knight whom d'yrant pursued and me thanks that he comes not here by his own free will (utterance_68) +but geranta's overtaken him in a vengeing insult to the maiden to the uttermost (utterance_69) +lady said he at the gate there was a knight and i saw never a man of so pitiful an aspect to look upon as he (utterance_70) +i do said he he tells me that he is ederan but some of nood (utterance_71) +then she replied i know him not (utterance_72) +so glenarva went to the gate to meet him and he entered (utterance_73) +and drank greets thee well and in greeting thee to compel me to come here to do thy pleasure for the insult which thy maiden received from the dwarf no need did he overtake thee (utterance_74) +sir said she when thinkest thou that deraint will be here (utterance_75) +to morrow i think you will be here with the maiden (utterance_76) +i am lord said he and i have met with much trouble and received wounds unsupportable (utterance_77) +well it ought there from what i hear it be whose winner to be merciful told thee (utterance_78) +the mercy which thou desirest lord said she will i grant to him since the deserts insulting to thee that an insult should be offered to me as to thyself (utterance_79) +thus will it be best to do said otter let this man have medical care until it be known whether he may live (utterance_80) +to go to a verner handmaiden said he (utterance_81) +and the steward of the household so ordered her (utterance_82) +and being young he changed himself and grew to hate the sin that seemed so like his own of maudrett autha's nephew and fell at last in the great battle fighting for the king (utterance_83) +and when drouin came to the place where one of her was he saluted her (utterance_84) +then they went in and dismounted (utterance_85) +heaven protect thee said otter and the welcome of heaven be unto thee (utterance_86) +and inasmuch as thou hast vanquished edinburghn the son of nud thou hast had a prosperous career (utterance_87) +and from that time she became his wife (utterance_88) +and the maiden took up her abode in the palace and she had many companions both men and women and there was no maiden more steamed than she in the island of britain (utterance_89) +and a year and a second and a third he proceeded thus until his fame had flown over the face of the kingdom (utterance_90) +and he greets thee well as an uncle should greet his nephew and as the vassal should greet his lord (utterance_91) +and the neighbouring chiefs knowing this grow insolent toward him and covered his land in possessions (utterance_92) +and ah that told during the cause of the mission and of the coming of the ambassadors to him out of cornwall truly said derang be it to my advantage of disadvantage lord i will do according to thy will concerning this embassy (utterance_93) +what discourse said glenarva do i hear between you (utterance_94) +said deraint i think i shall have enough of knighthood with me and they set forth (utterance_95) +and never was there seen a fair host journeying towards the seven (utterance_96) +and he said to derent i am a feeble and an aged man and whilst i was able to maintain the dominions for thee and for myself i did so (utterance_97) +and every one asked that which she desired (utterance_98) +and they were not long in giving so eat was every one to bestow guess and if those who came to ask us none departed unsatisfied (utterance_99) +then derates and abases to the men of cornwall to ask them this (utterance_100) +and they all said that it would be the fullness of joy and honour to them for joy to come and receive their homage (utterance_101) +so he received the image of such as were there (utterance_102) +and the day after the followers of otter intended to go away (utterance_103) +a number of other days were observed for the christian church at various times as the birthday of jesus the gospels give no date and appear to be quite uncertain really ignorant about it (utterance_104) +yet there is no evidence that he was born on that day (utterance_105) +widest discrepancy and historical document to say nothing about inspiration (utterance_106) +again matthew says that to escape the evil designs of herod marian joseph with the infant jesus fled into egypt looks as nothing about this hard flight nor of herod's intention to kill the infant messiah (utterance_107) +when we come to the more important chapters of our jesus we meet with queer difficulties (utterance_108) +boys always on a friday that the cruspixions commimorated the weak in which that they occur is very sweet year (utterance_109) +good friday falls not before the spring equinox but as soon after the spring equinox is the full moon allows thus making the calculation to depend upon the position of the sun and a zodiac and the phases of the moon (utterance_110) +the pagan austeria has become the christian easter (utterance_111) +that in the absence of evidence ordent offers of folly and metaphysical arguments against the scypical sessus one (utterance_112) +if we are to have any mythology at all he seems to argue why object to adding to it the miss of jesus (utterance_113) +the immediate companions of jesus appear to be on the other hand as mythical as he is himself (utterance_114) +who was matthew it was mark (utterance_115) +who were john peter judis and mary (utterance_116) +there is absolutely no evidence that they ever existed (utterance_117) +if peter ever went to rome with the new doctrine how is it that no historian has taken note of him (utterance_118) +here again we see the presence of a myst (utterance_119) +he was the only one who saw them (utterance_120) +peter paul john james judis occupied a stage almost exclusively (utterance_121) +it is impossible to explain why the contemporaries of jesus the authors and the historians of this time you not take notice of him (utterance_122) +for they had been in a conspiracy against him (utterance_123) +howis is his unanimous signs to be accounted for (utterance_124) +how van are we to decide which other numerous canadates for divine honors should be given our votes (utterance_125) +and such a faith is never free it is always maintained with a sword now and by hell fire hereafter (utterance_126) +yet the most impossible utterances are put in jesus mouth (utterance_127) +only a mythical jesus convertually hand over the gormo of the evis to quarters who have petitions to press upon his attention (utterance_128) +moreover if jesus could keep his promise there would be to day no misery in the world no orphans no childless mothers no shipwrecks no floods no famines no disease no crippled children no insanity no wars no crime no wrong (utterance_129) +have these prayers been answered (utterance_130) +how me self delired prophets these extravagant claims have produced (utterance_131) +and who can number the bitter disappointments caused by such impossible promises (utterance_132) +the same which the preachers of to day give he parried his hands with many words and at length said that the promise was betaken with the provision that what we asked for would be given if god thought it for a good (utterance_133) +but he said if you ask evening in my name i will do it and if it were not so i would have told you (utterance_134) +did he not mean just what he said (utterance_135) +self effort and not prayer is a remute against ignorance slavery poverty and moral degradation (utterance_136) +but i am determined not only to know if it is possible the whole truth about jesus but also to communicate that truth to others (utterance_137) +but there is more of a moral tonic in the opening canadid discussion of a subject like the one in hand than in the multitude of platitudes (utterance_138) +i never deliver a lecture in which i do not either directly or indirectly if full in free expression to my faith in everything that is worthier faith (utterance_139) +if i do not believe in dogma is because i believe in freedom (utterance_140) +oh he tears down but he is not built up is another criticism about my work it is not true (utterance_141) +no preacher of preachers more constructive (utterance_142) +class in truth and jail yag in the mouth of a student is that building up or tearing down (utterance_143) +when brinal lighted a new torch to increase the lie of the world what was his foreward the stake (utterance_144) +count your rights political religious social intellectual and telling which of them was conquered for you by the priest (utterance_145) +i wish to tell you something (utterance_146) +the first list be in personal the epithets irreverent blasphemer atheist and infidel are flung in a man not from pity but from envy (utterance_147) +not having the courage or the industry of our neighbour who works like a busy bee in the world of men and books searching with a sweat of his brow for the real bread of life waiting the open page of for him with his tears pushing into the wee hours of the night his quest and made by the fairest of all loves (utterance_148) +as i approached the city i heard bell's ringing and a little later i found the streets a stir with throngs of well dressed people in family groups winding their way hither and thither (utterance_149) +looking about me i saw a gentleman in a neat black dress smiling at his hand extended to me with great cordiality (utterance_150) +he must have realized i was a stranger and wished to hinder his hospitality to me i accepted it gratefully i clasped his hand he pressed mine (utterance_151) +we gazed for a moment slightly into each other's eyes (utterance_152) +of course you are going there too i said to my friendly guide (utterance_153) +yes he answered i conduct the worship i am a priest (utterance_154) +an idle i whispered taken by surprise (utterance_155) +they worship god they did not exist (utterance_156) +but the greeks loved their gods i protested my heart clammed in my breast (utterance_157) +no i said in a low voice (utterance_158) +he was an idle man and not a god (utterance_159) +it made athensacy of light it created the beautiful the true the good yes our religion was divine (utterance_160) +it had only one fault and drove to my guide what was that (utterance_161) +i inquired without knowing what his answer would be it was not true (utterance_162) +produce him (utterance_163) +i wished her to myself what blasphemy (utterance_164) +van taking heart i told my guide how more than once i had felt apollo radiant presence in my heart and told him of the immortal lines of homer concerned in a vinepolo (utterance_165) +do you doubt homer (utterance_166) +i said to him homer the inspired bard (utterance_167) +no no a pearl is modern idle (utterance_168) +he is a god and the son of a god (utterance_169) +the air was heavy with incense a number of men in gorgeous vestments were passing to and fro bow and and kneeling before the various lights and images (utterance_170) +observing my anxiety to understand a mean of all this my guide took me aside and in a whisper told me that the people were silibraying the anniversary of the birthday of their beautiful saviour jesus the son of god (utterance_171) +forget apollo he said with his suggestion of severity in his voice (utterance_172) +there was no such person he was only an idle (utterance_173) +if you would assurch for apollo at all the universe you would never find any one answer into his name or description (utterance_174) +i want to see jesus i hasten turning toward him (utterance_175) +will he not be here this morning (utterance_176) +will you not speak to his worshippers i asked again (utterance_177) +will he not permit them to touch him to caress his hand to class his divine feet to inhale the embrosal fragrance of his breath to bask in the golden light of his eyes to hear the music of his immaculate accents (utterance_178) +i asked my eyes filled with wonder in my voice quivering with excitement (utterance_179) +would not that then i venture to ask impatiently make jesus as much of an idle as apollo (utterance_180) +and if faith it uses as a god proves him a god while will not faith in apollo may kill a god (utterance_181) +i make his offensive explanation of a given phenomenon (utterance_182) +the mind grace for knowledge the child ask questions because of an emborning desire to know (utterance_183) +now and then they came close enough to stop at each other (utterance_184) +with this mythos the prontom man was satisfied and he was developing intelligence realized its inadequacy science was born without realization (utterance_185) +the method of one eyed people live in an india has in replace by accurate information concerning the hindoos (utterance_186) +and this is precisely the use to which this have been put (utterance_187) +as to you someth (utterance_188) +there is in man of faculty for fiction (utterance_189) +it thinks less than guesses (utterance_190) +in his reflection which introduces up the end to the mouth of imagination curving its pace and subdue in its relentless spirit (utterance_191) +we filled a space abound over us with spirits fairies gods and other invisible and airy beings (utterance_192) +recovered the rainbow we reach out for the moon (utterance_193) +our feet not really being to touch the firm ground until we have reached the years of discretion (utterance_194) +science was not born till man had retreated (utterance_195) +grown up people create science (utterance_196) +the cradle is the womb of all the fairies in face and mankind (utterance_197) +this school is the birthplace of science (utterance_198) +religion of the science of the child (utterance_199) +in the discussion of this subject i appeal to the mature not the child mind (utterance_200) +he is god's mouthpiece and no one may disagree with him (utterance_201) +the only way i may command your respect is to be reasonable (utterance_202) +let us place ourselves entirely in the hands of the evidence (utterance_203) +as intelligent beings would desire to know where this jesus his worship is not only cost in the world millions of the people's money but which is also drawing to his service the time the energies the affections the devotions and the labor of humanity is a myth or reality (utterance_204) +and again when the artists following malicorne's advice was a little plate in arriving and when saint agnan had been obliged to be absent for some time it was interesting to observe that though no one witnessed them those moments of silence full of deep expression which united in one side two souls most disposed to understand each other (utterance_205) +in a word malicorne philosopher that he was though he knew it not had learned how to inspire the king with an appetite in the midst of play and with desire in the assurance of possession (utterance_206) +in this manner therefore without leaving her room and having no confidant she was able to return to her apartment thus removing by her appearance a little tarty perhaps the suspicions of the most determined sceptic (utterance_207) +but the door remained close and neither satan agnan nor the painter appeared nor did the hangings even move (utterance_208) +gordon dearest love said the king that returned quickly (utterance_209) +no no not to day sir (utterance_210) +i knew but too well that you had not ceased to love me (utterance_211) +the gallery with a gesture partly of extreme terror and partly as if in voking a blessing attempted to speak but could not articulate one word (utterance_212) +at the moment however when the king threw himself on his knees a cry of utter despair rang through the corridor accompanied by the sound of retreating footsteps (utterance_213) +the captain sitting buried in his leather arm chair his spurs fixed in the floor his sword between his legs was reading a number of letters as he twists mustache (utterance_214) +d'artagnan uttered a welcome full of pleasure when he perceived his friend's son (utterance_215) +i owe my boy he said by what lucky incident does it happen that the king has recalled you (utterance_216) +these words did not sound agreeably in the young man's ears who as he seated himself replying upon thy word i cannot tell you all that i know is i have come back oh (utterance_217) +that the king has not recalled you and you have returned (utterance_218) +i do not understand that at all (utterance_219) +rill was already pale enough and he now began to turn his hat round and round in his hand (utterance_220) +what they do is the matter that you look as you do and what makes you so down (utterance_221) +said the captain to people now a day to assume that sort of airs in england (utterance_222) +i have been in england and came here again as lively as a chafference (utterance_223) +will you not say something (utterance_224) +i had too much to say (utterance_225) +ah how is your father (utterance_226) +forgive me my dear friend i was going to ask you that (utterance_227) +d'artagnan increased his sharpness of his penetrating gaze which no secret was capable of resisting (utterance_228) +you are unhappy about something he said (utterance_229) +i am indeed and you know the reason very well monsieur d'artagnan (utterance_230) +neid did not pretend to be astonished (utterance_231) +i am not pretending to be astonished my friend (utterance_232) +i have neither had nor arm do not despise but help me in two words i am the most wretched of living beings oh (utterance_233) +she is deceiving you said d'artagnan not a muscle of whose face had moved those are big words who makes use of them (utterance_234) +every one ah (utterance_235) +if every one says so there must be some truth in it (utterance_236) +not for a friend for a son (utterance_237) +i don't take it you are really ill from curiosity (utterance_238) +nor does not from curiosity as from love (utterance_239) +good another big word (utterance_240) +i tell you i love louise to distraction (utterance_241) +well suppose it were only that (utterance_242) +no sensible man ever succeeded in making much of a brain when the head was turned (utterance_243) +i have completely lost by senses in the same way a hundred times in my life (utterance_244) +you would hear but you would not understand me you would understand but you would not obey me (utterance_245) +oat riot try (utterance_246) +i go far even if i were unfortunate enough to know something and foolish enough to communicate it to you you are my friend you say indeed yes (utterance_247) +there are good i should quarrel with you (utterance_248) +i never complain as you know but as heaven and my father would never forgive me for blowing out my brain i will go and get the first person i mean to give me the information which you withhold i will tell him he lies and and you occulia (utterance_249) +and a fine affair that would be so much the better what should i care (utterance_250) +you now assume a different tone instead of killing you will get killed yourself i suppose you mean very fine indeed (utterance_251) +how much i should regret you (utterance_252) +of course i should go about all day saying ah (utterance_253) +what a fine stupid fellow that bragglone was (utterance_254) +as great as i ever met with (utterance_255) +go then growl go and get yourself disposed of if you like (utterance_256) +i hardly knew who can have touched you logic but dost take me if your father has not been regularly robbed of his money (utterance_257) +grebble buried his face in his hands murmuring no i have not a single friend in the world (utterance_258) +idle fancies monsieur i do not laugh at you though i am a gascon (utterance_259) +a carpet there what do you mean (utterance_260) +upon my word i do not know some one told me there was a carpenter who made an opening through a certain floor (utterance_261) +oh i don't know where (utterance_262) +and whose room then (utterance_263) +i have told you for the last hour that i know nothing of the whole affair (utterance_264) +but the painter then they brought it (utterance_265) +will you suit the home only that name in your mouth (utterance_266) +i do not suppose it will concern you (utterance_267) +yes you're a right and he made a step or two as if you were going to leap why are you going (utterance_268) +to look for someone who will tell me the truth (utterance_269) +who is that a woman (utterance_270) +you wish to be consoled by some one and you will be so at once she will tell you nothing you live herself of course so be off (utterance_271) +you are mistaken monsieur replied raoul though i mean will tell me all the evils she possibly can (utterance_272) +well i admitted (utterance_273) +and in point of fact why should i play with you as a cat does with the poor mouse (utterance_274) +you distress me you do indeed (utterance_275) +wait if you can (utterance_276) +i could not so much the worst (utterance_277) +ah said raoul snatching eagerly at the pen which the captain held out to him (utterance_278) +how very fortunate that is you was looking for you too (utterance_279) +she said in the same tone of voice it is not i who am going to speak to him oh then (utterance_280) +i accompanied my granddaughter to this listened to tamement her letter responded (utterance_281) +it is scarcely a choice occasion to my mind (utterance_282) +no need just her thought like that if it isn't ejaculated mister green (utterance_283) +if our shirt this was the same man i go myself (utterance_284) +when i find a fellow his nigger knave nor a fool i stick to him bleef i'll send the find out (utterance_285) +the only time had been any comment upon her was the first time he saw her in the dress she accomplished merceditious they scambed that and girdow didn't give a hero wager (utterance_286) +doesn't look like it he said gravely (utterance_287) +no she answered i am not afraid it all (utterance_288) +i shall not be afraid again (utterance_289) +in fact she had perfectly confounded her ladyship by her demeanour (utterance_290) +i beg you'll not speak to me a very year she said i will out listen (utterance_291) +and turning about she walked out of the room (utterance_292) +and nothing more habits of subject sense (utterance_293) +before breakfast miss belinda was startled by the arrival of another telegram which reigned as follows (utterance_294) +arrived to day parishion the uthereal evening (utterance_295) +find with me martin dasset (utterance_296) +well at remarked rotavia i suppose that would have been an advantage (utterance_297) +octavia was a marked figure upon the ground at that garden party neither jest my dear remarked mister burden (utterance_298) +what a charming color she hasn't a clear she's usually paler (utterance_299) +perhaps the others the lord lands out (utterance_300) +she's prettier than ever to day in it's enjoying herself (utterance_301) +she was enjoying herself mister francisbral observed it rather gloomily as he stood apart (utterance_302) +and then a calm lord lyanza who and crossed the lawn to shake him for this host had been observed to keep his eye the extapart one particular point bermistowed he said after having spook in his first words who is that tall grown white (utterance_303) +and in ten minutes lady thiopold mister burnham mister bernon mister berylden the verse others too numerous a mention so missing the octavious sight evidently with no intention of leaving it (utterance_304) +not long after this francisboro found his way to miss belinda it was very dizzy and rather nervous and in these was evidently enjoying herself he remarked (utterance_305) +occiania is most happy to day answered miss blenda (utterance_306) +very few people understand octavia said mister bolinda i'm not sure that i follow all her mids myself (utterance_307) +she is not as frivolous as she appears to those she don't know her well (utterance_308) +beryl said non as mustache and made no reply he was not very comfortable (utterance_309) +he felt himself ill used by fate and rather wished he had returned the london from barrows instead of voidering in slobbridge (utterance_310) +it amazed himself at the first but in time heaven surprised to find its amusement knew something of its possessed (utterance_311) +it's ducedly about form on his part he's mentally what that you mean by it (utterance_312) +octavia on the contrary did not ask when he meant by it (utterance_313) +where you jocular i say wouldn't it (utterance_314) +i had not observed it answered her ladyship (utterance_315) +but she glared at beryl that she passed and beckoned to him where was lucia she had made it (utterance_316) +i shall hear what bermison half narrow ago he answered cold have you any message from my mother i shall return to london to morrow leaving here early turn quite pale (utterance_317) +what has happened she asked rigidly he looked slightly surprised nothing whatever he replied (utterance_318) +i remain here longer than i intended (utterance_319) +she began to move the mankles in her right wrist (utterance_320) +she had not brought lucia up under her own eye for nothing (utterance_321) +chapter twenty three may i go (utterance_322) +the very day after this octavia opened the fort chunk (utterance_323) +evidently something had happened octavia she said mister dugle binny is that old klow who is he (utterance_324) +he is my grand uncle exclaimed lucia tremulously he has a great deal of money (utterance_325) +i did not quite understand what mamma tivia she said (utterance_326) +last night she came to my room the talk to me and this morning she'll get in oh (utterance_327) +she broke out indignantly how could she speak to me in such a manner (utterance_328) +what did you understand (utterance_329) +i am to run after a matter does not care for me and make myself attractive in the hope that you will condescend to marry me because mister binny may leave me his money (utterance_330) +do you wonder that it took even lady feel on a long time to say that (utterance_331) +well remarked octavia you won't do it i suppose i wouldn't worry (utterance_332) +oh i always do it i didn't guess (utterance_333) +which is felt ever said faintly (utterance_334) +that is what the reason why she loaves me so she added (utterance_335) +lucia thought deeply forbidden it she recognized all at lights several things she had been mystified by before (utterance_336) +octavius maladoligate (utterance_337) +lucia sat thinking her hands clasped tightly (utterance_338) +i am glad i came here said at length (utterance_339) +i think i shall never be afraid of her any more (utterance_340) +her delicate nostrils were balladed and she held her head up her breath came fast there was a hint of exultation in her tone (utterance_341) +she walked very fast after she left the house (utterance_342) +but it was not against him that lucius indignation was aroused (utterance_343) +she wondered if he had heard her last works she fancied he had (utterance_344) +he took hold of her shaking little hand and looked down at her excited face (utterance_345) +i am angry she said you have never seen me angry before (utterance_346) +i am on my way to my to letty theabout (utterance_347) +he held her head as calmly as before (utterance_348) +what do you want to say to her he asked she laughed again (utterance_349) +held her hand rather closer (utterance_350) +she has made you very angry he said (utterance_351) +and then almost before she knew what she was doing she was pouring forth the whole of his story even more of it than she had told octavia (utterance_352) +we shall he say i wish you would let me go and talk with lady thea bolt you she's out with little start (utterance_353) +yes he answered let me go to her (utterance_354) +if you will say yesterday i think i can promise but you may never be afraid of her any more (utterance_355) +the fierce color died out of her cheeks and the tears rushed to her eyes (utterance_356) +she raised her face with a pathetic look (utterance_357) +i am desperately in love with you he entered in this quietest way (utterance_358) +alo colonel how do you feel a wood this time (utterance_359) +why that thing we must charge you clean a quarter this time but don't (utterance_360) +supper was over and i retired to my upper birth that shaded a long side and overlooking the bag table where the captain was deeply engaged having now the other pilot as a principal opponent (utterance_361) +hudder and short then and take the next word of its good theodooths and the cabra will leave the game now is getting right along (utterance_362) +this pilot's beating us all the smash the woody completed we paddled on again (utterance_363) +their anxious little learned the game and they delivered it (utterance_364) +still with all these as a managers they continue playing they wanted to learn the game (utterance_365) +now pretty globly sir replied the maid we can scarcely tell the heavy we are making for we are obliged to keep in it all the river and there is a shadow of faug raising (utterance_366) +this whit seems rougher better than that we took a nigella faces but we're nearly out again and must be looking out from morn (utterance_367) +as all lay just the hound the brake shall be hale (utterance_368) +yes yes replied the captain bin the bell now i'll let's the price of wood appear (utterance_369) +i thought elia knew his double kings (utterance_370) +deal sir if you please but her luck like's time (utterance_371) +the other poet's voice was again her own deck how much have you (utterance_372) +libout tongue court sir was replied the youthful salesman (utterance_373) +we've happened here till tom seemed to take six cords which were last to daylight and again turned his attention to the game (utterance_374) +but pallets he were changed places when did they sleep (utterance_375) +with agon end the caravan again took her place in the middle of the stream paddling on as usual day at length dawned (utterance_376) +i'd risen and went out with a cap'n to enjoy a view of a blocks (utterance_377) +here it is exclaimed the captain's stopper (utterance_378) +he was gone (utterance_379) +nor would the blue skys of crimson and ambutrings (utterance_380) +she sat by herself at the fire with unlighted candles on the table behind her kneel with a day the happy walk happy sketching cheerful pleasant dinner and the unconstable miserable walk in the garden (utterance_381) +here was she disturbed and unhappy because her instinct had made anything but a refusal impossible while he not many minutes after he had met with a rejection on what order of being the deepest holiest proposal of his life could speak as if its beliefs success oh dear (utterance_382) +her mother came into the room before this world of course was adjusted into anything like order (utterance_383) +mister hale sipped his tea in that attracted silence margaret had the responses on to herself (utterance_384) +she forgot that he had not made them run off with (utterance_385) +margaret was repairing her mother's worst at work and rather shrinking from the thought of the long evening and wishing betty would come that she might go over the events of the day again (utterance_386) +noggress (utterance_387) +i won't speak to about something very serious to us off (utterance_388) +very serious to us all (utterance_389) +mister lennox had never had the opportunity of having any post conversation with her father after her refusal or else that would indeed be a very serious affair (utterance_390) +but she soon felt it was not about anything which having only lately and suddenly occurred could have given rise to any complicated thoughts that her father wished to speak to her (utterance_391) +mister hale did not answer for a man to say (utterance_392) +margaret could not bear the sight of the suspense which was even more distressing to her father than to herself (utterance_393) +but why dear papa do tell me (utterance_394) +because i must no longer be a minister in the church of england (utterance_395) +but nothing to the shop tree receive from mister hale's last speech what could he mean (utterance_396) +it was all the rest for being so mysterious (utterance_397) +why can you no longer be a clergyman (utterance_398) +surely the bishop would told all we know about frederick and the hard and just (utterance_399) +margaret i will tell you about it (utterance_400) +or a lancer any questions this ones but after to night let us never speak of it again (utterance_401) +i can need the consequences of my painful nigible doubts but it is an effort beyond me to speak of what has caused me so with suffering (utterance_402) +no not doubts us to religion not the slightest interest of that he paused (utterance_403) +margaret sighed as if standing on the worde of some new horror (utterance_404) +margaret how i love the holy church from return to be shut out (utterance_405) +he could not go on for a moment till two (utterance_406) +margaret could not tell what to say it seemed to her as terribly and mysterious as if her father were about to turn her retreat (utterance_407) +the one state foundation of her home of her idea of her beloved father seemed reeling and rocking (utterance_408) +he swallowed down the dry choking soft which had been heaving up from his heart yet the truth and going to his book case he took down of volume which he had often been reading lately and from which he thought he had derived strength to enter upon the cause in which he was now embarked (utterance_409) +listen dear margaret said he putting one arm round her waist (utterance_410) +when god will not use thee in one kind yet he will in another (utterance_411) +if when thou are charged with corrupting god's worship also find thy woes their pretendest and necessity or it own in order to a continuance in the renistry (utterance_412) +as he read this and glanced at much more which he did not read he gained resolution for himself and felt as if he too could be brave and firm in doing what he believed to be right but as he ceased he heard margaret's low convulsive sob and his courage sang down under the keen sense of suffering (utterance_413) +i have borne long with southward podge that would have roused any line less torpid and cowedly than mine (utterance_414) +he shook his head as he went on (utterance_415) +margaret i tried to do it i tried to content myself with simply refusing the district preferment and sobbing quietly here striving like conscience now as i had strained it before (utterance_416) +god forgive me (utterance_417) +he rose and walked up and down the room speaking low words of soft reproach and humiliation of which margaret was thankful to her but a few (utterance_418) +margaret i returned to the old said burden we must leave helstone (utterance_419) +yes (utterance_420) +i have written to the bishop i dare say i've told you so but i forget things just now said mister hale collapsed him to his depressed manner as soon as he came to talk of hard matter of fact details informing him of my intention to resign the secret (utterance_421) +they are but what i have tried upon myself without a wail (utterance_422) +that will be a trial but worse far worse will be departing from my dear people (utterance_423) +you will come to stay with us to morrow (utterance_424) +was it to be so sudden then (utterance_425) +what does mamma say (utterance_426) +margaret i am a poor collin after all i cannot beg to give pain (utterance_427) +yes indeed she must said margaret (utterance_428) +perhaps after all she may not oh yes (utterance_429) +she will she must be shocked as the force of the blow returned upon herself and trying to realize how another would take it (utterance_430) +to milton northern he answered with a dull indifference for he had perceived that although his daughter's love had made her claim to him and for a moment tried to soothe him with her love yet the keenness of the pain was as fresh as ever in her mind (utterance_431) +melting more than (utterance_432) +yes said he in the same despondent and different way (utterance_433) +but he with this quick intuitive sympathy read in her face as in a mirror the reflections of his own new depression and turned it off with an effort (utterance_434) +you shall be told on margaret (utterance_435) +only help me to tell your mother (utterance_436) +i am going out for the day to bid father dobson and the pull people on bracy common could buy (utterance_437) +would you dislike breaking it to her very much margaret (utterance_438) +margaret did dislike it did she inform it more than from anything she had ever had to do in her life before (utterance_439) +mister hale shook his head despondingly and pressed her hand in token of gratitude (utterance_440) +margaret was nearly upset again into a burst of crying (utterance_441) +to turn her thoughts she said now tell me papa what up nanza (utterance_442) +you and mamma have some money independent of the income from the living have not you on shore has i know (utterance_443) +servitude of that has always gone to frederick since he has been abroad (utterance_444) +he must have sunder paid for serving with the spanish army (utterance_445) +frederick must not suffer said margaret decidedly in a foreign country so unjustly treated by his own a hundred as left (utterance_446) +no (utterance_447) +said mister hale that would not answer i must do something (utterance_448) +i can always decide better for myself and not influenced by those whom i love said he as a half apology for having remained so much before he had told any one of his family of his intentions (utterance_449) +i cannot stand objections (utterance_450) +and make me fall undecided (utterance_451) +mister hale continued a few months ago when my measure of doubt became more than i could bear without speaking i wrote to mister bell you remember mister bell margaret (utterance_452) +no i never saw him i think (utterance_453) +at any rate he has property there which has very much increased in value since milton has become such a large manufacturing town (utterance_454) +i don't know that he gave me my strength (utterance_455) +the private tutor (utterance_456) +said margaret looking scornful what in the world in manufactures want with the cassex on literature are the accomplishments of a gentleman (utterance_457) +oh said her father some of them really seem to be fine fellows conscience of their own deficiencies which is more than manly a man at oxford is (utterance_458) +some want they children to be better instructive than they themselves have been (utterance_459) +and in milton margaret i shall find a busy life if not a happy one and people and saying so different that i shall never be in mind of helstone (utterance_460) +discordant as it was with almost a detestation for all she had ever heard of the north of england the manufactures the people the wild and late country there was this one recommendation it would be different from helstone and could never remind them of that beloved place (utterance_461) +when do we go (utterance_462) +i do not know exactly (utterance_463) +i wanted to talk it over with you (utterance_464) +you see your mother knows nothing about it yet but i think in a fortnight after my deed of resignation is sent in i shall have no right to remain (utterance_465) +margaret was almost done (utterance_466) +but she recovered herself immediately (utterance_467) +yes papa it had better be fixed soon and decidedly as you say (utterance_468) +cobomarea (utterance_469) +oh if i would not marry if i will but myself in the world how easy it would be (utterance_470) +no said morret sadly i will do it (utterance_471) +you must not deceive yourself into doubting the reality of my words my fixed intention and resolved (utterance_472) +he looked at her in the same steady stony manner for some moments after he had done speaking (utterance_473) +the blessing of god be upon me my child (utterance_474) +the next moment she feared lest this answer to his blessing might be reverent wrong might hurt him as coming from his daughter as she threw her arms around his neck (utterance_475) +she heard him murmur to himself the martyrs and confessors had even more pain to bear i will not drink (utterance_476) +they were startled by hearing missus hale inquiring for her daughter (utterance_477) +in seventeen fifty he came forth in the character for which he was eminently qualified a majestic teacher of moral and religious wisdom (utterance_478) +the vehicle which he chose was that of a periodical paper which she knew had been upon former occasions employed with great success (utterance_479) +when i was to begin publishing that paper i was at a loss how to name it (utterance_480) +i sat down at night upon my bedside and resolved that i would not go to sleep till i had fixed its title (utterance_481) +edison's note was a fiction in which unconnected fragments of his lucubrations were purposely jumbled together in his awe the manner as he could in order to produce a laffable effect (utterance_482) +where johnson's abbreviations are all distinct and applicable to each subject of which the head is mentioned (utterance_483) +for instance there is the following specimen (utterance_484) +public calamities no sense of their prevalence of bad habits negligent of time ready to undertake careless to pursue all changed by time (utterance_485) +confidence of others on suspecting as inexperienced imagining himself secure against neglect never imagines they will venture to treat him ill ready to frost expecting to be trusted (utterance_486) +you found dishes as thinking orders easy to be had (utterance_487) +different kinds of praise pursued that different periods (utterance_488) +of the fancy in medwood (utterance_489) +rit (utterance_490) +school's friendship like ladies (utterance_491) +drawn to man by words repelled by passions (utterance_492) +common danger unites by crushing other passions but they return (utterance_493) +equality in this compliance (utterance_494) +superiority produces insolence and envy (utterance_495) +too much regard in each to private interest too little (utterance_496) +of confederacy with superiors everyone knows the inconvenience (utterance_497) +with equals no authority every man his own opinion his own interest (utterance_498) +man and wife hardly united scarce ever without children (utterance_499) +computation if two to one against two how many against five (utterance_500) +in this as in many other cases i go wrong in opposition to conviction for i think scarce any temporal good equally to be desired with the regard and familiarity of worthy men (utterance_501) +i hope we shall be some time nearer to each other and have a more ready way of pouring out our hearts (utterance_502) +the greatest benefit which one friend can confer upon another is to god and excite and elevate his virtues (utterance_503) +this your mother will still perform if you diligently preserve the memory of her life and of her death a life so far as i could learn it's full wise and innocent and the death resigned peaceful and holy (utterance_504) +i cannot forbear to magician did neither reason nor revelation denies you to hope that you may increase her happiness by obeying her precepts and that she may in her present state look with pleasure upon every apt virtue to which her instructions or example have contributed (utterance_505) +if you write down minutely what you remember of her from your earliest years you will read it with great pleasure and receive from it many hints of soothing recollection when time shall remove her yet farther from you and your grief shall be matured to veneration (utterance_506) +number thirty two on patience even under extreme misery is wonderfully lofty and as much above the rent of stoicism as the song of revelation is brighter than the twilight of pagan philosophy (utterance_507) +it must indeed be allowed that the structure of his sentences is expanded and often has somewhat of the inversion of latin and that he delighted to express familiar thoughts in philosophical language being in this the reverse of socrates who each was said reduced philosophy to the simplicity of common life (utterance_508) +this idle charge has been echoed from one babylon to another who have confounded johnson's essays with jolpson's dictionary and because he thought its right in the lexicon of our language to collect many words which had fallen into disuse but were supported by great authorities it has been imagined that all of these have been in to open into his own compositions (utterance_509) +their styles differ as plain cloth and brocade (utterance_510) +our extremest pleasure has some sort of groaning and completing in it would you not say that it is dying of pain (utterance_511) +the highest and fullest contentment offers more of the grave than of the mary it was a feliciatoss say missy temperatte premit even felicity unless it moderate itself oppresses (utterance_512) +socrates says that some god tried to mix in one mass and a confound pain and pleasure but not being able to do it he bethought him at least to couple them by the tail nettrodora said that in sorrow there's some mixture of pleasure (utterance_513) +nature discovers this confusion to us painter's whole that the same motions and grimaces of the face that serve for weeping serve for laughter too and indeed before the one or the other be finished do but observe the painter's manner of handling and you will be in doubt to which of the (utterance_514) +and therefore common and less speculative souls are found to be more proper for and more successful in the management of affairs and the elevated and exquisite opinions of philosophy unfit for business this sharp vivacity of souls (utterance_515) +he who dies into and in his inquisition comprehends all circumstances and consequences hinders his election a little engine well handled is sufficient for executions whether of less or greater weight (utterance_516) +when the lofty thucidities is about to enter upon his description of the plague that desolated athens one of his modern commentators assures the reader that the history is now going to be exceedingly solemn serious and pathetic and hence with that air of chuckling variety (utterance_517) +such are the true subjects for the historic pen (utterance_518) +the fall of empires the desolation of happy countries splendid cities smoking in their ruins the proudest works of art tumbled in the dust the shrieks and groans of whole nations ascending under heaven (utterance_519) +thus those swarms of flies which are so often execrated as useless vermin are created for the sustenance of spiders and spiders on the other hand are evidently made to devour flies (utterance_520) +ancient traditions speak much of his learning and of the gallant inrodes he had made into the dead languages in which he had made captive a host of greek knowns and latin versus and brought off rich booty in ancient saws and apothegama (utterance_521) +it was observed however that he seldom got into an argument without getting into a perplexity and then into a passion with his adversary for not being convinced gratus (utterance_522) +his abode which he had fixed at a bowery or country seat at a short distance from the city just at what is now called dutch street soon abounded with proofs of his ingenuity pattened smoke jacks that required a horse to work them dutch ovens that required a horse to work them (utterance_523) +it is in knowledge as in swimming he who flounders and spices on the surface makes more noise and attracts more tension than the pearl diver who quietly dies in quest of treasures to the bottom (utterance_524) +the romans by this means erected their colonies for perceiving their city to grow immeasurably populous they eased it of the most unnecessary people and sent them to a inhabitant cultivate the lands conquered by them sometimes (utterance_525) +and we suffer the ills of a long piece luxurious more pernicious than war (utterance_526) +and this also was one reason why our king philip consented to send his son john upon a foreign expedition that he might take along with him a great number of hot young men who were then in his pay (utterance_527) +what other end does the impious art of the gladiators propose to itself what the slaughter of young men what pleasure fed with blood (utterance_528) +prince take the honours delayed for thy reign and be successor to thy father's henceforth let none at rome be slain for sport (utterance_529) +let beasts blood stain the infausarena and no more homicides be there actant (utterance_530) +it was not enough for them to fight and to die bravely but cheerfully too insomuch that they were hissed and cursed if they made any hesitation about receiving their death (utterance_531) +if i girls themselves set them on (utterance_532) +beginning of revolt (utterance_533) +at this unexpected command the surprise was great on board the forward (utterance_534) +like the fires exclaimed some (utterance_535) +what with asked others (utterance_536) +and stuff the stove with the masts added warren (utterance_537) +did you hear me (utterance_538) +who spoke cried hatteras (utterance_539) +i did said pen advancing towards the captain (utterance_540) +i say answered pen with an oath i say we've had enough of it and we won't go any further (utterance_541) +you shan't tell us with hunger and work in the winter and they shan't write the fires (utterance_542) +if you repeat what the man says answered hatteras i'll have you shut up in your cabin and guarded (utterance_543) +a murmur was heard (utterance_544) +the engineer followed by plover and worn went down to his post (utterance_545) +the steam was soon got up the anchors were weighed and the forward vired away east cutting the young ice with her steel prow (utterance_546) +between bearing island and beacher point there are a considerable quantity of islands in the midst of ice fields the streams crowd together in the little channels which cut up this part of the sea they had a tendency to a glomorate under the relatively low temperature hummocks (utterance_547) +i'm beginning not to answered wall (utterance_548) +hatteras still hoped to find an open sea beyond the seventy seventh parallel as sir edward belter had done (utterance_549) +ought he to treat these accounts as apocrifal (utterance_550) +the next day the sun set for the first time ending thus the long series of days with twenty four hours in them (utterance_551) +the men had ended by getting a custom to the continual daylight but it had never made any difference to the animals the greenland dogs went to their rest at their custom hour and dick slept as regularly every evening as though darkness had covered the sky (utterance_552) +the doctor by following johnson's advice accustomed himself to support the low temperature he almost always stayed on deck waving the cold the wind and the snow (utterance_553) +there is more than one amongst us who would like to imitate than i think (utterance_554) +they are cowards mister clawbonny those animals have no provisions as we have and are obliged to seek their food where it is to be found (utterance_555) +you hope that hatteras will succeed then (utterance_556) +he certainly will mister clawbonny (utterance_557) +i am of the same opinion as you johnson and if she only wanted one faithful companion he'll have two (utterance_558) +prince albert land which the ford was then coasting there is also the name of greenell land and though hatteras from his hatred to the yankees would never call it by its american name it is the one it generally goes by (utterance_559) +on the eighteenth of august they cited britania mountain scarcely visible through the mist and the forward weighed anchor the next day in northumberland bay (utterance_560) +and as a mortal apollo sought to earn his bread amongst men (utterance_561) +afterward people wondered at at medicines ever smiling face and ever rading being (utterance_562) +those before it met us sailed on the argo with jason and the companions of the quest (utterance_563) +thereafter at meadows having love of alchestus was even more happy than he had been before (utterance_564) +a radiant figure it was and it matters new that this was apollo come to him again (utterance_565) +but apollo turned to admit it a face that was without joy (utterance_566) +what years of happiness have been mine or polo through your friendship for me said ned medici (utterance_567) +but still apollo stood before him with a face that was without joy (utterance_568) +he spoke and his voice was not that clear and vibrant voice that he at once in speaking to her medicine (utterance_569) +admedis and menace he said it is for me to tell you that you may no more look on the blue sky nor walk upon the green earth (utterance_570) +it is for me to tell you that the god of the underworld will have you come to a maddes and matters know that even now the god of the naud world is sending death for you (utterance_571) +if one will go willingly in thy place with death thou canst still live on go and let us (utterance_572) +and then he came upon an ancient woman who sat upon stones in the courtyard grinding corn between two stones (utterance_573) +there she was signals he had first known her with her eyes blired and her knee shaking and with the dust of the courtyard and the husks of the corn in her matted hair (utterance_574) +he went to her and spoke to her and he asked her to take the place of the king and go with death (utterance_575) +but when she heard the name of death hora came into the face of the ancient woman and she cried out that she would not let death come near her (utterance_576) +at meadows took the man's shirvilled hand and he asked him if he would not take the king's place and goeth death that was coming for him (utterance_577) +then admedas went in to the palace and into the chamberer's bed was and he lay down upon the bed and he lamented that he would have to go with death that was common for him from the god of laund world and he lamented that none of the wretched ones round the house would take his place (utterance_578) +one should go in your place for you are the king and have many great affairs to attend to (utterance_579) +now the footsteps seemed to stop (utterance_580) +it was not so terrible for him as before (utterance_581) +in the words he had spoken he would have taken back the words that brought her consent to go with death in his place (utterance_582) +doth would soon be here for her (utterance_583) +no not here for you would not have death come into the house (utterance_584) +he lifted aucustus wrong bed and a character from the palace (utterance_585) +no more speech came from her (utterance_586) +and osford meters he went within the chamber and knelt beside the bed on which i'll cast his saddle in and thought of his terrible loss (utterance_587) +to what god does that sacrifice due (utterance_588) +and then rackley's felt that another labor was before him (utterance_589) +i have dragged up from the under world he thought the hound thy guards those whom death brings sound into the realm of the god of the unto world (utterance_590) +why should i not strive with death (utterance_591) +and what a noble thing it would be to bring back this faithful woman to her house and to her husband (utterance_592) +he left the palace of red meadows and he went to the temple of the gods (utterance_593) +you are held by me death and you will not be let go unless you promise to go forth from this sample without bringing one with you (utterance_594) +and death knowing that heracles could hold him there and that the business of the god of the underworld would be left undone if you were held promise that you would leave the temple without bringing one with him (utterance_595) +she was veiled and that medicine could not see her features (utterance_596) +here is a woman whom i am bringing back to her husband i wonder from an enemy (utterance_597) +this i cannot do said enmidis i've had pains enough (utterance_598) +then that better s raised the veil of the woman he had taken across the threshold of his house (utterance_599) +thus when dogmas lead it what the man really and in general wills remain still the same (utterance_600) +for these are careful only for themselves for their own egoism just like the bandit from whom they are only distinguished by the absurdity of their means (utterance_601) +the deeds and conduct of an individual and of a nation may be very much modified to dogmas example and custom (utterance_602) +with an equal degree of wickedness one man may die on the wheel and another in the bosom of this family (utterance_603) +it is conceivable that a perfect state or perhaps indeed a complete and firmly believed doctrine of rewards and punishments after death might prevent every crime politically much would be gained thereby morally nothing only the expression of the will in life would be restricted (utterance_604) +we who here seek the theory of virtue and have therefore also to express abstractly the nature of the knowledge which lies at its foundation will yet be unable to convey that knowledge itself in this expression (utterance_605) +he sees that the distinction between himself and others which to the bad man is so great a gulf only belongs to a fleeting and elusive phenomenon (utterance_606) +he recognizes himself his will in every being and consequently also in the sufferer (utterance_607) +but the latter is the necessary and inevitable symptom of that knowledge (utterance_608) +the opposite of the steam of conscience the origin and significance of which is explained above is the good conscience the satisfaction which we experience after every disinterested deed (utterance_609) +to good man lives in the world of friendly individuals the well being of any of whom he regards us his own (utterance_610) +therefore although the knowledge of the lot of mankind generally does not make its disposition a joyful one yet the permanent knowledge of his own nature in all living beings gives him a certain evenness and aven serendy of disposition (utterance_611) +for the interest which is extended to innumerable manifestations cannot cause such anxiety as that which is concentrated upon one (utterance_612) +the accidents which concern individuals collectively equalise themselves while those which happen to the particular individual constitute good or bad fortune (utterance_613) +thus though others have set up moral principles which they give out as prescriptions for virtue and laws which it was necessary to follow i as has already been said cannot do this because i have no aught or lot prescribed to the eternally free will (utterance_614) +further than this it cannot go for there exist no reason for preferred an individuality of another to its own (utterance_615) +yet the number of other individuals whose whole happiness or life is in danger may outwait their regard for one's own particular well being (utterance_616) +so dive saucagies in guirdano bruno and so many a hero of the truth suffered death at the stake at the hand of the priests (utterance_617) +weeping is accordingly sympathy with our ownselves or simply directed back on its source (utterance_618) +it is therefore conditional upon the capacity for love and sympathy and also upon imagination (utterance_619) +when we are moved to tears not through our own suffering but through that of another this happens as follows (utterance_620) +either we vividly put ourselves in the place of the sufferer by imagination or see in his fate the lot of humanity as a whole and consequently first of all our own lot and thus in a very round vow way it is yet always about ourselves that we weep sympathy with ourselves which we feel this seems to be the principal reason of the universal and thus natural weeping in the case of death (utterance_621) +first of all he certainly weeps for the fate of the dead but he also weeps when after long heavy and incurable suffering death was to this man a wish for deliverance (utterance_622) +they were in the land this people said before the moon had come into the sky (utterance_623) +and many of the magicians of egypt who had come with keen sorstress stayed in that city of aya and they talked people spells that could stay the moon are going and coming in arising and setting (utterance_624) +media too his wise daughter knew that the secrets talked by those who could sway the moon (utterance_625) +for jason was the grand son of crethius and cretheus was the brother of othamus their grandfather (utterance_626) +jason took pelius and toloman with him (utterance_627) +as there came to the city a mist fell and jason and his comrades with the sons of fritzis went through the city without being seen (utterance_628) +the mist lifted and before the heroes was the wonder of the house in the bright light of the morning (utterance_629) +on each side of the courtyard were the palace buildings in one keen ades lived with upsertis his son and in the other chalciope and medea lived with their handbagons (utterance_630) +and then a dove flew toward her it was been chased by a hawk and many a saw the hawk's eyes and beak (utterance_631) +we pulled away from that place and thereafter we were driven by the winds back to the mouth of the frostis (utterance_632) +with him there came the mightiest of the heroes of greece (utterance_633) +already he has heard of your bitter foes the sarah matai (utterance_634) +he with his comrades would subdue them for you (utterance_635) +eddis's heart was filled with wrath as he looked upon them and his eyes shone as a leopard's eyes (utterance_636) +and then speaking to the king in a quiet voice jason said (utterance_637) +his heart was divided as to whether he should summon a disarmed men and have them slain upon the spot or whether he should put them in to danger by the trial he would make of them (utterance_638) +it may be that ye are truly of the seed of the mortals (utterance_639) +and it may be that i shall give you the gold police to bear away after i have made trial of you (utterance_640) +she entered softly and she stood away from her father and the four who were speaking with him (utterance_641) +she had a dark face those made very strange by her crown of gold hair (utterance_642) +no that on the plain of eris yonder i have two far bringing bulls with feet of brass (utterance_643) +then i showed the furrows not with the seed that the meter gives but with teeth of a dragon (utterance_644) +if you can accomplish this that i accomplished in days gone by i shall submit to and give you the gold fleece (utterance_645) +but if you cannot accomplish what i once accomplished you shall go from my city empty handed for it is not right that a brave man should yield up to one who cannot show himself as brave (utterance_646) +then jason utterly confounded cast his eyes upon the ground (utterance_647) +i will dare this contest monstrous out of the days (utterance_648) +as he said this he saw the eyes of mitya grow wide as with fear (utterance_649) +phrontus and mels went to where their mother was (utterance_650) +but what can i do so small and stupid and shy as i am (utterance_651) +i must find some way to give the little ones to nice christmas (utterance_652) +tom will like to have me go with him and saying while he places harp in the streets (utterance_653) +yes i will try and then if i do well the little one shall have a merry christmas (utterance_654) +but see that it is cold in the streets the wind bites in the snow phrases one's fingers (utterance_655) +she thanked tommo and ran away to get ready for she felt sure her father would not engage her anything (utterance_656) +then she washed out little ranso's frock and put it to dry because she would not be able to do it the next day (utterance_657) +she longed to make the beds and dressed the children over night she was in such a hurry to have all in order but as that could not be she sat down again and tried over all the songs she knew (utterance_658) +when she had told her plan peter but i shook his head and thought it would never do but tessa begged so hard he consented at last that she should try it for one week and sent her to bed the happiest little girl in new york (utterance_659) +as soon as her father was gone tessa flew about and put everything in nice order telling the children she was going out for the day and they were to mind tom was mother who would see about the fire in the dinner for the good woman left tessa and entered into her little plans with all her heart (utterance_660) +poor tess's heart beat fast as she trudged away with tambo who slung his harp over his shoulder and gave her his hand (utterance_661) +it was rather a dirty hand but so kind that tessa clung to it and kept looking up at the friendly brown face for encouragement (utterance_662) +see now have no fear give them bella monica that is marian will make the laugh whispered tommo tooling his heart (utterance_663) +one of that old frenchmen nodded to her and it seemed to help her very much for she began to sing before she thought and that was the hardest part of it (utterance_664) +but tom bushick his curly hat and answered soberly yes i took you there first for their love music and are of our country but up among the great houses we shall not always do well (utterance_665) +but she had made half a dollar for tommer divided the money fairly and she felt rich with her share (utterance_666) +her hands were covered with chill planes for she had no mittens but she had put them under her shawl and shuffled merrily away in her big boots feeling so glad that the week was over and nearly three dollars safe in her pocket (utterance_667) +how gave the streets where that day (utterance_668) +how brisk every one was and how bright the faces looked as people trotted about with big baskets holly wreaths and young evergreens going to blossom into splendid christmas trees (utterance_669) +but i can't so i'll fill the socks all full and be happy said tessa as she looked wistfully into the gay stores and saw the heavy baskets go by (utterance_670) +who knows what may happen if we do well returned tommo nodding wisely for he had planned as well as tessa and kept chuckling over it as he trudged through the mud (utterance_671) +we'll try one more street and then go home there are so tired little one (utterance_672) +at the fourth some people at them sing all their songs and gave nothing (utterance_673) +tessa felt so grateful that without waiting for tommo she sang her sweetest little song all alone (utterance_674) +alas mamma said rose and away she went into the dining room close by (utterance_675) +as the door opened tessa saw what looked to her like a fairy feast all silver mugs and flowery plates and oranges and nuts and rosy wine and tall glass pitchers and smoking dishes that smelt so deliciously she could not restrain a little snuff of satisfaction (utterance_676) +ah yes i shall come with much gladness and play as never in my life before cried tomah with a flourish of the old cat that made the children laugh (utterance_677) +give these to your brother said the fairy prince stuffing nuts and oranges into tuss's hands (utterance_678) +ah so kind so very kind i have no way to say thank you but runs it shall be for you a heavenly angel and i will sing my heart out for your tree cried chessa folding the mittens as if she would say a prayer thankfulness if she knew how (utterance_679) +she got up early to see if the socks were all right and there she found the most astonishing sight (utterance_680) +four socks instead of three and by the fourth pinned out quite elegantly was a little dress evidently meant for her a warm woollen dress all made in actually with bright buttons on it (utterance_681) +tessa screamed and danced in her delight and of tumble all the children to scream and dance with her making a regular carnival in it small scale (utterance_682) +in her long stocking she found all sorts of treasures for tunnel had stuffed it full of queer things and his mother had made gingerbread into every imaginable shape from fat pigs to full omnibuses (utterance_683) +little ramso was accepted with delight by the kind lady and her children and tessa learn the song quite easily (utterance_684) +arose from the crowd of children gathered to the festival (utterance_685) +before they went home the kind mamma told tessus she should be her friend and gave her motherly kiss which warmed the child's heart and seemed to set a seal upon that promise (utterance_686) +the senator took his seat in the pulpit with the ministron one side of him and the superintendent of the sunday school on the other (utterance_687) +so awed were they by the presence of a living united state senator that during three minutes not a spit ball was thrown (utterance_688) +after that they began to come to themselves by degrees and presently the spell was wholly gone and they were reciting verses in pulling hair (utterance_689) +the usual sunday school exercises were hurried through and then the minister got up and bored the house with a speech built on the customary sunday school plan then the superintendent put in his oar then the child dignitaries had their say (utterance_690) +and i am some populous centre of my own country where the choicest children of the land have been selected and brought together as at a fare for a prize no (utterance_691) +then where am i yes where am i (utterance_692) +my soul is lost in wonder at the thought (utterance_693) +earth has no higher no grander position for me (utterance_694) +then what is it what did my consciousness reply (utterance_695) +ah think of that now i could hardly keep the tears back i was so grateful (utterance_696) +they could not give him a costly education but they were good and wise and they sent him to the sunday school he loved the sunday school (utterance_697) +i hope you love your sunday school ay see by your faces that you do that is right (utterance_698) +always love your teachers my children for they love you more than you can know now (utterance_699) +and by and by the people made him governor and he said it was all owing to the sunday school (utterance_700) +why the people gave him a towering illustrious position a grand imposing position (utterance_701) +it was senator of the united states (utterance_702) +that poor little boy that left his sunday school became that man that man stands before you (utterance_703) +above all things my children be honest (utterance_704) +when senator dilworthy departed from cattleville he left three dozen boys behind him arranging a campaign of life whose objective point was the united states in it (utterance_705) +never mind polly said jasper there's all next summer and after a winter in dresston and all our hard work over music wanted to find those who chant round again and his eyes glistened (utterance_706) +and you'll go on drawing in painting till you get to be a great artistry on polly enthusiastically and then we'll see something you've done in the louv maybe the louv cried adela oh dear me polly pepper (utterance_707) +tom selwyn had been very sober during all this merry chatter and now in his seat across the narrow aisle he drummed his heels impatiently on the floor (utterance_708) +what's up little mother asked tom in surprise at her unusual manner it's us this tom (utterance_709) +when the news was circulated as it was pretty soon that the party was not to be broken into it all till paris was a completed story the jubilation was such as to satisfy even tom (utterance_710) +oh isn't it oats peas beans and barley growl cried polly as they watched them intently (utterance_711) +and his long arm went out and picked a jack and end of an urchin who incautiously regarding such quiet travellers as now worth minding had hovered too near while trying to tease the girls (utterance_712) +and presently a woman came and took little blue pin of fore off and then the rest of the girls unclasped their hands and the ring melted away and the game was over (utterance_713) +i'm glad the girls over here half fun said polly as grandpapa and his party moved off isn't it nice to think they do (utterance_714) +two or three days of rest at martiny put every one in good shape and gave them all a bit of time to pick up on many little things that were behind hand (utterance_715) +that's my third letter polly announced jasper on the other side of the table now i'm going to begin on jewels (utterance_716) +one two said polly counting why i thought i'd written three while this one is most finished as for (utterance_717) +dear said tom delighted to think that no terrible result had really insued from his words that after they were out had scared him mightily (utterance_718) +all posterous too polly give them here (utterance_719) +then his face brightened and he said and she's right polly while polly fished her frank out of joe's little money bag that hung in her belt (utterance_720) +dig at the stamps pleased jasper and put them on and he took up her two letters and she gave the bag a little pat for joel's sake wishing it was his steady black hair that her fingers could touch (utterance_721) +i don't know where we are going to get nice weight paper for around robin said polly leaning her elbows on the table and her chin in her hands i know ejaculated tom whirling on his heel and dashing out (utterance_722) +i want polly too said phronsie wriggling away from the pen that polly heard out alluringly (utterance_723) +phronsie who hadn't heard what polly said her small head being full of the responsibility of beginning the important letter and considering since it was to be done it was best to have it over with as soon as possible felt as crivilling the letters as fast as she could all then running down hill (utterance_724) +it's all right grinned the other like it he said (utterance_725) +i tell you you don't know my granddaddy he's caught lots of fun in him he added (utterance_726) +i won't cry any more declared phronsie wiping off the last cheer trailing down her nose (utterance_727) +then i shall be all as well as ever said polly kissing the wet little face (utterance_728) +we must put in little pictures said polly trying to make herself cheery as the work went busily on (utterance_729) +polly you always do think of the best things exclaimed jasper beaming at her which made her try harder than ever to smile (utterance_730) +i wouldn't feel so badly polly he managed to asper when phronsie was absorbed within a work he'll like you probably just as father did the gingebrad boy (utterance_731) +he seems to accomplish something every time he goes observed jasper drily hello just look at him now (utterance_732) +oh dear me exclaimed adela as her scissors slipped naive joggled the table again then she caught polly's eye (utterance_733) +rather not much obliged tom bobbed his thanks (utterance_734) +picture after picture cut from railroad guide books illustrated papers and it seemed to jasper gathered as if by magic with cunning little photographs broke up the letter and wound in and now with funny and charming detail of some of their journey (utterance_735) +the rest of it is nice was for jasper and i venture to say that he'll like that the best of all (utterance_736) +mister king thought so too and he beamed at phronsie so you did he cried now that's fine i wish you'd write me a letter some time (utterance_737) +i don't want to say good bye to you milly told dorothy and anne next morning (utterance_738) +oh that will be splendid declared nan (utterance_739) +you are quite rich now are you remarked dorothy (utterance_740) +and dorothy went up and down the room like the pictures of singerella's proud sisters (utterance_741) +and we will be on hand thank you replied the choking dorothy (utterance_742) +come nelly called missus mc gluckland i'm ready where's your hat (utterance_743) +we might be able to manage that too nelly told him (utterance_744) +my uncle is a fireman and he can take us through his engine house (utterance_745) +most of them i guess answered bert (utterance_746) +well we have had a good vacation and i'm willing to go to work again (utterance_747) +so am i declared nan but katy shouldn't was just long enough i think (utterance_748) +mister bobson was down from the city of course to take the family home and now all hands even freddy and plossy were busy packing up (utterance_749) +there were the shells to be looked after the fish nuts besides downy the duck and sneak the cat (utterance_750) +and so our little friends had spent all the vacation (utterance_751) +captain bull that the manner of a small garrison at sabrook permitted him to land but when the governor began to read his commission full ordered him to be silent (utterance_752) +what has happened mister prince watsworth asked for he could see that the man was greatly excited governor andrews has come again gasped mister prince why should that alarm us the fellow though given to boasting is not dangerous or alliable to put his threats into execution but he has grown dangerous declared mister prince the liberties of the colony involved (utterance_753) +captain watsworth became a little uneasy though he was still inclined to treat the matter lightly (utterance_754) +we have suborly refused to yield our charter voluntarily for it is the guardian of our political rights (utterance_755) +that is true captain wadsworth continued mister prince and to subdue our stubbornness this visori has come to hartford with sixty armed men to demand the surrender of the charter in person (utterance_756) +captain wazard bounded to his feet in a rage and placing his hand on the hilt of the sword declared he shall not have it (utterance_757) +the day was well nigh spent when he arrived and the members were engaged in a heated debate on a subject of the utmost importance (utterance_758) +he consented however to await the discussion but as soon as it was ended he declared that he would have the charter (utterance_759) +after that captain had taken two or three turns across the room he paused and asked (utterance_760) +what is the assembly doing engaged in the bait (utterance_761) +and will he wait until it is ended he has promised to do so (utterance_762) +mister prince fixed us amazed eyes on the captain's face and read their desperate determination captain he began (utterance_763) +mister prince bowed and hastily returned to the house where the assembly was in session (utterance_764) +though soon as he was gone charles steven said (utterance_765) +yes charles we will answer what do you mean uncle (utterance_766) +never did the badger's teeth greater intrust in a minor subject (utterance_767) +what do you intend doing uncle will you fight then (utterance_768) +remember the work must be done right at the time not too soon nor to read (utterance_769) +the sun was setting and the captain said (utterance_770) +come charles let us hasten to the assembly (utterance_771) +by no means but i want you to be fully impressed with the seriousness of your mission (utterance_772) +take your place charles and be prepared to do your part whispered captain watsworth (utterance_773) +charles god is close to the long table used by the secretary's is possible without attracting special attention (utterance_774) +the discussion went on darkness came and four lighted candles were placed on the table in two set on herself on the wall (utterance_775) +those two candles on the wall were a great annoyance to charles until he saw a man's station near them (utterance_776) +though the lights were extinguished through the window the faint starlight dimly illuminated the scene (utterance_777) +he followed him as rapidly as he could (utterance_778) +the youth was close behind him and when they were outside seized his arm (utterance_779) +for i have a care how you approached me (utterance_780) +the soldiers began the crowd about the house when at a signal from captain wadsworth the trained banks came on the scene and prepared to grapple with the soldiers (utterance_781) +where is the charter (utterance_782) +you have your soldiers at the door and we have the trained bands of connecticut ready to defend us against violence (utterance_783) +who love you has the charter (utterance_784) +it was the boy cried the inwreached governet (utterance_785) +every member of the assembly shook their heads (utterance_786) +we do not know him he does not living to not eat where does he live (utterance_787) +little did the captain or its youthful system dream that their simple act would make the old tree historic (utterance_788) +the tree in which the document was hiding was ever afterwards known as the charter oak (utterance_789) +it remained the grass bearing fruit every year and tittle a little after midnight august eighteen fifty six when it was prostrated by a heavy storm of wind (utterance_790) +when the order from the siege of the charters was first made known he suddenly roy island sent a most loyal address to the king saying (utterance_791) +he formerly dissolved the assembly broke the seal of the colony which bore the figure of an anchor and the word hope and admitted five in the inhabitants into his legislative council and assumed the function of governor but he did not take away the parchment on which the charter was written (utterance_792) +from that time until the forced union of the colonies from mutual defence at the breaking out of the french in indian war the inhabitants of rhode island or their share in the defence of efforts especially when the hostile savages hung along their frontiers in new york like an ill omined cloud (utterance_793) +the history of that commonwealth is identified with that of all new england from the beginning of king william's war soon after to the expulsion of andrews (utterance_794) +a beautiful day had grown out of the dreadful storm (utterance_795) +and everybody was so happy (utterance_796) +the napotine the vessel that had struck on the sandfire was now safely anchored near shore and the sailors came in and out in robelds back and forth to land just as they wished (utterance_797) +then we had to go back to work at the logs went on the captain and then one of our crew took a fever (utterance_798) +that was what delina so (utterance_799) +finally we had every law loaded on the schooner and we started off (utterance_800) +we chanted on getting home last week when this last storm struck us and drove us out of our course (utterance_801) +about the value asked mister bobsy who is down from the city (utterance_802) +the value repeated the captain aside so that the strangers may not hear (utterance_803) +while i am a rich man now and so is my meat the gluckland for that wood was contracted for by the lightest and richest pianoform in this country and now it is all but delivered to them and the money in our hands (utterance_804) +yes indeed it would have taken us a like time to accumulate as much money as we have earned in the sheer (utterance_805) +maybe aunt emily will take you down to the city on her shopping tour suggested nan (utterance_806) +he made the clicks from of all the trucks from the isles and i guessed everybody was glad the army fell down (utterance_807) +the wonderful fresh air that these men lived in night and day had brightened their eyes too so that even the plainest feast and the most awkward man among them was as nimble as an athlete from his perfect exercise (utterance_808) +colbert who had heard his uncle getting ready to run down to the water's edge (utterance_809) +it's a schooner said mister bingham to mister minchton and she is a very heavy cargo (utterance_810) +to this cord was fastened a heavy rope or cable (utterance_811) +what's that board for asked bert and she saw a board following the cable (utterance_812) +thence the directions said how (utterance_813) +they are printed in a number of languages and they tell the crew to carry the end of the cable high up to the mast and fasten it strongly there (utterance_814) +oh i see said bert the line will stretch then and the breeches bully will go out on a poly (utterance_815) +it was clear day now and much of the wicked storm had passed (utterance_816) +with the daylight came girls and women to the beach (utterance_817) +missus bobbsey missus mintaron nearly and her mother besides dorothy and man were all there flossie and freddy being obliged to stay home with dinah and susan (utterance_818) +of course the girls asked all sorts of questions and burton howl tried to answer them as best they could (utterance_819) +it seemed a long tiny fore any movement of the cable showed that the boy was returning (utterance_820) +nearer and nearer it came until now a man's head could be seen (utterance_821) +the girls and women were too frightened to talk and nellie clung close to her mother (utterance_822) +a big roller dashing in finished the work for the lifeguards and a man in the courtyard banded upon shore (utterance_823) +everybody gathered around then nellie with a strange face and a stranger hope broke through the crowd to see the rescued man (utterance_824) +oh it is my father she screamed falling right into the arms of the drenched man (utterance_825) +but the half drowned man rubbed his eyes as if he could not believe them then the next minute he pressed his little daughter to his heart unable to speak a word (utterance_826) +and is george bringing out there anxiously asked the brother (utterance_827) +safe and well came the welcome answer (utterance_828) +i guess our prayers were heard last night (utterance_829) +here come to another man exclaimed the people as this time a big man dashed on the sands (utterance_830) +while i declare we did land on a friendly shore (utterance_831) +just as mister bingham said the life saving work turned out to be a social affair for there was a great time greeting nellie's father and hell's uncle (utterance_832) +and how and his father too put in the end (utterance_833) +what a morning that was at sunset beach (utterance_834) +i'm so gladly printed said little flossie to freddy when she heard the good news (utterance_835) +pray captain cries i as i was going down into the cabin it's a man never overtaken by death in this passage (utterance_836) +why there's not i'm for the man to be sick in it replied he what a cursed liar for i am sick as a horse quiz i already what a brain upside down hey day (utterance_837) +sick sick (utterance_838) +sick sick sick (utterance_839) +when shall we get to land (utterance_840) +they went up about (utterance_841) +is death the nata meet him full in the face (utterance_842) +captain quoth she for heaven's sake let us get ashore (utterance_843) +was not in microtus who loved ten times more than i town clerk of abdeera (utterance_844) +nay if you don't believe me you may read the chapter for your pains (utterance_845) +icy shawls of some depart not perhaps was out in a nate longing too to greet the island along with his happy snobs (utterance_846) +farewell dear friends i say new little know that the individual who regards you from the beach is your friend and historyographer and proser (utterance_847) +i went to day to see our excellent vent smokes on board the queen of the french many scores of snops with air on the deck of that fine ship marching force in their private bravery (utterance_848) +they will be at austend in four hours they will anumdate the continent next week they will carry into far lands the famous image of the british snob (utterance_849) +i have seen snobs in pink coat and taunting boots scouring over the companion graham and have heard as their roads and their well known slying in the galleries of the patikin and to under the shadowy arches of the colisseum (utterance_850) +my lady margenis comes on board looks round with that happy air of mingled terror and impertinence which distinguishes her ladyship and dresses to her carriage for it is impossible that she should mingle with the other snobs on deck (utterance_851) +there she sits and will be ill in private (utterance_852) +the strawberry leaves on her chariot panels are ingrate on her ladyship's heart (utterance_853) +and david's you'd best take the pistol case into the cabin (utterance_854) +look at the honest mazen handstitch and his lady and their little song (utterance_855) +what a noble air of blazing contentment illuminates the features of those snops of eastern rays (utterance_856) +what a toilette hounds did she say (utterance_857) +he will never spare himself any cheap enjoyment (utterance_858) +i have said before i like to look at the peoples on their gallow days there is so picturesquely and outrageously splendid and heavy (utterance_859) +younger comes captain bull speaking span tight and trim who travels for four or six months every year of his life who does not commit himself by luxury of raiment or rensolence of demeanour but i think as is greatest not by any man on board (utterance_860) +bull passes the season in london sponging for dinners and sleeping in the garret near his club (utterance_861) +see he is up told carbas already i told you he would (utterance_862) +that broad shouldered book with a great whiskers and the clean white kid glass is mister falin clantie of paul dudistown he calls himself mister de cloncie he endeavours to disguise his native brogue with a richest superposition of english and he the seven or eight games and sewing (utterance_863) +the next person is rumatauk (utterance_864) +when a gross instance of snobshness happens i should not the indignant journalist cause the public attention to that delinquescy too (utterance_865) +how for instance could set wonderful cate of the isle of mangle verta at his brother be examined in the snobbish point of view (utterance_866) +all requie is that some man should be recommended to us by the earl of mangelrozashire (utterance_867) +oh you pride of osnob lent (utterance_868) +a crawling truckling self confessed luckies and parasites (utterance_869) +it was her slobbish sentiment botanous letter and to make her vanities of prey did the swindling fortune teller (utterance_870) +how to your account for the prodigious beneathland's exercise to will seem to singing french lady (utterance_871) +the honest boarding house people read her feet at once (utterance_872) +good honour simple lord loving children of scotland (utterance_873) +finally there was a case of dride omnibal mister fernand at york (utterance_874) +the right honorable was a son of a nobleman and practised on an old lady (utterance_875) +then he cast his nets over a family of father mother and daughters one of whom he proposed to marry (utterance_876) +one day the trait of platte with a teapotter and a basket full of cold features (utterance_877) +it was a right honorable which baded the hook which gorged all these greedy simple snobs (utterance_878) +what they have been taken in by commoner (utterance_879) +alas and alas what water man that speaks the truth can hope for such a landlady (utterance_880) +and that all these instances are fond and treacherous nobshness have occurred of the same week's paper was who knows how many school more (utterance_881) +we are three sisters from seventeen to twenty two (utterance_882) +we are just the same to persian who is a handle to their names to those without it (utterance_883) +if you do i cannot help it but i am of a sanguine disposition and entertain the lingering hope (utterance_884) +excuse us grow but i always write had long (utterance_885) +we never write and presume to favour in short i can't help singing that a few knew us you would not sink his snobs (utterance_886) +i shall have a black crayp around my white hat and my usual baby came with sir richmond gilt's knock (utterance_887) +i am so here there will be no time to get up moustaches between now and next week (utterance_888) +from seventeen to two and twenty good gods or ages (utterance_889) +dear young creatures i can see you all three (utterance_890) +seventeen sous me as near as my own time of life but might i don't say two and twenty still old (utterance_891) +no no i'm that pretty rogue is demure middle one (utterance_892) +please please there's silly little fluttering heart (utterance_893) +you snobs dear young ladies (utterance_894) +i will call any man's known success say (utterance_895) +there is no harm in being of a good family (utterance_896) +you can't tell that poor dears what's in the name (utterance_897) +that very confidence saves of arrogants and to be arrogant is to be a snog (utterance_898) +but aren't there no cunning natures no tender hearts no soul's humble simple and truth loving (utterance_899) +ponderwell on this question sweet young ladies (utterance_900) +interest however still runs on in both cases superior to the full extent of payment of it just serving to keep the memory of the affair of relief till at length in some reeve lauer pop comes the creditor upon the spot together with full extent of their obligations (utterance_901) +as a reader for i hate your raves as a sorrow knowledge of human nature i need not say more to satisfy him so that my hero could not go on at this rate without some slight experience of season to dentilimentose (utterance_902) +to speak the truth he had wantonly involved himself in a multitude of small book debts of this stamp which notwithstanding eugenious as frequent advice he too much disregarded thinking that as not one of them was contracted through any malignacy of humour through all of them was crossed out in cause (utterance_903) +eugenius would never admit this and would often tell him that one day or rosa he would certainly be reckoned with and he would often add in an accent of sorrowful apprehension to the uttermost bite (utterance_904) +what inclined eugenius to his same opinion was as follows (utterance_905) +your rick followed eugenius was his eyes to the door he's then close to them and to never opened them all (utterance_906) +alas poor yorick (utterance_907) +nevertheless in general appearance the harrier and the foxhound are very much alike the one obvious distinction being that of size (utterance_908) +if you want to hunch your hairiers on foot sixteen inches is quite big enough i am most too big to run with but if you are riding to them twenty inches as a useful height or even nineteen inches (utterance_909) +it is useless to lay down any hard and fast rule as to color it is so much a matter of individual taste (utterance_910) +but copies are usually sent out to walk and may easily be procured to be captain reared until they are old enough to be entered to their work (utterance_911) +he is of course finer but with the length of neck so perfect in the bigger hound the little shoulders of the same pattern and the typical quarters and second pies (utterance_912) +and when he is fairly on a line of course he sticks to it as the saying is like a beagle (utterance_913) +it is quite possible therefore that the beagle was crossed with the welsh southern or otter hound to get more size and power as there certainly was a welsh rough coated beagle of good eighteen inches and an almost identical contemporary that was called the essex beagle (utterance_914) +that a great many of the true order were bred became very manifest as soon as the harier and begal association was formed and more particularly when a section of the peterborough hound shell was reserved for them (utterance_915) +then they seem to spring from every part of the country (utterance_916) +one hears now of the chastan they housed at place very noted indeed the halting the lean park the stout place the edinburgh the serbiton the trinity foot the wood dale missus g w w hillirds missus prices and missus turners (utterance_917) +eyes brown dark hazel or hazel not deep set nor bology and with a mild expression (utterance_918) +ears long set on low fine in texture and hanging in a graceful fold close to the cheek (utterance_919) +neck moderately long slightly arched the throat showing some dulap (utterance_920) +shoulders clinging and slightly sloping (utterance_921) +forelegs quite straight well under the dog of good substance and round in the bone (utterance_922) +feet round well nuckled up and strongly patted (utterance_923) +coat smooth variety smooth very dense and not too fine or short (utterance_924) +height not exceeding sixteen inches (utterance_925) +all things which follow from the absolute nature of any attribute of god must always exist and be infinite for in other words are each colonel and infinite through they said attribute (utterance_926) +proof conceive if it be possible supposing the proposition to be denied that something in some attribute of god can follow from the absolute nature of the acced attribute thought (utterance_927) +genit's nature infinite (utterance_928) +must necessarily exist (utterance_929) +we have now credit therefore thought not constituting the idea of god and accordingly the idea of god does not naturally follow from its nature can so far as it is absolute thought which is against our hypothesis (utterance_930) +and beyond the limits of the duration of the idea of god supposing the latter at some time not to have existed for not to be going to exist thought would perforce have existed without the idea of god necessarily flowed there from (utterance_931) +bear in mind that the same proposition may be affirmed of anything which in any attribute necessarily follows from god's absolute nature (utterance_932) +corallary hence it follows that god is not only the cause of things coming into existence but also of their continuing in existence that is in scholastic phraseology god is cause of the being of things essindy rium (utterance_933) +coralary individual things are nothing but modifications of the attributes of god poor modes by which the attributes of god are expressed in a fixed and definite manner (utterance_934) +such a core such a time you never did see (utterance_935) +how is we seen somebody would give the conversation a start when indiani made a break (utterance_936) +this ain't no great stock country says he to the old gentleman with the cane (utterance_937) +no sir says the old gentleman (utterance_938) +there is very little grazing here and the range is pretty much wore out (utterance_939) +the young lady smiled through her veil and the old lady snapped her eyes and looked sideways at the speaker (utterance_940) +i'm going out to orleans to see if i can't get a contract out of uncle sam to feed the boys what's been licking them in front of mexkins so bad (utterance_941) +i've read some accounts of the battle says the old gentleman that it didn't give a very flattering account of the conduct of some of our troops (utterance_942) +the old creature listened to him with evident signs of dis pleasure twisted and groaning till he couldn't stand it no longer (utterance_943) +he should his mouth wrought in the middle of what he was saying and looked at the preacher while his face got his red as fire (utterance_944) +swearing says the old preacher he's a terrible bad practice and there ain't no use in it no how (utterance_945) +oats but in the any kept shady he appeared to be cowed down (utterance_946) +the old gentleman with the cane took a part in the conversation and the hoozer listened without ever open in his head (utterance_947) +he was at sawdamengamorea and seeing the place war lots wife fell ah (utterance_948) +yes says the preacher he went to the very spot and was the remarkablest thing of all he seen the pillar of salt what she was turned into (utterance_949) +yes sir he's seen the salts standing there to this day (utterance_950) +what says the hoozer real genoin good salt (utterance_951) +yes sir a pillar of salt just as it was when that wicked woman was punished for her days obedience (utterance_952) +right out in the open air he asked (utterance_953) +we had then but little of that minute and accurate knowledge of the interior of the continent which was requisite for determination of the problem (utterance_954) +several different parties were therefore organized to examine the various routes supposed to be practicable within the northern and southern limits of united states (utterance_955) +the only discrimination made was in the more prompt and thorough equipment of the parties for the extreme northern line and this was only because that was supposed to be the most difficult of execution of all the surveys (utterance_956) +inquiries were made with regard to gunpowder which subsequently led to the use of a coarser reign for artillery (utterance_957) +the officers of these regiments were chosen partly by selection from those already in service in the regular army and party by appointment from civil life (utterance_958) +under instructions from the president the leist was therefore revised and modified in accordance with this new element of geographical distribution (utterance_959) +after some further discussion of the question the visitors withdrew dissatisfied with the result of the interview (utterance_960) +the quartermaster general on hearing of this conversation hastened to inform me that it was all a mistake that the appointing to the office had been confounded with his father who was a well known wig but that he the son was a democrat (utterance_961) +i assured the general that this was altogether immaterial adding that it was a very pretty quarrel as it stood and that i had no desire to affect a settlement of it on any inferior issue (utterance_962) +the social attitude towards smoking the ardent victorian base and for some time later was curious (utterance_963) +now missus croup he says i feel in the smoking humour and it shall probably blaze away all night (utterance_964) +but the seat where you are if you please in case i want you (utterance_965) +the dwarf's taste however were capital it (utterance_966) +but the crilp and brass were now in a society (utterance_967) +there was still plenty of fact in volponnes and denouncers of tobacco (utterance_968) +one of the most distinguished was the great duke of rattington who abominable had smoking and was annoyed by the increasing stigars smoking among officers of the army (utterance_969) +the ladies had their kinsons for the abominable door of the battle and that this trusted the man was milk (utterance_970) +here is fistbudoes or tacker is coming on it what is they smoking that it should be considered a crime (utterance_971) +i believe in my heart the women are jealous of it that's up a rival (utterance_972) +i have delayed gaining that the man in lady who has just been kind enough to reap the abod lines lays down the book after this confession of my that i must smoke her and the safe o the vulgar wretch and the passer sounds of something else (utterance_973) +germany has been puffing for threes four years for us mogues to a man (utterance_974) +schah look at his progress (utterance_975) +thus the outer of the back was now brought into the drawing room (utterance_976) +the journalist and the bohemians whom that had their coders were about or below the big pace of fashion and the smoking was always the feature of their gatherings (utterance_977) +both queen victoria and the prince consort detested it so papa was to bullier ever the poor force (utterance_978) +at that very time attained the morning of the second of september napoleon was standing among his troops on the piccloni heel looking at the penoralness brought out before him (utterance_979) +the brightness of the morning was magical (utterance_980) +but the my climasies always ready to descend upon the vanquished (utterance_981) +yet here she is lying out of my feet with her golden domes and encrauses singleating in the twinkled in the sunshine (utterance_982) +but i shall spare her (utterance_983) +from behind out the cranley yes the earliest the cramilly yes i will give them just allows i'll teach them the meeting of shoe civilization i will make generations some pooliars remember their conqueror with love (utterance_984) +i will tell that the quotation that i did not and do not desire war that i foresh the war only against the false policy of their court that i love in the respectalise under and that immosical i'll accept terms of peace with fill myself and of my people (utterance_985) +it do not wish to utilize the fortunes of war to humiliate in honor to monarch (utterance_986) +you have to be told all the same says some gentlemen of this week but gentlemen (utterance_987) +a single report out the signaling gun followed and the chilves who were already spread out on the front side south mosque coat moving to the city through a murder cologa and dargomelov case (utterance_988) +his major domo came in a second time to say that the frenchman who had a brow the letter from the contest was very anxious to see him if only four minutes and thus some one from positive sweetoe had a cow to ask pierre to take charge of her husband's book asked she herself was leaving for the country (utterance_989) +there was no way in the passage (utterance_990) +the hall pooser was standing at the front door (utterance_991) +from the landy a weirpier stood there was a second staircase leading to the back antes (utterance_992) +he went down that staircase out into the yard no one has seen him (utterance_993) +when he felt that he was being a look at he behaved alike austerish which hydis had an apociom though not to be seen he held his head and quickening his face went down the street (utterance_994) +he hard the first a cap himagon told the driver to go to the patriax's palace where the window baths of david's house was (utterance_995) +this was the authentic scowlsh acts with paths gives nose in the exclamations (utterance_996) +he set thought that thus did writing table and having laid the menus gree before him open the law closed them finally pushed them away and arresting his head on his hand sank into medication (utterance_997) +macker alexeyvish came twice that evening shuffling along his slashis as far as the door and stops and the loop that ingritiately of the pierre (utterance_998) +the old visitors were about to take leave of the prisoner due apparently reluctant to be left along with his friend ask them to stay in half tea (utterance_999) +cease were browed in and so lust the tea (utterance_1000) +the elpices case was surprised at a pure swoonch stout figure and the listenery's talk of monosico and the position of our army one which he had a reason (utterance_1001) +so you understand the whole position of our troops (utterance_1002) +now being a military man the canissayaff understood that the fully for they understood that general position (utterance_1003) +well then you know more than anyone else be it who with me said chris and you (utterance_1004) +and tell me your opinion of backlaid the holy (utterance_1005) +pure look that malcolm with the comely sendaline to rock tape's smile with which everybody voluntarily rejoiced that officer (utterance_1006) +with the light of gas is his serenity has been appointed your excellency sat in mocking timidly and continually turning to glass at his colonel (utterance_1007) +why so ask the peer (utterance_1008) +no life was it forbidden (utterance_1009) +at smallesque too he jousted correctly that of a french might outflancas as they had a large forces (utterance_1010) +he ordered us to retreat and all our efforts in allows us when for nothing (utterance_1011) +silly the aspen with barclay (utterance_1012) +well russian was well before in her disturbed her and the beest glanding a minister but as soon as she is in danger she needs one of her own king (utterance_1013) +and they say his skilful commander rejoined the peer (utterance_1014) +i don't understand what is meant by a skilful commander replied prince andrew ironically (utterance_1015) +a skilful commander replied the peer (utterance_1016) +pure loca theamison frys (utterance_1017) +and yet they say that the voice like a game of chest he remarked (utterance_1018) +the relatives dress of bodies of tube can never be known to any one (utterance_1019) +success never depends and never will depend on position where equipment or even a members and the least of all on position but on what then (utterance_1020) +on the filling that is in me and in him appointed the tutimalkin and the aish sorcer (utterance_1021) +but that they swam by those who firmly resolved to wean it (utterance_1022) +why they will lose the powder and a ouspodor (utterance_1023) +we've lost so light a swan and we ran (utterance_1024) +but to morrow we shall say it (utterance_1025) +but that would await us to morrow (utterance_1026) +the fact is that of those men with whom you have freedom around the position not only to now help matters but a hinder (utterance_1027) +bass the truth the real truth said the malcon (utterance_1028) +is now the day for that they say (utterance_1029) +oh were silent the officers tools (utterance_1030) +yes yes answered the prince andrew absently (utterance_1031) +the french has destroyed my home and are only a weight of destroying mossical they have outraged and are outrisioning every moment the irma enemies (utterance_1032) +am i opinion they are all criminals (utterance_1033) +and so thinks to malchy and the whole army (utterance_1034) +since they are my foes they can not be my friends whatever may have been said at a tusit (utterance_1035) +yes this muttered pierre looking with shining eyes at the prince andrew (utterance_1036) +the talk to us a ferous of war of chivalry our flax of truth of mercy to the unfortunate and so long it shall rubbish (utterance_1037) +the plunder of their people's houses issue false claver money and the worst are foul they kill my children and my father and they in tauk off rue saffoir and magnimity to foes (utterance_1038) +take no prisoners but the kio and beau (utterance_1039) +prince andrew who have found it was all the same to him whether rinaldmosico was taken as malense had been was suddenly checked in his speech by a aspact of the crabiest throat (utterance_1040) +he paced up and done a few times since silence but his eyes glittered vigorously and the hissed leaves quivered as the began speaking (utterance_1041) +the wind there was a roar like this one it would be a war (utterance_1042) +what is need of the foresecising warfare (utterance_1043) +on the inspite i'll follow this it is the highest class respected by every one (utterance_1044) +i'll just got the bab look at them and hear them (utterance_1045) +i see that i have began to understand too much (utterance_1046) +and they doesn't do for a man to taste of the tree of knowledge of good and evil ah well it is now fore long he added (utterance_1047) +however your sleepy and is time for me to sleep (utterance_1048) +go back to gorgi said the prince andrew suddenly (utterance_1049) +go go before about a one must have a one silly path replied prince andrew (utterance_1050) +no he does not want it pierre concluded (utterance_1051) +and i know that this is our relaxa meeting (utterance_1052) +one picture succeeded another as imagination (utterance_1053) +and one of them he dwelt loud and sorefully (utterance_1054) +his characters get drunk will go mad with jealousy or fall in epileptic fits or rave hysterically (utterance_1055) +if dausteriski had had less vision he would have been stringberg (utterance_1056) +like them he is a noblest of torture (utterance_1057) +certainly the last of cruelty the luster destruction for destruction's sake is the most conspicuous of the deadly sins in dosteizky's men and women (utterance_1058) +he may not be a cruel also (utterance_1059) +but they are never in balance they are always in demonitical conflict (utterance_1060) +even the lost is never or hardly of a the lust of a more or less sane man (utterance_1061) +thus vesthie could not have described the scene of nekhludoff in resurrection (utterance_1062) +this is a mad house cried so one in the hideous (utterance_1063) +one result of this is a multiplicity of action (utterance_1064) +even the talk is of actions more than of ideas (utterance_1065) +he saw his violent deeds not with the hand but with the sack (utterance_1066) +but one had noticed during this last two days that the other was wearing a silver watch on a yellow bad chain but he seemed not to have seen on him before (utterance_1067) +he took a knife and when his friend had turned away he approached him cautiously from behind till game turned his eyes heavenwood crossed himself and praying fervently god forgive me for christ's sake (utterance_1068) +he never paints every man he always protects dostoevsky or a not married till stevsky (utterance_1069) +that is where a crime in punishment belongs to a lower range of fiction than any corenna or fathers and sons (utterance_1070) +we sympathise indeed with the fears the bravado that is fair that succeeded the crime (utterance_1071) +he is a grotesque made alive by sheer imaginative intensity and passion (utterance_1072) +one does not gradual notice an abnormal character or two (utterance_1073) +he invents vicious grotesque his dickens advanced comic breakfasts (utterance_1074) +was very fond of hanging cuts and bearing them with great ceremony (utterance_1075) +as for the carimasos themselves he betrays the old father and the eldest of his sons hating each other and fighting like brittomaniacs (utterance_1076) +saviem rite shouted the matche breathlessly (utterance_1077) +if i haven't killed him i'll come again and kill him (utterance_1078) +it is easy to see why dostoeski has become a popular author (utterance_1079) +no melodramatist ever poured our incidents upon the stage from such a horn of plenty (utterance_1080) +thus the escapes always ready to show them all then at once (utterance_1081) +on two opposite pages of the idiot one finds the following characters brought in by name general a partner prince s adelaida ivanovna lizaretta prococraffietna yabana titson and general of organ (utterance_1082) +but the secret of dosteropes his appeal is something more than the multitude in thrill of his incidence and characters (utterance_1083) +mister lorry bore the faces of difficulty and attempts to definition (utterance_1084) +to him thus ask its work is the record of a great mind seeking for a way of life it is more than a record of a struggle it is the struggle itself (utterance_1085) +and those voices take shape in certain unfigitable fragments of dialogue that have been spoken by one spirit to another in some ugly mean tavern certain surrounding darkness (utterance_1086) +ultimately they are the creations not of a man who desired to be but of a spirit which sought to know (utterance_1087) +because they are possessed they are no longer man and women (utterance_1088) +this is all an imagined truth (utterance_1089) +to say this is not to deny the spirit a content of dostheuska's work the anguish of the imprisoned soul is a battle's a doubt and denial in despair (utterance_1090) +there is in dastyevsky the suggestion of caliban trying to discover some better gord than the tables (utterance_1091) +the ultimate attitude of dasterisky is as christian as the apostle peters lord i believe hope thou might unbelief (utterance_1092) +and beyond the dark night of suffering and dissipated the night thus ersky still sees the light of christian compassion (utterance_1093) +or even by the compassion of others like prince michand in the idiot (utterance_1094) +his work like his face bears the mark of this terrible conflict (utterance_1095) +the novels of the perfect image of the man (utterance_1096) +as to the man himself the recomptitable gay described him as he saw him in the last years of his life (utterance_1097) +when he became excited on a certain point one could have sworn that one had seen him before seated on a bench in a police court awaiting trial or among baggabonds he passed their time begging before the prison doors (utterance_1098) +at all other times he carried that look of sad and gentle meekness seen on the images of olds of one accents (utterance_1099) +that is the portrait of the man one sees behind ostevsky's novels the portrait one might almost have inferred from the novels (utterance_1100) +it is a figure that at once fascinates and repels (utterance_1101) +he is not by temperament of sinner (utterance_1102) +his music is a still small voice unevenly matched against his consciousness of midnight and storm (utterance_1103) +truth to tell mister hardy is neither sufficiently articulate nor sufficiently fastidious to be a great poet (utterance_1104) +he does not express life easily in beautiful words or in images (utterance_1105) +thus he writes in i found her out there of one who (utterance_1106) +there could not be an uglier and more presaicate's adjuration than its contained in the image in the last line (utterance_1107) +and prose in truth in the choice of words as well as in images (utterance_1108) +take for example the use of the word domiciled in the passage in the same poem about (utterance_1109) +when we are strangers sought their catering care veiled smiles bespoke their thought of what we were (utterance_1110) +catering care is an appalling phrase (utterance_1111) +is a line of good poetry (utterance_1112) +you did not come and marching time drew on and wore me long yet lost for loss of your dear presence there then that i thus found lacking in your make that higher compassion which can overbear reluctance for pure loving kindness's sake grieved i when is the hope our stroked its song you did not come (utterance_1113) +there hence of the grand style of the rectory in these lines but phrases luck in your make and as the hope ours stroked its song a discourse that brought tumbling to the levels of victorian commonplace (utterance_1114) +he has a temperament sensitive beyond that of all but a few recent writers to the pain and passion of human beings (utterance_1115) +one can remember paul after paul of his with a theme that might easily have served for mister hardy too late christina the lost mistress the last ride together a statue in the bost to name a few (utterance_1116) +but what a sense of child there is in browning's tragedies (utterance_1117) +his world is a place of opulence not of poverty (utterance_1118) +to have loved them for an hour is with browning to live for ever after in the inheritance of a mighty achievement (utterance_1119) +to have loved for an hour is in mister hardy's imagination to have deepened the sadness even more than the beauty of one's memories (utterance_1120) +for then i undistressed my hearts growing cold to me could only wait my endless rest with equanimity (utterance_1121) +but time to make me grieve parts deals let's part abide and shakes this fragile frame at eve with throbbings of noon tide (utterance_1122) +and despair is by no means triumphant in what is perhaps the most attractive of all mister hardy's poems the oxen (utterance_1123) +you pictured the meek mild creatures where they dwelt in their story pen nor did it occur to one of us there to doubt or kneeling then (utterance_1124) +the murder faith however or rather of delight in the memory of faith is not mister hody's prevailing mood (utterance_1125) +he can enter upon a wall without ironical doubts as we see in the song men he march away (utterance_1126) +how long he cried in a palm written some years ago (utterance_1127) +when shall the same as soft of pollities wherever dream have sway in each proud land and patriotism growing broad like scorn to stand born slave to realms but circle earth and seas (utterance_1128) +but perhaps his characteristic attitude to war is to be found not in lines like knees but in that melancholy poem the souls of the slain in which the souls of the dead soldiers returned to their country in question a senor solphlane mister harvey friends and relatives have kept their doubted deeds in remembrance (utterance_1129) +and general hell hold out her sweet huts swoon loyal as doves (utterance_1130) +some fickle and flayed hearts and found the new loaves (utterance_1131) +and our wives quoth another resonantly do they are now deeds (utterance_1132) +mister hardy has too bitter a sense of reality to believe much in the glory of war (utterance_1133) +the rural to mister hardy is the road of ancient human things in which war has come to be a hideous irrelevance (utterance_1134) +it may be thought on the other hand that mister hardy's poems about war a no more expressive of tragic futility than his poems about love (utterance_1135) +futility and frustration are ever recurring themes in both (utterance_1136) +his lovers like his soldiers rotten the grave defeated of their glory (utterance_1137) +love was always severed both in life and in death (utterance_1138) +in beyond the last bank we have the same mournful cry over severance (utterance_1139) +no shade of pinnacle a tree or tower while earth and jewels will fall on my mound and within the hour still unto yours one robin never haunt are two green covered shoes (utterance_1140) +they bring us face to face with an experienced intensity that our own (utterance_1141) +nothing of tinious worth have i wrought pondered planned no one thing asking blame or praise since the pale corpse like birth of this diurnal unit bearing blanks in all its rays dullest of dull heed days (utterance_1142) +in one corner of the little room kenneth forbes squatted upon a bench with an empty pine box held carelessly in his lap (utterance_1143) +while youngkins worked the boy was busy with his pensive but neither had spoken for it please the half hour (utterance_1144) +then riding slowly up the hedge bordered road his troubles once more assailed him and he wondered if there was not some sport upon the broad earth to which he could fly retirent until the girls had left elmhurst for good (utterance_1145) +norah shyed and he looked up to discover that he had nearly run down of pedestrian a stout little man with a bundle under his arm who held out one hand as it would arrest him (utterance_1146) +where do you want to go asked the boy (utterance_1147) +that is the same gain as ever he responded with a shake of his glizzard head (utterance_1148) +do you know i saw a hawk she performed and i'd be glad to see her again but i wish she's got money (utterance_1149) +aunt jane's witch aunt tae (utterance_1150) +echoed the man quickly what you name lad (utterance_1151) +don't like girls i take it (utterance_1152) +another long pause then the boy suddenly turned questioner (utterance_1153) +you know anne of miss merrick sir (utterance_1154) +i used to when we were both younger (utterance_1155) +ganett stopped short and the mayor stopped and the little man with a whim took a smile at the boy's astonishment was the stock (utterance_1156) +john meddock let me (utterance_1157) +you was a pinsmith (utterance_1158) +they kept track of herb as she suddenly became rich and a great lady and that was a surprising thing to have the poor merrick (utterance_1159) +find you lad returned the man gratefully i thought a little exercise would do me good but this three miles have seemed like thirty to me (utterance_1160) +i will said the man (utterance_1161) +the boy turned away but in a moment hoitered again (utterance_1162) +his interest in miss jane's brother john was extraordinary (utterance_1163) +there's little danger in this court lampshire so i'm may as well be friends with the poor child (utterance_1164) +ah why not (utterance_1165) +but hesitated (utterance_1166) +the letter asking me to visit her was the first i have ever received from her (utterance_1167) +but since she asked me to visit her which had she had softened and might wish to be confending and so i accepted the invitation (utterance_1168) +surely two girls will have a better time in this lonely old place that one could have alone (utterance_1169) +oh yes she has corrected louise (utterance_1170) +you mean patricia dorrell yes (utterance_1171) +then we may conclude she left out of the arrangement said beth calmly (utterance_1172) +you will fight for your own chance and fight might be hard (utterance_1173) +why my dear cousin i don't want aunt jane's money (utterance_1174) +my mother and i are amply provided for and i am only here to find dress for my social duties and to be acquainted with my dead father's sister that is all (utterance_1175) +my father teaches music and mothers calls him continually for not being able to earn enough money to keep out of bed (utterance_1176) +we've never seen her send of her money although father has tried at times to bore enough to help him out with difficulties (utterance_1177) +i would kiss her when she asked me to and it sent a shiver all down my back (utterance_1178) +for my part i am fond of every one and it delights me to foster on invalids and assist them (utterance_1179) +you say you like the catherine will get and i don't (utterance_1180) +you'd try to make me think you don't want alice when you're as anxious to get it as i am (utterance_1181) +they call me beth solemnly (utterance_1182) +i couldn't deserve it this out of the way corner of the world you know (utterance_1183) +but of course she needs it to you persisted pet (utterance_1184) +louise seemed to medite (utterance_1185) +it's a magnificent estate said bett looking at her cousin doubtfully (utterance_1186) +now shall we be french she asked lightly (utterance_1187) +to be sure i should want that all my dear (utterance_1188) +such a girl said it had never been hoped of village to have before and when her suspicions were forgotten she became fairly responsive and bright and wonderfully (utterance_1189) +silas she said rennienta what do you think of my nieces (utterance_1190) +they are very charming girls he answered although they are at an age when few girls short could a bandage (utterance_1191) +why does you not invite kennis to deny jane the boy (utterance_1192) +he is constantly saying disagreeable things (utterance_1193) +very well said the loyal quietly but your fine niece is to you prefer (utterance_1194) +ask you a lady after a pause i cannot say on so short an acquaintance he answered with gravity which do you prefer jane (utterance_1195) +they are equally unsatisfactory she answered (utterance_1196) +i cannot imagine i must belong to either siders (utterance_1197) +i must see that allanies the one who defies me and refuses to answer my second letter (utterance_1198) +there would be a dozen heirs to fight for my money and dear old enhoss would be sold to strangers she resumed the bitterness (utterance_1199) +they are but lukewam lovers who can content themselves with the dialogue carried on at bouchert distance (utterance_1200) +if there be an ellissium onout it is this (utterance_1201) +his own daughter his only daughter of the best blood of southern aristocracy beautiful accomplished everything to secure him a splendid alliance holding nightly assignation with a horse hunter (utterance_1202) +he could well concede so much to her caprice since her staying at home could be no disadvantage to the cause that had prompted him to the stern council (utterance_1203) +it is already known that this road passed the hassienda of casa del corville at some distance from the house and on the opposite side of the river (utterance_1204) +on reaching the corpse he dismounted let his horse in a man though underwood hitched him by looping his bridle rein around the topmost twigs of an elastic bow then detaching a long rope of twisted horsehay from the horn of his saddle and inserting his arm (utterance_1205) +before forsaking the shadow of the corpse he clasped a glance toward the sky and met the moon sailing supremely over it (utterance_1206) +the growl conceit which has so often used the nocturnal inebriate of great cities appear to produce a like effect upon the night pachrola of the prairie and for a moment the shadow late darkening his brow disappeared (utterance_1207) +it's not likely if this are unless it be the owner of a bad conscience who can't sleep (utterance_1208) +cloth this one such within those walls (utterance_1209) +if he be abroad that's a good chance of his seeing me on the open ground not that i should care a straw if it were only myself to be compromised (utterance_1210) +it's no use waiting upon the moon do you stacca (utterance_1211) +it is true he had designs upon the hussianda but these did not contemplate either its cash fleet or jewelly if we accept the most precious jewel it contained the mistress of the mansion herself (utterance_1212) +he tarried at kemisha a few days and came up to gardo where i then decided he was apparently without any business that would support him but he soon became acquainted with my son thomas with whom he hunted for a long time and made his home with him at my house winter came on and he continued his day (utterance_1213) +the enraged husband well knowing that he should feel a blow if he waited to hear the order repeated instantly retreated and went down the river to his cattle (utterance_1214) +we protected the poor manticoch woman and gave her victuals and allan sympathized with her in her misfortunes till spring when her husband came to her acknowledged his former errors and that he had abused her without a course promised a reformation and she received him with every mark of renewal of her affection (utterance_1215) +the indians were soon answered by the american officer that the wancom was cordially accepted and that a continuance of peace was ardency wished for (utterance_1216) +my son thomas went with them with allan's horse and carried the good (utterance_1217) +allan on finding that his enemies had gone came back to my house where he lived as before but of his return they was sworn not to fight at cyagara and nettles who married priscilla ramses with a small party of indians came on to take him (utterance_1218) +metals at length abandoned the chase went home and island all in battles came in (utterance_1219) +by running in the woods his clothing had become torn into rags so that he was in a suffering condition or was naked (utterance_1220) +allan made his trousers himself and then built a raft on which he went down the river to his own place at montfauche (utterance_1221) +there an indian gave him some refreshment and a good gun with which he hastened on to little beard's tongue where he found his corp (utterance_1222) +not daring to risk himself at that place for fear of being given up he made her but a short visit and came immediately to guard all (utterance_1223) +the love of liberty however added to his natural swiftness gave him sufficient strength to make his escape to his former castle of safety (utterance_1224) +his pursuers came immediately to my house where they expected to have found him secreted and under my protection (utterance_1225) +still unsapied and doubting my veracity they advised my indian brother to use his influence to grow from me the secret of his concealment which they had an idea that i considered of great importance not only to him but my sense i persisted in my ignorance of his situation and finally they left me (utterance_1226) +he came to my house in the night and awoke me with the greatest caution feeling that some of his enemies might be watching to take him at a time when and in a place where it would be impossible for him to make his escape (utterance_1227) +at that time island lay in a secret place in the guise a short distance above my flat in a hole that he accidentally found in the rock near the river (utterance_1228) +the pavloved crowds held feast after feast celebrating a wars they had received for the campaign and made expeditions to almost to visit a certain caroline a hungarian who had recently opened a restaurant there with girls as wages (utterance_1229) +the guards had made their whole march as if on a pleasure trip parading their cleanliness and discipline (utterance_1230) +the regiments had entered and left the tide with their banes play and by the grand jake's orders the men had marched all the way in step a practice of which the guards plated themselves the officers on foot and at their proper force (utterance_1231) +barras had been coarser to have marshed all the way with berg who was already in command of a company (utterance_1232) +boris during the campaign had made the acquaintance of many persons who might prove useful to him and by a letter of recommendation he had brought from pierre had become acquainted with prince andrew bo konski though whom he hoped to obtain a post on the commander in chief stuff (utterance_1233) +berg and boris having rested after yesterday's march were sitting clean and neatly dressed at a rhine table in the clean quarters a lotted to them plain chest (utterance_1234) +well how are you going to get out of that she remarked (utterance_1235) +at that moment the door opened (utterance_1236) +dear me how you have changed (utterance_1237) +he was about to embrace his friends but nicholas avoided him (utterance_1238) +he wanted to pinch him push him do anything but kiss him a thing everybody did (utterance_1239) +but notwithstanding this boris embraced him in a quiet friendly way and kissed him three times (utterance_1240) +they had not made for nearly half a year and being at the age when young man took their first steps on life road each saw immense changes in the other quite a new reflection of the society in which they had taken was first steps (utterance_1241) +i did not expect you to do he added (utterance_1242) +you know of course of his imperial highness wrote with our regiment all the time so that we had every comfort in every advantage (utterance_1243) +what receptions we had in polands (utterance_1244) +what dinners and balls i can't tell you (utterance_1245) +oh you guard said rostov i say service o wide (utterance_1246) +he went to his bed drew a parcel under the clean pillow and sent for wine (utterance_1247) +yes and i have some money in a letters to give you he added (utterance_1248) +i'll don't mention it kate i quite understand said berg getting up in speaking in a muffled and guttural voice (utterance_1249) +go across to our horse they invited you i did boris (utterance_1250) +berg put on the cleanest of course without a spot or speck of dust stood before a looking glass and brushed the hair on his temples upwards in the way affected by the emperor alexander and having insured himself in the way rust of luke tightet that his coat had been noticed left the room with a pleasant smile (utterance_1251) +oh dear was a beast i am muttered rostov as he read the letter why (utterance_1252) +well have you sent gabriel for some white all right less half sun (utterance_1253) +and the letter from his parents was enclosed a letter of recommendation to bagration which the old countess at anna mikolovna's advice had obtained through an acquaintance and sent to her son ask him to take it to his destination and make use of it (utterance_1254) +why have you thrown that away asked boris (utterance_1255) +it is some letter of recoigned i should want a devil to i wanted for (utterance_1256) +he looked intently and inquiringly into his friend's eyes evidently trying in vain to find the answer to some question (utterance_1257) +would you believe it kate i was not at all alarmed as i knew i was right (utterance_1258) +i came forward berth stood up and showed her he presented himself with his hand to his cap and really it would have been difficult for a face to express greater respect and self complacency than his debt (utterance_1259) +well he started me as the saying is starved and starned and stormed (utterance_1260) +it was not a matter of life but rather of death as the same is (utterance_1261) +albadians and devils and too siberia said berg with a sagacious smile (utterance_1262) +still i remained silent and what do you think kate (utterance_1263) +the next day it was not even mentioned in the orders of the day (utterance_1264) +that's the way coat said beryke lighting his pipe and emitting rings of smoke (utterance_1265) +yes that was fine said rostov smiling (utterance_1266) +rust off with a chissful young man and we don't know a kate have told the deliberate lie (utterance_1267) +he began his story meaning to tell everything just as it happened but imperceptibly involuntarily and inevitably he elapsed into falsehood (utterance_1268) +prince andrew who liked to help young man was flattered by being asked for his assistance and being well disposed towards boris who had managed to please him the day before he wished to do what the young man wanted (utterance_1269) +in spite of prince andrew's disagreeable a ronical tone in spite of the contempt with which rostov from his fating army point of view regarded all these little adjutants on the staff of whom the newcomer was evidently one rostov felt confused blushed and became silent (utterance_1270) +boris inquired what news there might be on the staff and whats with our indiscretion one may ask about our plans (utterance_1271) +we shall probably advance replied borkovsky evidently reluctantly reluctant to see more in the presence of a stranger (utterance_1272) +berg took the opportunity to ask with great politeness whether as was rumord the allowance of forage money to captains of company who be doubled (utterance_1273) +i was there said rostov angrily as if intending to insult the aide de camp (utterance_1274) +with a slightly contemptuous smile he said yes that are many stories i told about that affair (utterance_1275) +but our stories are the stories of men who have been under the enemy's fire (utterance_1276) +our stories have some weight not like the stories of those fellows on the staff who get rewards without doing anything (utterance_1277) +however he added rising you know my name and where to find me i don't forget that i do not regard either myself or you as having been at all insulted and as a man awe than you my advice is to let the matter drop (utterance_1278) +exclaimed prince andrew and was about to them both he went out (utterance_1279) +and he was still more angry at having omitted to see it (utterance_1280) +he ordered his horse at once and coldly taking leave of bars rode home (utterance_1281) +should he go to head quarters next year and challenge that a faded adjutant or really let the matter drop was the question that weighed him all the way (utterance_1282) +it was long since rostov said news of nicholas (utterance_1283) +not till midwinter was the count at last handed a letter addressed in his son's handwriting (utterance_1284) +on receiving it he ran on tiptoe to his study an alarm and haste trying to escape notice closed the door and began to redo later (utterance_1285) +each time at these heads began to meet the countess anxious as she glanced uneasily at the count and at anna mikolovna the latter very adroidly turned to conversation to insignificant matters (utterance_1286) +but for god's sake be careful you know her at me affect your mamma (utterance_1287) +no am i too word of honour said natasha crossing herself i won't tell anyone (utterance_1288) +and she ran off at once to sonya (utterance_1289) +she rushed to sonya helped her and began to cry (utterance_1290) +it's true that all you women are crabbing be shammard petya pacing the room with large resolute straights (utterance_1291) +you're all blubberous and understand nothing (utterance_1292) +natasha smiled through her tears (utterance_1293) +what nasty brutes they are (utterance_1294) +hold your tongue pitcher what a goose you are (utterance_1295) +sonya smiled do i remember nicholas (utterance_1296) +i remember nicolinka too i remember her well she said (utterance_1297) +no she shut her eyes (utterance_1298) +she felt that sonya was speaking the truth that there was such love as sonya was speaking of (utterance_1299) +she believed it could be but did not understand it (utterance_1300) +shall you write to him she asked (utterance_1301) +now that he was already an officer and a wounded hero would it be right to remind him of herself and as it might seem of the obligations to her he had taken on himself (utterance_1302) +i don't know (utterance_1303) +sonya smiled no (utterance_1304) +it's because she was in love with that fat one his spectacles that was her picture described his namesake the new cobazokov and now she's in love with our singer he made natasha's italian singing master that's why she's ashamed (utterance_1305) +petya you're stupid said natasha (utterance_1306) +the countess had been prepared by enemy colovna's heads at dinner (utterance_1307) +on retiring to her own room she sat in an arm chair her eyes fixed on a miniature portrait of her son on the lid of a snuff box while the tears came coming into her eyes (utterance_1308) +the kite put his ear to the keyhole and liscered (utterance_1309) +at first he heard a sign of indifferent voices then animmicolovna's voice alone in a long speech then a cry then silence then both voices together with glad intinations and then footsteps (utterance_1310) +anna mikolovna opened the door (utterance_1311) +when she heard this sonya blushed so that tears came into her eyes and unable to bear the lugs turned upon her ran away into the dancing hall her old minded at full speed with her dress puffed out like a balloon and flushed and smiling plumped down on the floor (utterance_1312) +the coat tis was crying (utterance_1313) +from all he says one should be glad and not cry (utterance_1314) +how charmingly he described said she reading the description part of the letter and what a soul (utterance_1315) +i always said when he was only so high i always said (utterance_1316) +i have been told that mister van brandt is in present for debt i said (utterance_1317) +and i saw for myself last night that he had left you hopeless (utterance_1318) +he left me the little money he had with him when he was arrested she rejoined sadly (utterance_1319) +his cruel creditors are more to blame than he is for the poverty that has fallen on us (utterance_1320) +even this negative defence of ann bratt stung me to the quick i ought to have spoken more guardedly of him i said bitterly (utterance_1321) +i ought to have remembered that a woman can forgive almost any wrong than a man can inflict on her when he is a man whom she loves (utterance_1322) +she put her hand on my mouth and stopped me before i could say any more (utterance_1323) +how can you speak so cruelly to me she asked (utterance_1324) +you know to my shame i confessed it to you the last time we met you know that my heart and secret is all yours (utterance_1325) +what wrong are you talking of (utterance_1326) +is it the wrong i suffered when van brandt married me with a wife living at the time and living still (utterance_1327) +do you think i can never forget the great misfortune of my life the misfortune that has made me unworthy of you (utterance_1328) +it is no fault of mind god knows but it is not the less true that i am not married and that the little darling who is playing out there with her doll as my child (utterance_1329) +and you talk of my being your wife knowing that the child accepts me as her second father i said (utterance_1330) +it would be better and happier for us both if you had as little pride as a child pride she repeated (utterance_1331) +in such a position as mine (utterance_1332) +a helpless woman with a mock husband in prison for debt (utterance_1333) +am i to marry you for my food and shelter (utterance_1334) +am i to marry you because there is no lawful tide that binds me to the father of my child (utterance_1335) +bad as he is he has not forsaken me he has been forced away (utterance_1336) +my only friend is it possible that you think me ungrateful enough to consent to be your wife (utterance_1337) +the woman in my situation must be heartless indeed who could destroy her place in the astimation of the world and the regard of your friends (utterance_1338) +the wretchedest creature that walks the streets would shrink from treating you in that way (utterance_1339) +no what a man made of (utterance_1340) +how can you how can you speak of it (utterance_1341) +i yielded and spoke of it no more (utterance_1342) +every word she uttered only increased my admiration of the noble creature whom i have had loved and lost (utterance_1343) +bitterly as i hated the man who had parted us i loved her dearly enough to be even capable of helping him for her sake hopeless invatuation (utterance_1344) +i don't deny it i don't excuse it hopeless and voctuation you have forgiven me i said (utterance_1345) +that may deserve to be forgiven (utterance_1346) +it is something to be your only friend (utterance_1347) +you must have plans for the future tell me unreservedly how i can help you (utterance_1348) +complete the good work that you have begun she answered gratefully help me back to half (utterance_1349) +make me strong enough to submit to a doctor's estimate of my chances of living for some years yet (utterance_1350) +a doctor's estimate of your chances of living i repeated what do you mean (utterance_1351) +i hardly know how to tell you she said without speaking again of mister van brandt (utterance_1352) +thus speaking of him again mean speaking of his debts i asked (utterance_1353) +why need you hesitate (utterance_1354) +you know that there is nothing i will not do to relieve your anxiety (utterance_1355) +neffer let me tell you the plain truth (utterance_1356) +there is a serious necessity for his getting out of prison (utterance_1357) +yes this is his position in two words a little while since he obtained an excellent offer of employment abroad from a rich relative of his and he had made all his arrangements to accept it (utterance_1358) +unhappily he returned to tell me of his good fortune and the same day he was arrested for debt (utterance_1359) +thus narrow that had been set for her was plainly revealed in those four words (utterance_1360) +in the eye of the law she was of course a single woman she was of age she was to all intents and purposes her own mistress (utterance_1361) +what was there to prevent her from insuring her life if she pleased and from so disposing of the insurance as to give and brought a direct interest in her death (utterance_1362) +thanks to the happy accident of my position the one certain way of protecting her lay easily within my reach (utterance_1363) +i could offer to lend the scoundrel the money that he wanted in an hour's notice and he was the man to accept my proposal quite as easily as i could make it (utterance_1364) +you are quite mistaken i replied (utterance_1365) +i am only doubting whether your plan for relieving mister van brandt of his embarrassments is quite so simple as you suppose (utterance_1366) +are you aware of the delays that are likely to take place before it will be possible to borrow money on your policy of insurance (utterance_1367) +i know nothing about it she said sadly (utterance_1368) +will you let me ask the advice of my lawyers (utterance_1369) +they are trustworthy inexperienced men and i am sure they can be of use to you (utterance_1370) +cautiously as i had expressed myself her delicacy took the alarm (utterance_1371) +promise that you won't ask me to borrow money of you for mister van brandt she rejoined and i will accept your help gratefully (utterance_1372) +i could honestly promise that (utterance_1373) +my one chance of saving her lay in keeping from her knowledge of the course that i had now determined to pursue (utterance_1374) +i rose to go while my resolution still sustained me (utterance_1375) +kiss me she whispered before you go (utterance_1376) +it is only a goodness that overpowers me (utterance_1377) +it's a sad thing for a body to lack brains when she wants to be a teacher isn't it (utterance_1378) +when a lope has taedded so hard all winter and she hasn't gone anywhere told the elder sister wistfully (utterance_1379) +doris dreamed of credit dresses all that night and don't about them all the next day (utterance_1380) +so it must be confessed did penalope though she would not have admitted it it for the world (utterance_1381) +she knew that pennilope had started out to say a new dress (utterance_1382) +doris hanter i believe it's an old quilled (utterance_1383) +listen pennellope my dear doris (utterance_1384) +love to pennylock and yourself (utterance_1385) +your affectionate aunt at the la hound (utterance_1386) +i don't say it's beauty said pennilope with a great (utterance_1387) +it may have been pretty wants but it is all fighted now (utterance_1388) +tell me dorry does it argue a lack of proper respect for my ancestors that i can't feel very enthusiastic over this hero especially when grandmother hunter died years before i was born (utterance_1389) +it was very kind of aunt adela to sandy said torres dutifoo (utterance_1390) +why the wrong side is ever so much prettier than the right exclaimed penelope (utterance_1391) +what lovely old time he stuffed at not a big fatted (utterance_1392) +i declare it is as good as new (utterance_1393) +well let us go and have cheek said pennilope i decidedly hungry (utterance_1394) +besides i see the poverty popular coming (utterance_1395) +it is something too also's an heroine after all (utterance_1396) +venilope was surprised as much as the tagger sisterly hurt could wish them where doris flashed out up on her stream frankly and the evening on the party with the black skirt nicely pressed and rehung and the prettiest waste imaginable a waste that was a girtle and notes of black velvet (utterance_1397) +so when a lopy went to blinds party and her dress was the admiration of every girl there (utterance_1398) +when a lopee told her altogether charming (utterance_1399) +she looks us if she had just stacked out of the frame of some lovely old picture she said to herself (utterance_1400) +my aunt adela gave me give us their material she stammered (utterance_1401) +and named after her missus fairwater suddenly put her arm about pennilope and drew the young girl to her her lovely old face a glow with delight and tenderness (utterance_1402) +that you are my grand niece she said (utterance_1403) +when i saw your track i felt sure you were related to her i should recognize that rosebud sailed if i came across it in tibat (utterance_1404) +when a lopy was four years older than i was but we were devoted to each other (utterance_1405) +soon after these our mother died and our house alled was broken up (utterance_1406) +my dear i am a very lonely old woman with no body belonging to me (utterance_1407) +now she patted missus fairworther's soft old hand affectionately (utterance_1408) +doris and penalopee found their leaves and plants changed in the twin cling of unai (utterance_1409) +when missus fairwattle had gone toryson pennelope looked at each other (utterance_1410) +and she sleeped into her blue print afternoon thrice her arm called to her from below (utterance_1411) +aunt jane was standing at the foot of the stairs with a lamp in one hand and the year old baby clanging to the other (utterance_1412) +she was a big shapeless woman with a round good natured face cheerful and vulgar as a sun flower was armed jane at all times and occasions (utterance_1413) +i want to run over and see how missus biggs baked airs this evening city and you must take care of the baby till i get back (utterance_1414) +seemed to sigh and went downstairs for the baby (utterance_1415) +all her days were alike as far as harold work and dullness went but she accepted them cheerfully and uncomplainingly (utterance_1416) +but she did present having to look after the baby where she wanted to write her letter (utterance_1417) +the room was worn a mare box about the kitchen which seemedly shared with two small cousins (utterance_1418) +herbad and the cart where the little girls lapt filled up almost all the available space (utterance_1419) +just at that particular angle one eye appeared to be as large as an orange while the other was the size of a pea and the moth zigzag from ear to ear (utterance_1420) +sinna hated that marilla's very lightly as she could hate anything (utterance_1421) +her mother had died to day after and sidney their opon had come into the hands of good aunt jane with those books for her dorry since nothing else was left after the expanses of the double funeral had been great (utterance_1422) +presently she began to write with a flash of real excitement on her face (utterance_1423) +only one answer came to ellen douglas and that was forwarded to her pipe the long suffering aditor all of the mappo leaf (utterance_1424) +he wrote that although his age did bear him from membership in the club he was twenty and the limit was aching he read the letters of the department with marching track and often had told of answering some of the request for correspondence (utterance_1425) +he never had done so but ellen doubtless this letter was so interesting that he had decided to write to her (utterance_1426) +would she be king enough to correspond with him (utterance_1427) +he was two years out from the east and had not yet forgotten to be homesick at times (utterance_1428) +sydney like the letter and answer at eat (utterance_1429) +she never expected to meet john lincoln nor did she wish to do so (utterance_1430) +in the correspondence itself she found her pleasure (utterance_1431) +john lincoln rogue brazier counts of french life and adventures on the far western plains so amian and remote from snug humbdram plain field life that sinae always had the sensation of crossing a garth when she opened a letter from the bar and as for sydney's own letter this is the way it read as she ralted (utterance_1432) +they ever grinns plainfield dear mister lincoln (utterance_1433) +i love life and its bloom and brilliancy i love meeting new people i love the ripple of muse the harm of laughter and conversation (utterance_1434) +the manner had been talking we was all more the great novels (utterance_1435) +as it was i had contradicted him twice and he had laughed and liked it but his books will always have a new meaning to me henceforth true the inside he himself has given me (utterance_1436) +it is such meetings at these that give life its sparkle for me (utterance_1437) +you will be weary of my robs of these overfair (utterance_1438) +she has sympathy and understanding for my every mode (utterance_1439) +yours sincerley simnae richmond (utterance_1440) +old jane came home presently and carried away her sleeping baby sydney sat her prayers went to bed and slept soundly and serennially she mailed her letter the next day and the mount later and answered kate (utterance_1441) +sydney did not sleep that night but those restlessly about to ride in her peel (utterance_1442) +the good woman shook her hat (utterance_1443) +she may draw the way of the transgressor and found that its tones burst to born and narrow (utterance_1444) +you see that road out thark (utterance_1445) +and there was no harbor or glimpse of disdency visible (utterance_1446) +had the halter keeper made a mistake (utterance_1447) +this is his place nobody courted the evergreen but myself (utterance_1448) +i don't understand he said perplexedly (utterance_1449) +oakes evening too out her head in a burst of patient protest (utterance_1450) +no and you never will understand i can't make you understand (utterance_1451) +everything i told you about it and my life was just imagination (utterance_1452) +then why did you write them he asked blankly (utterance_1453) +why did you deceive me (utterance_1454) +oh i didn't mean to deceive you i never thought of such a thing (utterance_1455) +i just couldn't write you about my life here not because it was hard but it was so ugly and empty (utterance_1456) +and when once i had begun i had to keep it up (utterance_1457) +i found it so fascinating to (utterance_1458) +those letters made that other life seem real to me i never expected to meet you (utterance_1459) +this last four days since your letter came have been dreadful to me (utterance_1460) +oh please go away and forgive me if you can (utterance_1461) +it was worse than she had even told it would be (utterance_1462) +he was so handsome so mildly so earnest eyed (utterance_1463) +john lincoln opened the gate and went out to her (utterance_1464) +please don't distress yourself so sidnate he said unconsciously using her christian name (utterance_1465) +i think i do understand (utterance_1466) +i'm not such a dull fellow as you take me for (utterance_1467) +after all those letters were too or rather there was truth in them (utterance_1468) +his young man was certainly good art understanding (utterance_1469) +you you'll forgive me then she stammered (utterance_1470) +but in the state of innocence there would have been lowed messiphal age (utterance_1471) +on the contrary everything generated in scarcely imperfect but in the citizens children would have been begotten by generation (utterance_1472) +therefore from the first they would have been imperfect in bodily size and power (utterance_1473) +therefore in the state of innocence there was no need for women to be born on the contrary nature's process and generation would have been incominate with the manner in which it was established by god (utterance_1474) +for whither in that state men would have been master of a man (utterance_1475) +therefore in the state of innocence then have no mastership of the animals (utterance_1476) +therefore in the state of innocence before man habits bade not in disbading that was naturally subject to him (utterance_1477) +suddenly this is proved by the order of divine providence which has governed fear with things by the superior (utterance_1478) +certainly this is proved from a property of man and other animals (utterance_1479) +now whatever is partest painted is subjected what is the sensual and immerso (utterance_1480) +therefore the subjection of other animals to man is proved to be natural (utterance_1481) +they would not however on this kind have been accepted from the mastership of men as neither at present or they for that reason accepted from the mastership of plot his providence has fordain all this (utterance_1482) +this is signified by fact that god led at the animals to man that he might give the names expressive of their respective natures (utterance_1483) +so all enemies would have a bit men of their own court as in the present day some domestic animals obey him (utterance_1484) +objection one it was seemed that in the civilisans man would not have had mastership over all other creatures (utterance_1485) +much less therefore would he have a bit man in the state of innocence (utterance_1486) +therefore since it is by this reason that man is competent to have mastership it seems that in the state of incense man had no meaning over plans (utterance_1487) +now in mill reason has the position of a master and not of a subject (utterance_1488) +i insert that we must needs admit that in the primitive state they would have been some inecordity at least as regards sex because generation depends upon diversity of sex and likewise as regards as regards as regards as for some would have been born of others nor old sexry uni have been stairal (utterance_1489) +there might also have been bodily disparity (utterance_1490) +an authority might also rise on the parts of nature as above described without any defective nature (utterance_1491) +objection one it will seem that a misted of the business man would not have been must over men (utterance_1492) +therefore in the state of innocence may would not have been subject a man (utterance_1493) +in other sense mastership is referred in a general sense to any kind of subject and in this sense even hay has the office of governing and directing free men can be caught a master (utterance_1494) +such a connift mastership would have existed in the state of a nisance between man and men for two reasons (utterance_1495) +more than this he hath been hurt to rail on you my lord or am now his judge (utterance_1496) +judge thy just tomb would be to die on the spot stoop let us hear what thou hast to say (utterance_1497) +then the judge to some of the kings spoke those you'll save this man who has made such a stirring darrot town (utterance_1498) +thus while when lost his life for the truth a new man rose from his death the travels same way was questioned (utterance_1499) +come good help for said christian let us walk on the grass (utterance_1500) +so they set off through the field (utterance_1501) +hopeful i have my fears from the first and soul gave you a heap christen good friend i grieve that i have brought you out of the right path (utterance_1502) +hopeful say no more no doubt it is for our good (utterance_1503) +question we must now stand thus let us try to go back (utterance_1504) +then set joined despair you have no right of force your way him here the ground on which you lie is my (utterance_1505) +they had not much to say as they knew that they were in ford (utterance_1506) +and by the sack we killed our souls as well (utterance_1507) +he now went on till he came to the house and a door of which he was to not this he did two or three times (utterance_1508) +christian i have come to see a good man at the house (utterance_1509) +christian sir i am come from the city of destruction and em on my way to montsaian (utterance_1510) +i was told by the man that stands up the gate that if i can hear you will show me good things that would help me (utterance_1511) +he stood as if he would please for men and a crown of gold hall near his head (utterance_1512) +christian what does this mean (utterance_1513) +then he took him to a large room that was full of dust for it had not been swept and interpreter told his man to sweep it (utterance_1514) +christian what means this (utterance_1515) +though you now sought made coming to lay the dust so you saved my claim and laid low by faith in the book (utterance_1516) +just as christian came up to the crowd his notes lay from his back close to the mouth of the tube where it fell in and i saw it no more (utterance_1517) +as he stood thus and wept lo three bright whites came to him and one of them said peace be to thee thou hast grace from thine sings (utterance_1518) +christian gave relief for joy and said as he went ah what a play is this blaste grows blessed too (utterance_1519) +he went on thus till he came to a bale where he saw three men who were in a sound sleep with chains on their feet (utterance_1520) +christen sirs friends call you and where do you go (utterance_1521) +from vast and hypocrisy we were born in the land of flanglory and our own our way to mounds iron for praise (utterance_1522) +nor did not that hay that comes not the inn at the door with concept of getting the same as a thief (utterance_1523) +the told christian that he had no need for care on that score for long youth had made a law and they could prove that it had been so for years (utterance_1524) +yes said they no doubt of it (utterance_1525) +and if we get in the road at all pray what are the ox (utterance_1526) +is not our case as good as yours (utterance_1527) +i saw then that they all went on do they came to the foot of the heel of difficulty where there was a spring (utterance_1528) +now in christian god as far as the spring of life he drank of it and then went up to him (utterance_1529) +now half wheeled was a cave made by the lord of that hue that those who came by met rasphere (utterance_1530) +timorra said that dying was the healed in men to clown but that when they had got half way they found that they met with more and more risk so that great fear came on them and all they could do was to turn back (utterance_1531) +yes said miss just for a chesting front of us there lay two beats of prey now path we knew not if they snapped or not but we thought that they would follow us and to our lings (utterance_1532) +yet he thought once more with what he had heard from the man and then he found in his tilt for his scroll that he might read it in find some piece (utterance_1533) +he felt for it but found it not (utterance_1534) +so he fell down on his knees to pray that god would give him graceful this act and then when bad do look for his crow (utterance_1535) +ho foe that i am said he the slipping the day time so he gave way to the flash as two years for yeas that rest which lord of the hugh had made but for the help of the soul (utterance_1536) +such was the lot of the jews for their sing they were sent back by the way to the rat sea and i and made trad those steps with grave which i might have trod with joy had it not been for this leaf (utterance_1537) +whole form and i have been on my weep by this time (utterance_1538) +now by this time he had come to the veil once more wherefore spell he sat down wet but at last as the castle sat glance at the foot of the bench he saw his squirrel which he caught it with haste and putting his cloak (utterance_1539) +words are too weak to tell the joy of christian when he had got back his road (utterance_1540) +he laid it up in the breast of his coat and gave thanks to god (utterance_1541) +would what a lie stack did he now climb the hill (utterance_1542) +hah thought he these beasts ran to the knot for their prey and if they should meet with me the dark how should i fly from them (utterance_1543) +the name of the man who kept the lodge of their house was watched for and when he saw their christian made a halt as if he would go back he came out to him and said it is by strength so small (utterance_1544) +fear gnawed the two wild beasts for they are bound by chains and are put here to try the faith of those bad habit and to find out those that hath known (utterance_1545) +keep in the midst of the path and no harm shall come to thee (utterance_1546) +then i saw in my dream that still he went on in gray dread of the wide beasts he heard them grow yet they didn't him no harm but when he had gone by then he went on with joy till he came and stood in front of the lot where a watchful doubt (utterance_1547) +christian sah what has it this may arrest here to night (utterance_1548) +wherein watsfall told her why question had come there she said what is your name (utterance_1549) +then christian bent down his head and went with him to his house (utterance_1550) +piety calm good christian seems our love prompts us to take you into rest let us talk with you a fall that you have seen on your way (utterance_1551) +christen with a wide good blow and i am glad that she should ask it of me (utterance_1552) +prudence and first say what is it that makes you wish too much go to monthaiian (utterance_1553) +there they say is no death and there i shall tell with such as not the lord (utterance_1554) +charity have your wife and babes christian yes i have (utterance_1555) +charity and why did you not bring them with you (utterance_1556) +but they would not come with me nor hath me leaven (utterance_1557) +thus this question talked with his friend's too little room dark and then he took his rest in the large room the name of which was peace there he slept till break a day and then he said him (utterance_1558) +and they brought out a john bone of the nest with which sensened with such refeast and the sling and stone with which tabbots knew galiath of death (utterance_1559) +what is the name of this land said christian (utterance_1560) +then they told him it was symmonious land (utterance_1561) +it was a night when sorrow may come to the brightest without causing any great sense of incongruity when with impressible persons love becomes solicitousness hope sinks to misgiving and faith (utterance_1562) +still to a close observer they are just as perceptible the difference is that their meteor of manifestation are less trite and familiar than such well known ones as the bursting of the buds or the fall of the leaf (utterance_1563) +if anything could be darker than the sky it was the wall i never think could be gloomier than the wall it was the river beneath (utterance_1564) +an indescribable succession of dull blows perplexing in their regularity sent their sound with difficulty through the fluffy atmosphere (utterance_1565) +not long after a form moved by the brink of the river (utterance_1566) +this was all that was positively discoverable though it seemed human (utterance_1567) +the shape went slowly along but without much exertion for the snow though sudden was not as yet more than two inches deep (utterance_1568) +at this time some words were spoken aloud one (utterance_1569) +two three (utterance_1570) +full five (utterance_1571) +between each utterance the little shape advanced about half a dozen yards (utterance_1572) +the other spot stopped and dwindled smaller (utterance_1573) +then a morsel of snow flew across the river towards the fifth window (utterance_1574) +the river would have been seen by day to be of that deep smooth sort which races middle insides with the same gliding precision any irregularities of speed being immediately corrected by a small welpoo (utterance_1575) +the window was struck again in the same manner (utterance_1576) +then a noise was heard apparently produced by the opening of the window (utterance_1577) +said the blood spot in the snow tremulously (utterance_1578) +i ask it was your window forgive me (utterance_1579) +when i said that you might (utterance_1580) +how must i it is when shall we be married frank (utterance_1581) +i have money (utterance_1582) +and we live in two parishes do we well then (utterance_1583) +if i said so course i will (utterance_1584) +the fact is i forgot to ask (utterance_1585) +good night frank good night (utterance_1586) +he hoped nothing serious had happened to drag her out of such an untoward time (utterance_1587) +but as the rain gave not the least side of cessation he observed i think we shall have to go back never (utterance_1588) +why not he cried (utterance_1589) +i cannot understand how you should name me while i have no knowledge of you (utterance_1590) +oh but you know me about me at least (utterance_1591) +i should think so (utterance_1592) +he's my father indeed (utterance_1593) +but we have been tenants of servania castle on the island here this season (utterance_1594) +my father's is a comparatively humble residence hard by (utterance_1595) +but he could have haught a much bigger one if he chose (utterance_1596) +you've heard say (utterance_1597) +i don't know he doesn't tell me much of his affairs (utterance_1598) +my father she burst out suddenly is always coding me for my extravagance (utterance_1599) +was that this evening (utterance_1600) +there on the beds they sat (utterance_1601) +joscelyn thought it strange that he should be thrown by fate into a position to play the son of the montaguese to this daughter of the capitalits (utterance_1602) +no i shall go on and get a lodging in bub with time if ever i reach it (utterance_1603) +it is so late that there will be no house open except a little place near the station where you won't care to stay (utterance_1604) +the island was an island still (utterance_1605) +they had not realized the force of the atoms till now (utterance_1606) +he seated her bodily by encircling her waist with his arm and she made no objection (utterance_1607) +he pitied her and while he wondered at it admired her determination (utterance_1608) +their application for admission led to the withdrawal of a boat and they stood within the gas light of the passage (utterance_1609) +he could see now that there she was such a fine figure quite as tall as himself she was but in the bloom of young womanhood (utterance_1610) +i will tell the servants to do this and send you up some degree (utterance_1611) +he felt ravenously hungry himself and set about drying his clothes as well as he could and eating at the same time (utterance_1612) +by the aid of some temporary wraps and some slippers from the cupboard he was contrived to make himself comfortable when the maid servant came down stairs with a damp armful of woman's raiment (utterance_1613) +you are sleeping i go said pierson (utterance_1614) +he again became conscious of the change which had been initiated during the walk (utterance_1615) +the well beloved was moving house had gone over to the wearer of this attire (utterance_1616) +an howl by little obi's carro (utterance_1617) +things arrange themselves (utterance_1618) +but the countess never gave way an inch (utterance_1619) +the following was the answer which she returned to the note written to her by aunt julia (utterance_1620) +i shall not know how to drink wine with them and should do a hundred things which would make them think me a beast (utterance_1621) +but the girl begged for some to day (utterance_1622) +it was a matter that required to be considered (utterance_1623) +pride in him might be as weak as bright and then (utterance_1624) +if they will put out their hands to him why should he refuse to put out his own (utterance_1625) +ottaya received him courteously having learned to like the man understanding that he had behaved with honesty and wisdom in regard to his clan and respecting him as one of the workers of the day but he declared that for the love of family as a family he did not care for them particularly (utterance_1626) +there pulls a sunder from me he said (utterance_1627) +but by your good fortune and merit if you will allow me to say say you have travelled from the one pole very far towards the other (utterance_1628) +at present i think that the sense of the country is in favour of an aristocracy of birth (utterance_1629) +when you were foremost among them did you not wish to be their master (utterance_1630) +it is one to which all legisative and all human efforts should and must tend (utterance_1631) +when you make much water boil mister threats some of it will probably boil over (utterance_1632) +i quite agree with you that the silk gowns should be kept for their elders and so the conversation was ended (utterance_1633) +with her there was a real wish that the poles might be joined together by her future husband (utterance_1634) +if you ready wish it you shall go he said (utterance_1635) +and a blue one to be buried in what'll ask me (utterance_1636) +must i have a pink silk gown to walk about in early in the morning (utterance_1637) +i soon as you dawned my worst in stocking the sweetheart (utterance_1638) +i can do that too (utterance_1639) +and now i'll sit down and write a letter to my lord (utterance_1640) +she draws close and satisfied (utterance_1641) +he could not forget missus pineavan's eyes that he remembered nothing of her other facial details (utterance_1642) +afterwards they kept a part of all in the drawing room for formed sake but eventually gravitated together again and finished the evening in each other's company (utterance_1643) +but this was not all (utterance_1644) +but was he able (utterance_1645) +it was unfair to go further without telling her even though hitherto such explicitness had not been absolutely demanded (utterance_1646) +he determined to call immediately on the new incarnation (utterance_1647) +she lived not far from the long fashionableamptonshire square and he went thither with expectations of having a highly emotional time at least (utterance_1648) +but somehow the very bell pulls seemed cold although she had so earnestly asked him to come (utterance_1649) +raising her eyes and a slightly inquiring manner from the book she was reading she went back in her chair as if suking herself in luxurious sensations which had nothing to do with him and replied to his greeting with a few commonplace words (utterance_1650) +just as they turn medeira into port in the space of a single night so this old air has been taken and doctored and twisted about and brought out as a new popular ditty indeed (utterance_1651) +she thought a little and then they were gone to talk about her house which had been newly painted and decorated with greenish blue satin up to the height of a person's head an arrangement that somewhat improved her slightly faded though still pretty face had was helped by the awnings over the windows (utterance_1652) +yes i have had my house some years she observed complacently and i like it better every year (utterance_1653) +don't you feel lonely in it sometimes oh never (utterance_1654) +what an unsivil thing to say she murmured in surprise (utterance_1655) +it is rather uncivil (utterance_1656) +as a punishment she did not ring the bell but left him to find his way out as he could (utterance_1657) +i saw him at lady channercliff's the other night (utterance_1658) +joseph and pierston (utterance_1659) +oh didn't he marry her (utterance_1660) +said missus bynevan with a start (utterance_1661) +but jostan was receding from the pretty widow's house with long strides (utterance_1662) +lady aris had left the drawing room for a moment to see that all was right in the dining room and when he was shirnon there stood alone in the lamplight niccola pineavan (utterance_1663) +she had been the first arrival (utterance_1664) +as the other guests dropped in the pair retreated into a shady corner and she talked beside him till all moved off for the eating and drinking (utterance_1665) +he had not been appointed to take her across to the dining room but at the table found her exactly opposite (utterance_1666) +the spring in the present case was the artistic commendation she deserved and craved (utterance_1667) +the lady ondustnin's left wife of a lord justice of appeal was in like manner talking to her companion on the outer side so that for the time he was left to himself (utterance_1668) +it came from the wife of one of his father's former workmen and was concerning her son whom she begged justly to recommend us candidate for some post in turn that she wished him to fill (utterance_1669) +what is necessary to the completeness of the story at this stage is not to rake capitolate but to take up some of the loose hands of the threads well remaining and followed them through and to the clear and comprehend the picture of the events can be seen (utterance_1670) +the way of the ventre is hard (utterance_1671) +he can sometimes raise cabato to help him the working on his crude conceptions but in then it is frequently done at a distressful cought a personal surrender (utterance_1672) +when the resound is achieved the adventure makes it's the pair on the score of economy a material are of effort and then labor off in the weights with crushing and tyrannical spirit dismissed the apperritous of forbidding's very use (utterance_1673) +possibly our national obdism as we viewed in the mansion the seeking the higher good knit some check (utterance_1674) +possibly the lidders would travel too fast and too far on the road of perfection if conservedison did not also play its salutary part in consisting that the procession moved forward a sassaho (utterance_1675) +on the contrary the conditions for its perceptions have been likely fast (utterance_1676) +yes the very vulgar of the electric art light made harder the arrival of the incondescent (utterance_1677) +a number of parents arc linen compans were at in existence and a great many lococa compass having caught into things under french ties for commercial business and to execute ragulousity contracts for street line (utterance_1678) +thus and the curious manner the maudanard of electric lighting was in a very true sense divided against hisself with intense reveries and jealousies which were none the less real because they were but temporary and according fount where an ultimate union of the force was inaptable (utterance_1679) +hands twenty years after the first out of the station station were established the matthirts they involved could be fairly credit with no less than sixty seven per cent (utterance_1680) +it will be readily under these conditions the modern lining company supplied to its customists both incondescent and argliny frequently from the same dinamo electric machinery as the sores of current and that the old food has between the rival systems has died out (utterance_1681) +in fact for some years past the presidence of the national electric wide association have been chosen almost exclusively for malone the managers of the great allison linen compass in the leading cities (utterance_1682) +the others round opposition to the incondescent light came from the gascondescru (utterance_1683) +there also the most bitter feeling was shown (utterance_1684) +the gas manager did not like arc like but it interfered only with his treat service which was not his large source of income by enemies (utterance_1685) +here again was given the most convincing demonstration of the truth that such an addition to the resources of mankind all was careless with it unsuspected benefits even for his animist (utterance_1686) +this was not lawn nor universally the spirit of shown and to day a hundreds of citizens the electric and gas progress are united under that one management which does not find it impossible to pushing a friendly and progressive way the use of both illuminance (utterance_1687) +the most conspicuous example of this identity of interest is given in new york itself (utterance_1688) +so much for the early opposition of which they are worth as plenty (utterance_1689) +but it may be questioned whether inertiers not equally to be dreaded with active iowo (utterance_1690) +of course a great many counts were eaten and read but why would daniel interest was aroused it was necessarily apothetic (utterance_1691) +what god that are the great bargain and only paid us more sum dam and the ballistan waddigage (utterance_1692) +was seldom for forty cents but they were only about twenty with thirty thousands of them (utterance_1693) +the fourth year i guided on to thirty seven cents and i made all the money out in one year that i held off previously (utterance_1694) +one of the incidents which called a very great sheep'ning was that when we started one of the important processes had to be done by experts (utterance_1695) +after feeling around for some days i got a clue how to do it (utterance_1696) +a dam made another machine which did the word nicely (utterance_1697) +incidentally he may be delicate as illustrative of the problem brought to allison that or he had the factory at harison and imperring the chinese reader when to him each wanted a dinamo to be run by hand power (utterance_1698) +for making the dynamos atticsons of curate as noted in the preceding shadow the roach eye wore a sun gower sweeps new york and this was also equipped (utterance_1699) +to sick minded bird man who had worked privously with edison until from the paradison phonogras and was already making edison specialitist in the small way and the loft hung loose star street new york was a silent house of constructing saw kits fixtures meaders sifty fuses numbers out of numbers out of odddy details (utterance_1700) +in the early part of eighteen eighty one the edison electria light company least they owe bee charamason act sixty five fifth avenue close to fording street for his headquarters and shell rents (utterance_1701) +this were as one of the finest home to the city of that period and its acquisition was of premide or sign of the surrender of the famous residence of abbon to commerse (utterance_1702) +they experienced with a little gas engine was farther startling (utterance_1703) +one day it was not going very well and went down to the man in charge and got exploring around (utterance_1704) +for the next four or five year succeeded by was a veritable beehife day and night (utterance_1705) +the routine was very much the same as that at the laboratory in its audignate of the clock (utterance_1706) +i was telling the gentlemen one day that i could not keep a secret even they followed them up in my dusk they would break it open (utterance_1707) +he suggested to me that he had a friend over an eighth avenue who made a superior grade of secrets and who would show them a trick (utterance_1708) +he said that he would have some of them made ab with hair and o paper and i could put them in without a word and see the result (utterance_1709) +i thought no more about the matter (utterance_1710) +i didn't remember anything about it (utterance_1711) +i was too busy on other things to denote us (utterance_1712) +speaking of those days of nights edison says years ago one of the great violinist was ramany (utterance_1713) +who would talk with me but i never asked him to bring his violin (utterance_1714) +why night he came with his fatherly about twelve o'clock (utterance_1715) +after that every time he came to new york he used to call it stupefy late a night with his violinch (utterance_1716) +another visitor who had used to give us a good deal amusement and pleasure was captain shah the hat of lent and fibery gate (utterance_1717) +who go out among the fire ladies and hath a great time (utterance_1718) +speaking of tell the stars i once got telling a man stories at the house and land factory in the yard as he was leaving (utterance_1719) +he was winter and he was all in furs (utterance_1720) +i hear nothing long to protect me against the code (utterance_1721) +now the gob clear a sea and had to be shaped to florida for cury (utterance_1722) +he had merely enjoyed the delights of anxious anticipation and the perilous pressure of fact in in gathers and experiments (utterance_1723) +now after its quotation was required (utterance_1724) +london is goat and glory (utterance_1725) +they say best man are moded out of thoughts and for the most become much more the better for being a little bad (utterance_1726) +standing on the broken column of the oasteaper three hundred feet above preying road hill william struck an attitude of theatrical fashion and otterate the falling aritarical flight (utterance_1727) +glorious london (utterance_1728) +a sad how sad a thing that day wilcom would not a vestige of this wonderful mass of human energy shall remain where the cry of the waff bad and beat him she only be hurt a nature again resume her rustic splendent desolation (utterance_1729) +the devil's tavern was a resort for actors a author's bohemians for us and ladies who did not retire early to their downinged couches (utterance_1730) +well oh that myself soon found rest in deep slumbering and wafted away into a dreamless rim our tide bodies lay in the infoding arms and morphers unto the pot and knock at our door next morning as the clock of the tower struck the hour of nigh (utterance_1731) +our first side of the sun rising land and give us great expectations of fame and fortune for surely all we had with glowing exhortations (utterance_1732) +oft expertation fows and most of there were most a promises and off a heads where hope is coldest and despair most fits (utterance_1733) +deuces one double when the sixth trepiclein (utterance_1734) +william to the great amazement of the dinner flung a gaining the sinnapot which was immediately tapped by jack while the others looked on in siling expectation (utterance_1735) +the pot jack replied all rice sir take a word for it (utterance_1736) +i have sent my life upon the cast i will stand a hazard of the dye (utterance_1737) +i immediately followed in his fistaps and found him jogging with a landlady about a cup of infam boo perhaps she was fondling her capacious lap (utterance_1738) +if he had jobbed out of a clouds willing could not have been more pleased or surprised and the feeling was reciproco (utterance_1739) +the praning shop of fowl was owing a short distance from the devil's tavern and we were invited to visit the establishment (utterance_1740) +james rabbage gazed for a moment on the manly formal willing and blurried out in his bluff manner what do you know (utterance_1741) +the next day everybody in the house began to make preparations for the journey (utterance_1742) +everything was done very leisurely though there was a lot of talking in disputing and the giving of contrary orders (utterance_1743) +the old porter was fair directing a scoting the servants of they piled the rugs and blankets and bags of food and pots and pans and dishes into the wagon (utterance_1744) +there was quite a procession when that last the big wagon rumbled out through the gateway (utterance_1745) +behind it came the grandmother and her duly deck a sort of a litter were easy chair sunk between two long poles (utterance_1746) +besides the family there were many servants and several others walked beside a slow moving wagon (utterance_1747) +the clock too well with them (utterance_1748) +good bye shouted little now from his garden whilst they went by good bye (utterance_1749) +they shouted greetings to their friend the potter as they passed them and also to the old faccure smeared up over with ashes who sat in a little brick hut by the bridge and pretended to make wonderful cures (utterance_1750) +this is more fun the going to school said cola as the oxen plotted along through clouds of dust (utterance_1751) +these lovely birds are found nearly everywhere in india and in some parts are in quite wild (utterance_1752) +his long matted hair hung on his shoulders and he will say his prayers with the help of a rosary of beads which he continually passed through his hands (utterance_1753) +as the wagging came up a young man who accompanied the holy man ran up and held out a begging ball saying give o charitable people to this holy one (utterance_1754) +no country in the world has so many beggars as india (utterance_1755) +many of them are caught wholly men because they do nothing but make pilgrimages from one secret place to another living solely on the arms that are given to them (utterance_1756) +when they had eaten their lunch the young people were to explore the garden near them (utterance_1757) +perhaps there are dogs in mahala a little fearfully but they forgot about dogs and they thought they get a sugar cane down by its stream (utterance_1758) +perhaps you can buy some from the man there he is now pulling by the stream said cola (utterance_1759) +it is the goover water said the farmer as he took a loss of coin and gently guided it down to the stream (utterance_1760) +the snake is another sacred animal of the hindooth and they will not kill or injure wend for anything (utterance_1761) +as they were about to move on again they saw a great cloud of dust down the road (utterance_1762) +i turned out that it was the great and powerful regia going and stay on a journey to with another regia or ruler of one of the small kingdoms or states of which modern and deals formerly made up (utterance_1763) +first there came a big elephant all decorated with silk and golden silver (utterance_1764) +on the elephant's back it was the howder which was like a big chair the canopy over it and in this sitting cross light was the ruggya a big fat fellow dressed in coloured silks and jewels the great diamond set plume in his turban (utterance_1765) +behind the howl dust that a servant holding a big umbrella of fine feathers over the red chest head (utterance_1766) +the driver sat on the neck of the elephant and guided the big beast that were parting him all one side or the other with an iron shod stick or gold (utterance_1767) +as in it fine to raela down a big elephant (utterance_1768) +noirdiris of the day the middle folk talked of nothing but the great magianist escort (utterance_1769) +our party came to a halt among many other bullock carts the owners of which were already sitting around on the ground cooking their suppers were bargaining for food and a little booth (utterance_1770) +these they used for plates keeping them up with their boiled rice and curry and sash and all sorts of puddings and sweets (utterance_1771) +a supper was being eaten another party stopped at the peril and camped not far away (utterance_1772) +when the lidder was put down the young boy stepped out looking very proud and halty (utterance_1773) +his servants i once spread a handsome rug and the gown for him to sit on i rushed about waiting on him taking good care to keep every one at a distance (utterance_1774) +yes and how he orders every one about him (utterance_1775) +around the little brahman's neck was a thin quartered thread which was the sign of his high cast (utterance_1776) +meanwhile the halty little brahman ate his supper when the sun turned away so no one could see him eat and then growing tired of respectful glances of the crowd around him he got into his litter again and the servants fastened the curtains tightly around him (utterance_1777) +everybody sat soundly in spite of the fact that one of the servants was beating a drum us of the night which they really believed was the way to keep off evil spirits (utterance_1778) +oh the thieves he cried (utterance_1779) +there was bad as the beggars (utterance_1780) +what art though guarding so carefully she asked her brother (utterance_1781) +he and colo were walking beside the wagon for a change (utterance_1782) +the lattices right so she and her mother and aunt could enjoy the fresh air (utterance_1783) +they're my doll said the little girl sadly as she patted the bundle beside her (utterance_1784) +i take them with an offering to the holy river poor little woman (utterance_1785) +must thou sacrifice thy toys too (utterance_1786) +smarter uncle as he patted her head (utterance_1787) +chapter forty nine greggs is stubborn (utterance_1788) +the days gludded by with the stiffness and crispy's limbs growing thus painful and the pony recovering fast for the clear mountain air seemed to act like a cure for wounds (utterance_1789) +every day the cave showed the injured animal in bitter condition (utterance_1790) +at's efforts to move no longer made christenings and forget his own pains and those he fell at seeing the mustang suffer (utterance_1791) +everyone was busy for the keeping watch regularly took up a good deal of time (utterance_1792) +it's all nonsense ned cried chris for them to think that they're staying on account of us hullo griggs were you listening (utterance_1793) +how did your pony go this morning splendid (utterance_1794) +just haunted the litter on the bare leg but is better than a worse yesterday (utterance_1795) +did you counter this morning counter (utterance_1796) +we went at a good swing gallop and what about you (utterance_1797) +oh i'm only a little stiff still (utterance_1798) +we should get strong more quickly journeying or the plains or climbing in and now among the mountains (utterance_1799) +he says we're deserted to morrow at daybreak (utterance_1800) +who are cried chris (utterance_1801) +but we sha'n't my lad why not (utterance_1802) +because of scene indians again (utterance_1803) +oh you're all a singing indians again (utterance_1804) +while they show themselves to me i didn't want them said griggs stridely (utterance_1805) +then artful lot never been away at all i believe (utterance_1806) +we couldn't see him but if you may start they had been close upon a heels directly (utterance_1807) +ah you have to trap them chris said ned maliciously (utterance_1808) +look here if you say that again we shall quail here that griggs (utterance_1809) +oh yes i hear serve you right (utterance_1810) +if he can show us a better way had better hold her tongue (utterance_1811) +very well i can do that said ned haughtily (utterance_1812) +there that's enough cried chris don't be so petty ned (utterance_1813) +that's right cried griggs (utterance_1814) +look here lads i've just been trying that place again (utterance_1815) +and he turned the doctor likes (utterance_1816) +being shot up i followed with both an arrow sounds bad enough but there's not much risk here (utterance_1817) +i don't know about that said chris anxiously (utterance_1818) +don't you will i do (utterance_1819) +i should be running fast and dodging in and out among the rocks and cheese (utterance_1820) +but the enemy won't be standing still continued griggs (utterance_1821) +i don't believe there's a bitter risk for me i shall be all right (utterance_1822) +but that animals would be well back in that hall said chris (utterance_1823) +yes melad but i want them to be planted for the backstool (utterance_1824) +i'm afraid father would say that the ponies ought to be close at hand (utterance_1825) +yes that's right if it can be done but it'll go hard with us all if the indians gave up the bay of the trap and turned upon those who said it (utterance_1826) +well you must talk it a rue with father said chris (utterance_1827) +too many redskins about as i told you (utterance_1828) +there are always too many red skins about cried chris impatiently (utterance_1829) +i wish you could charge them boldly and send them flying over the plains (utterance_1830) +never to come back again said ned sharply (utterance_1831) +not quite milads don't you see that we're playing a very ticklish game (utterance_1832) +just then the doctor came to the shelter with the boys having talking ringing with an awegin levin shooting rather trying to shoot for he had had no success and they two were talking earnestly about ways and means (utterance_1833) +oh here your griggs cried the doctor (utterance_1834) +had a good turn of scouting yes sir (utterance_1835) +the indians are shipped over the quarters and therein allow us ocrit a position as we could contrive for our purpose (utterance_1836) +we must get away from here to some good hunting ground (utterance_1837) +that the indian seemed to be camping or only on the roof (utterance_1838) +this seemed to me to be hatching up some daughter another replied griggs (utterance_1839) +then he began to walk up and down forward evidently deeply thought (utterance_1840) +there he said has made of my mind (utterance_1841) +it is very evident that we may wait here at tarry's doors like saucepan and be as far off our pecuniary duty we seek as ever (utterance_1842) +the indians cannot we cannot and they seem to know it (utterance_1843) +going to give up young chris's plan said beauc's father (utterance_1844) +no i'm going to put it in foresail once we start to night (utterance_1845) +but all the same we can be making up preparations (utterance_1846) +the barrels can be flowed with water and every one's bottom (utterance_1847) +provisions can be packed in our wallets in fact everything he'll ready for a start (utterance_1848) +finally just at thus the animals can be driven into food and watered and (utterance_1849) +exactly said the doctor (utterance_1850) +but before any more said griggs i'll want to offer you the opportunity to go back (utterance_1851) +what for said good sharply (utterance_1852) +not a bit of it sir i'm going to take care they don't pet me (utterance_1853) +i want to do a bit to carry out young chris's plan i shut up the restaurant for a week or two perhaps a month while we get right away (utterance_1854) +there is a horrible saturnt griggs (utterance_1855) +what be if we let them get the better of us sir (utterance_1856) +you mean the shutting of the enemy here stars (utterance_1857) +he jockleaded crigs so sharply that the boy started serve him right if they did sir (utterance_1858) +what business have they to warn our sculps but we shouldn't shut the mob to start (utterance_1859) +they'd have weeks a work before they could get their horses out but with our horses they be all in the week (utterance_1860) +star nonsense (utterance_1861) +but there i don't want to make speeches it's all settled gentlemen (utterance_1862) +well you've got to tell the lookout with coming off (utterance_1863) +now every one understand that he is to be ready without showing any washwood and dense doubt that there is something on the way (utterance_1864) +yet so strong was the effect upon him of contemplating a large fortune that in despite of reason and desire he lived in eager expectation of the word which should make him rich (utterance_1865) +a part of that impression was due to the engagement which he must now fulfil (utterance_1866) +to shuffle out of this duty would make him too ignoble even in his own eyes (utterance_1867) +because in his salad days he dallied with a girl who had indeed many charms step by step he had come to the necessity of sacrificing his prospects to that raw attachment (utterance_1868) +unable to think of work he left the house and wandered pollubly about regent's park (utterance_1869) +he felt himself ill used by destiny and therefore by marian who was fate's instrument (utterance_1870) +he wrote to marian (utterance_1871) +will you let me hear or come and see me (utterance_1872) +i scarcely thought of buffernus likely to kill himself (utterance_1873) +but why that jesus did he go all the way out there (utterance_1874) +i hope you would bring me some news (utterance_1875) +poverty i can only suppose (utterance_1876) +but i will see well down i hadn't come across bethin for a long time (utterance_1877) +once he still saw very poor (utterance_1878) +asked amy compassionately (utterance_1879) +i am afraid so his book failed utterly (utterance_1880) +oh if i had imagined him still in such distress surely i might have done something to help him (utterance_1881) +perchance his death was imparted trebutable to that hopeless love (utterance_1882) +he sent me a copy of his novel she said and i saw him once or twice after that (utterance_1883) +having this subject to converse upon put the two more quickly at ease than could otherwise have been the case (utterance_1884) +i mean might take a foremost place among brilliant women (utterance_1885) +especially now that her father is threatened with blindness (utterance_1886) +is it so serious (utterance_1887) +even if mister yule recovers his side it is not at all likely that he will be able to work as before (utterance_1888) +our difficulties are so grave that (utterance_1889) +he paused and let his hand fail despondently (utterance_1890) +i have a good deal of will you remember and what i have set my mind upon no doubt i shall some day achieve (utterance_1891) +there was silence (utterance_1892) +the last three years he continued have made no slight difference in my position (utterance_1893) +recall where i stood when you first knew me (utterance_1894) +just now i am in need of a little encouragement (utterance_1895) +you don't notice any falling off in my work recently (utterance_1896) +do you see my things in the current and so on generally (utterance_1897) +sometimes i believe i have detected you when there was no signature (utterance_1898) +postorion that girl's paper has attracted attention (utterance_1899) +and i could so easily put her at rest by renouncing all claim upon her (utterance_1900) +i surmise that that you yourself would also be put at rest by such a decision (utterance_1901) +don't look at me with that ironical smile he pleaded (utterance_1902) +i couldn't go about declaring that i was harp broken in any of it i must be content for people to judge me according to their disposition and judgements are pretty sure to be unfavorable what can i do (utterance_1903) +the case is too delicate i fear for my advice (utterance_1904) +well i'll go back to my scribbly (utterance_1905) +again jasper held the white soft hayed for a superfluous moment (utterance_1906) +look for such feelings he reproached himself and the reproach made him angry (utterance_1907) +marian could not mistake the air of restless trouble on her companion's smooth countenance (utterance_1908) +she had divined that there was some grave reason for this sums and the pading with which she approached was half caused by the anxious beats of her heart (utterance_1909) +he began abruptly (utterance_1910) +he gave her such details as he had obtained then added (utterance_1911) +there are two of my companions falling in the battle (utterance_1912) +i ought to think myself a lucky fellow marrying what (utterance_1913) +you are better fitted to fight your way jasper (utterance_1914) +more of a great bemain (utterance_1915) +you know very well i don't (utterance_1916) +i have made up my mind about air affairs he went on presently (utterance_1917) +lips (utterance_1918) +will you marry me and let us take your chains (utterance_1919) +you feel yourself indispensable to your father at present (utterance_1920) +i should be so afraid of the effect upon his health jasper (utterance_1921) +she paused and looked up at him touchingly (utterance_1922) +dear i can't feel it would be my duty to announce you because my father had become blind (utterance_1923) +has one thing occurred to you (utterance_1924) +will he consent to receive an allowance from a person whose name is missus milvain (utterance_1925) +and if he obstinately refuses what then what is before him (utterance_1926) +she listened anxiously and reflected (utterance_1927) +as i have said there is a very serious doubt whether your father would accept money from you when you were my wife (utterance_1928) +it isn't your fault marian and well then there's only one thing to do (utterance_1929) +except jasper but if father is helpless i must find means of assuring his support (utterance_1930) +do you think them insommotable (utterance_1931) +that is just what i have decided is impossible now you shall have the plain truth (utterance_1932) +i don't trust myself (utterance_1933) +but shall you face them willingly (utterance_1934) +pull up your rumbrel and marian (utterance_1935) +what do i care for a drop of rain she exclaimed with passionate sadness when all my life is at stake how am i to understand you (utterance_1936) +every word you speak seems intended to dishearten me (utterance_1937) +why need you conceal it if that is the truth (utterance_1938) +is that what you mean by saying you distrust yourself (utterance_1939) +we must see each other again marian (utterance_1940) +how am i to live an hour in such uncertainty as this (utterance_1941) +i'll do wish it (utterance_1942) +her emotion had an effect on him and his voice trembled (utterance_1943) +there is no natural law that a child should surrender everything for her parents (utterance_1944) +you know so much more of the world than i did can't you advise me (utterance_1945) +is there no way of providing for my father (utterance_1946) +good god this is frightful marian i can't stand it (utterance_1947) +i will be faithful to you (utterance_1948) +he had made a pretence of holding his umbrella over her but marian turned away and walked to a little distance and stood beneath the shelter of a great tree her face averted from him (utterance_1949) +livita followed he saw that her frame was shaken by soundless sobbing (utterance_1950) +in what can there be more selfishness (utterance_1951) +but i couldn't say a word that would seem to invite such misery as this (utterance_1952) +you don't love me jasper and that's an end of everything (utterance_1953) +happiness or misery come to us by fate (utterance_1954) +is it he my power to make you happy (utterance_1955) +but if you had said you loved me before that i should have it always to remember (utterance_1956) +if i believe anything i believe that i did love you (utterance_1957) +what can you say to me more than you have said now (utterance_1958) +remember me as a man who disregarded priceless love such as yours to go and make himself a proud position among fools and knaves indeed that's what it's come to (utterance_1959) +soon enough you would thoroughly despise me and though i should know it was merited my perverse pride would revolt against it (utterance_1960) +what can be simpler than the truth (utterance_1961) +it is a thing that happens every day either in a man or woman and all that all a demands is the courage to confess the truth (utterance_1962) +marian will you do this will you let her engagement last for another six months but without her meeting during that time (utterance_1963) +that seems to be childish (utterance_1964) +the rain fell unceasingly and with it began to mingle an autondal mist (utterance_1965) +just the delay demanded they asked calmly (utterance_1966) +are you going to the museum yes (utterance_1967) +go home again for this morning marian your can't work (utterance_1968) +i must and i have no time to lose (utterance_1969) +good by she gave him her hand (utterance_1970) +they looked at each other for an instant that marian left the shelter of the tree opened her umbrella had walked quickly away (utterance_1971) +jasper did not watch her he had the face of a man who was suffering a severe humiliation (utterance_1972) +his sister said very little for she recognized genuine suffering in his times and aspect (utterance_1973) +a few weeks ago he actually proposed to a woman for whom he does not pretend to have the slightest affection but who is very rich and who seemed likely to be foolish enough to marry him (utterance_1974) +yesterday morning he received her final answer a refusal (utterance_1975) +you will understand they surely you need no fresh proof how utterly unworthy he is of you (utterance_1976) +you're the only friend i have of my own sex and i could not bear to lose you (utterance_1977) +several days passed before there came a reply (utterance_1978) +i must only ask that you will write to me without the least reference to these troubles tell me always about yourself and be sure that you cannot tell me too much (utterance_1979) +we have succeeded in a massing two hundred ounces of silver enough i trust to erect a handsome brown figure (utterance_1980) +too be sure it seems a shame yet if i could steal the money this priest is boasting about i could live at ease for the rest of my days and so he began casting about how best he might compass his purpose (utterance_1981) +but the priest far from guessing the drift of his comrade's thoughts journeyed cheerfully on till they reached the town of coona (utterance_1982) +here there is an arm of the sea which is crossed in fairy boats that start as soon as some twenty or thirty passengers are gathered together and in one of these boats the two travellers embarked (utterance_1983) +when the boatmen and passengers heard the splash and saw the priest struggling in the water they were afraid and made every effort to save him but the wind was fair and the boat running swiftly under the bellying sails so they were soon a few hundred yards off from the drowning man who sank before the boat could be turned to rescue him (utterance_1984) +when he saw this the rooum feigned the utmost grief and dismay and said to his fellow passengers this praised whom we have just lost was my cousin he was going to kioto to visit the shrine of his patron and as i happened to have business there as well we settled to travel together (utterance_1985) +now alas by this misfortune my cousin is dead and i am left alone (utterance_1986) +he spoke so feelingly and wept so freely that the passengers believed his story and pitied and tried to comfort him (utterance_1987) +then the romans said to the boatman (utterance_1988) +what thank you gentlemen added he turning to the other travellers (utterance_1989) +they of course were only too glad to avoid any hindrance to there onward journey and all with one voice agreed to what the ruin had proposed and so the matter was settled (utterance_1990) +when at length they reached the shore they left the boat and every man went his way but the roman overjoyed in his heart took the wandering priest's luggage and putting it with his own pursued his journey to kioto (utterance_1991) +fortune favouring his speculations he began to amass great wealth and lived at his ease denying himself nothing and in the course of time he married a wife who bore him a child (utterance_1992) +since then all was gone well with me yet had i not been poor i had never turned a sasten northeaf (utterance_1993) +he would have fled into the house but the ghost stretched forth its withered arm and clutching the back of his neck scalded him with a vindictive glare and a hideous ghastliness of mean so unspeakably awful that any ordinary man would have swooned with fear (utterance_1994) +at length undone by such ceaseless vexation took a bay fell ill and kept muttering o misery misery the wandering priest is coming to torture me (utterance_1995) +now it chanced that the story reached the ears of a certain wandering priest too lodged in the next train (utterance_1996) +and hiding his head under the coverlet he lay quivering all over (utterance_1997) +three years ago at the coonifaring you flung me into the water and well you remember it (utterance_1998) +happily continued the priest i had learned to swim and to dive as a boy so i reached the shore and after wandering through many provinces succeeded in setting up a bronze figure to buddha thus fulfilling the wish of my heart (utterance_1999) +on my journey homewards i took a lodging in the next street and there heard of your marvelous ailment (utterance_2000) +thinking i could divine its cause that came to see you and i'm glad to find i was not mistaken (utterance_2001) +and would it not ill become me to bear malice (utterance_2002) +repent therefore in abandon your evil ways (utterance_2003) +to see you do so i should esteem the height of happiness (utterance_2004) +be of good cheer now and look me in the face and you will see that i am really a living man and no vengeful goblin come to torment you (utterance_2005) +in a fit of madness i was tempted to kill and rob you (utterance_2006) +fortune befriended me ever after but the richer i grew the more keenly i felt how wicked i had been and the more i foresaw that my victim's vengeance would some day overtake me (utterance_2007) +haunted by this thought i lost my nerve till one night i beheld your spirit and from that time forth fell ill (utterance_2008) +but how you manage to escape in her still alive it's more than i can understand (utterance_2009) +a guilty man said the priest with a smile shudders at the rustling of the wind or the chattering of his storks beak a murderer's conscience praise upon his mind till he sees what is not (utterance_2010) +every well ordered japanese home of the old fashioned kind has its little shrine which is the centre of the religious life of the house (utterance_2011) +she it is who sets the rice and wine before the ancestral tablets who lights the little lamp each night and who sees that at each feast day in anniversary season the proper food is prepared and set out for the household gods (utterance_2012) +these must be kept carefully by the mother is a safe guard against the many ables that beset child life (utterance_2013) +visits to noted temples by relatives and friends often result in additions to the child's collection (utterance_2014) +all these were put together by the careful mother and preserved as jealously as queen of theo kept the charred stick that governed the destiny of her son (utterance_2015) +as the children arrive at years of discretion these treasures pass out of the mother's faithful keeping into the hands of their actual owners and their usually kept sport away in some little use drawer cabinet until death removes the necessity for any further safeguards over life (utterance_2016) +each animal brings its own kind of good or bad luck into the hour day or year over which it provides and only a skilful balancer of prose and cons can read a right the combinations and understand what the luck of any particular hour in any particular day of any particular year will be (utterance_2017) +for the greater events of family life the home prophecies are felt to be too uncertain in the services of the fortune teller must be called him (utterance_2018) +no well managed family would think of building a new house without finding in what direction to pace the front door (utterance_2019) +after this manner has been settled in the house has fairly begun there are occasional crises in its construction upon which much depends (utterance_2020) +of these the most important is the day when the roof is raised (utterance_2021) +the house owner then besides whether the day sat by the builder as a lucky one for himself and his family (utterance_2022) +a present of money to each workmen is also in order and will conduce to the rapid and faithful execution of the job at hand when at last the house is finished in carpenters and plasterers are ready to leave it the local firemen who have assisted all along in the building as uncilled laborers often ascend to the roof and from the bridge pole cast down cakes for which the children and the neighborhood scrambled joyfully (utterance_2023) +all come who can and those who cannot come since servants or provisions (utterance_2024) +on the day after the death often in the evening the body must be placed in the cask's shaped coffin that until recently was a style commonly in using japan (utterance_2025) +now among the wealthier classes the long coffin has superseded the small square or round one but the smaller expense connected with the burial in the old way makes a survival of an old type a necessity for the majority of japanese (utterance_2026) +at an appointed time all the relatives assemble in the death chamber and preparations are made for the bathing of the corpse (utterance_2027) +there is no official ceremonial morning of parents for their children nor does custom require them to perform any of the last riots or attend the funeral (utterance_2028) +upon the younger brothers and sisters falls the duty of attending to all of the last sad ministrations (utterance_2029) +when the body has been washed it is as dressed in white and silk hawautae whenever the family can afford it (utterance_2030) +the body too be placed in the coffin must be folded into a sitting posture the chin resting upon the knees the position of the mummies found in many aboriginal american tombs (utterance_2031) +this difficult to us apparently impossible feat safely accomplished there are placed in the coffin and number of small things that the dead takes with him to the next world (utterance_2032) +the single exception to this roll about metal is that small copper coins may be put in to see the old hag who guards the bank of the river of death (utterance_2033) +last of all the vacant spaces in the coffin are filled in with bags of tea (utterance_2034) +so long as the coffin is in the house it must be watched over continually (utterance_2035) +it is their duty to see that the incense burning before the coughness never allowed to go out while the food for the dead is renewed of regular intervals by the mourners themselves (utterance_2036) +there are few enlightened japanese who will defend the present system of cruelty to the afflicted or who do not long for some change but so great as the force of conservatives and this regard so haunting the fear that any change may indicate a lack of respect for the dead that reform advances slowly (utterance_2037) +individual instances occur in which some of the worst features of these customs are modified (utterance_2038) +a case in point is that of the late mister fucusaua a man whose life was devoted to the advancement of his countrymen in modern ways and who in his death continued his teaching (utterance_2039) +in this will he provided that his body was to be buried without washing in the clothing in which he died (utterance_2040) +through this growing feeling and the unselfishness of maternal affection may come in time the release from these mournful ceremonies (utterance_2041) +just before the procession starts a religious ceremony is held at the house which is attended by the friends of the deceased and which is substantially the same as that performed at the cemetery (utterance_2042) +on the day of the burial great bunches of natural flowers are sent to the dead each bunch so large as to require the services of one man to carry it (utterance_2043) +sometimes with the gift a man is sent to take part in the procession but if the giver feels too poor to hire a man this burden too falls upon the bereaved household for edicate requires that all flowers sent be borne to the grave by uniform coolies who march in the funeral train (utterance_2044) +another favorite present at this time among buddhist is a cage of living birds too be born to the grave and released thereon (utterance_2045) +it seems more like a bride old than a burial (utterance_2046) +during this period the spirit of the deceased is supposed to be still inhabiting the house and a tablet or shrine is set up in the death chamber before which food and flowers are renewed daily (utterance_2047) +of course you must be a wain anne said diana (utterance_2048) +of course it would be romantic conceded jane andreas but i know that i couldn't keep stone (utterance_2049) +but it's so ridiculous to have a red headed elaine warned anne (utterance_2050) +and a lane was a lily man (utterance_2051) +your complexion is just as fair as rubies said diana earnestly and your hair is ever so much darker than it used to be before you could it (utterance_2052) +it was splendid to fish for chat over the beach and the two girls learned to row themselves about in the little flat bottomed during the sebericate products shooting (utterance_2053) +it was annudiated that the dramatized a lane (utterance_2054) +those day she said were so much more romantic than the present (utterance_2055) +they had often gone down like this and nothing could be more convenient for playing a lane (utterance_2056) +the black shell having been procured anne sped it over the flat and then lay down on the bottom with closed eyes and hands folded over her breast (utterance_2057) +it spoils the effect because this is hundreds of years before missus lunde was borne (utterance_2058) +ten year bunches (utterance_2059) +it's silly for a lane to be talking when she's done (utterance_2060) +jane rested the occasion (utterance_2061) +that behind the landing (utterance_2062) +anne gave one gasping little scream which nobody ever heard she was white to the lips but she did not lose her self possession (utterance_2063) +there was one chance just one (utterance_2064) +under such circumstances you don't think much about making a flowery prayer (utterance_2065) +the flat drifted under the breadth and then promptly sank in mid stream (utterance_2066) +ruby jane and diana already awaiting it on the lower headland saw it disappear before their very eyes and had no doubt but that anne had gone down with it (utterance_2067) +the minutes passed by a seeming like an hour to the unfortunate lily maid (utterance_2068) +why didn't somebody come where had the girls gone (utterance_2069) +her imagination began to suggest all manner of curse and possibilities to her (utterance_2070) +anne shirley (utterance_2071) +how on earth is you it up there he exclaimed (utterance_2072) +it was certainly extremely difficult to be dignified under the circumstances (utterance_2073) +what has happened anne (utterance_2074) +asked gilbert taking up his orders (utterance_2075) +we were playing in lane explained anne frigile without even looking at her rescue and ahead to drift down to camelot in the barge and in the fight (utterance_2076) +for a moment anne hesitated (utterance_2077) +her heart gave a quick clear little bee (utterance_2078) +her resentment which to other an older people might be slaffable at its cause was in no wit allayed and softened by time seemingly (utterance_2079) +no she said coldly i shall never be friends with you gilbert blythe and i don't want to be (utterance_2080) +all right (utterance_2081) +i'll never ask you to be friends again anne shirley that i don't care either (utterance_2082) +of course he had insulted her terribly but still (utterance_2083) +everything i do gets me or my dearest friends into escape (utterance_2084) +and for sentiment proved more trustworthy than for sentiments are apt to do (utterance_2085) +will you ever have any sense anne grined marilla (utterance_2086) +i don't say how said marilla (utterance_2087) +ever since i came to green gables i've been making mistakes and each mistake has helped to cure me of some great short coming (utterance_2088) +vanity and vexation of spain (utterance_2089) +the spring was abroad in the land and realist sober middle aged step was lighter and swifter because of its deep primal gladness (utterance_2090) +i must say with all her thoughts i never found her disobedient or untrustworthy before and i'm real sorry to find her so now (utterance_2091) +perhaps she had judging her too hastily marilla (utterance_2092) +of course i knew you'd take her part mattie but i'm bringing her up not you (utterance_2093) +demanded marilla anxiously going over to the bed (utterance_2094) +anne cowered deeper into her pillas as if desirous of hiding herself rever from mortal eyes no (utterance_2095) +get right up this minute and tell me (utterance_2096) +this minute i say diana what is it (utterance_2097) +and had slid to the floor in despairing obedience (utterance_2098) +yes it's green moaned anne (utterance_2099) +i thought nothing could be as bad as red hair (utterance_2100) +he even got an end to any scrape for ever too month and i was sure another one was due (utterance_2101) +now then what did you do to your hair (utterance_2102) +and shirley didn't you know it was a wicked thing to do (utterance_2103) +yes i know it was a little wicked admitted anne (utterance_2104) +i know what it feels like to have you a word added (utterance_2105) +and missus allan says we should never suspect any one of not telling us the truth unless we have proof at their not (utterance_2106) +but i hadn't been and i believed every word he said implicitly (utterance_2107) +who said are you talking about (utterance_2108) +oh i didn't let him in the house (utterance_2109) +in a trice i saw myself with beautiful raven black hair and the temptation was irresistible (utterance_2110) +oh marilla what had tangled webbly weave when first we practiced to deceive (utterance_2111) +you hear must be cut off there is no other way he can go out with a little like that (utterance_2112) +with a dismal sigh she went for the scissors (utterance_2113) +but there is nothing comforting and having your hair cut off because you've died at a dreadful color is there (utterance_2114) +i'm going to weep all the time of cutting it off if it wanted a fear (utterance_2115) +it seems such a tragic thing (utterance_2116) +anne wept then but later on when she went up stairs and looked in the glass she was calm with despair (utterance_2117) +yes i will too (utterance_2118) +i never thought i was a vein about my hair of all things but now i know i was in spite of its being rain because it was so long and thick and curly (utterance_2119) +i expect something how will happen to my nose next (utterance_2120) +anne's clipped head made a sensation in school in the following monday but to her relief nobody guessed the real reason for it not even justly pie who however did not fail to inform anne that she looked like a perfect scarecrow (utterance_2121) +it's hard to be told you look like a scarfed kicked scarecrow and i wanted to say something back but i did it (utterance_2122) +i meant she feel very virtuous when you forgive people doesn't it (utterance_2123) +i mean to devote all my energies to being good after this and i shall never try to be beautiful again (utterance_2124) +of course it's better to be good (utterance_2125) +i do really want to be good marilla like you and missus allan and miss stacy and grow up to be a credit to you (utterance_2126) +diana says when my hair begins to grow to tie a black velvet ribbon around my head at the bow at one side (utterance_2127) +i will call it a snude it sounds serematic (utterance_2128) +my head is better now (utterance_2129) +it is terrible by this afternoon there (utterance_2130) +genia avonlea found it hard to settle down to hum drumming systems again (utterance_2131) +perhaps after a while i'll get used to it but i'm afraid concerts spoil people for every day life (utterance_2132) +i suppose that is why marilla disapproves of them (utterance_2133) +i feel just now that i may grow up to be sensible yet (utterance_2134) +i just lay awake and imagine the concert over and over again (utterance_2135) +eventually however avonlea's school slipped back into its old groove and took up its old interests (utterance_2136) +none of the sloanes would have any dealings with the bows because the bells had declared that the sloanes had too much to do in the program and the sloans had retorted that the bells were not capable of doing the little they had to do properly (utterance_2137) +the winter weeks slipped by (utterance_2138) +on anne's birthday they were tripping lightly down it keeping eyes and ears alert amid all the chatter for miss stacy had told them that they must soon read a composition on a winter's walk in the woods and it behooved them to be observant (utterance_2139) +i can scarcely realize that i mean my teens (utterance_2140) +it's a great comfort to think that i'll be able to use big words then without being laughed at (utterance_2141) +ruby gillis thinks of nothing but both said anne disdainfully (utterance_2142) +she is actually delighted when anyone writes her name of the new take notice for all she pretends to be so man (utterance_2143) +i'm trying to be as much like missus allan as i possibly can for i think she's perfect (utterance_2144) +if i had alice bell's crooked nose said anne decidedly i wouldn't but there (utterance_2145) +i'm afraid i think too much about my nose ever since i heard that compliment about it long ago (utterance_2146) +oh diana look there's a rabbit (utterance_2147) +they're so white and still as if they were asleep in dreaming pretty dreams (utterance_2148) +i read at last monday evening (utterance_2149) +it's called the jealous rival or in death not divided (utterance_2150) +i read it to marilla and she said it was stuff in nonsense (utterance_2151) +it's a sad sweet story (utterance_2152) +cordelia was a regal brindet with a coronet of midnight hair and duskly flashing eyes (utterance_2153) +you know so much more than you did when you were only twelve (utterance_2154) +they grew in beauty side by side until they were sixteen (utterance_2155) +i asked ruby gillis if she knew anything about how men proposed because i thought she'd likely be an authority on the subject having so many sisters married (utterance_2156) +but she pretended to be jolly and's friend the same as ever (utterance_2157) +let'sy you and me have a story club all around and write stories for practice (utterance_2158) +you ought to cultivate your imagination you know miss daisy says so (utterance_2159) +only we must take the right way (utterance_2160) +this was how the story club came into existence (utterance_2161) +no boys were allowed in it although ruby gillis a pin that their admission would make it more exciting and each member had to produce one story a week (utterance_2162) +each girl has to read her story out loud and then we talk it over (utterance_2163) +mine is rosamond mont morcery all the girls see pretty well (utterance_2164) +i am sure that must have a horse in the fact (utterance_2165) +the more was the great thing mister allan says so (utterance_2166) +i read one of my stories to him in missus allan and they both agreed that the moral was excellent (utterance_2167) +jane and ruby almost always cry when they come to the pathetic parts (utterance_2168) +miss jessienberry wrote back that she had never read anything so amusing in her life (utterance_2169) +i'm sure missus allan was never such a silly forgetful little girl as you are (utterance_2170) +i felt so encouraged when i heard that (utterance_2171) +missus lynde's has she always felt shocked when she hears of any one ever having been naughty no matter how small they were (utterance_2172) +now i wouldn't have felt that way (utterance_2173) +pelic's neckers the generally of lady man of the hall had just brought the boys up from saiterville to its place they had journeyed from a tartar on the regular afternoon boat running up cayougalik (utterance_2174) +with the rivers had come thread katison naddy called me and several others of the old school chums (utterance_2175) +oh how do you do missus tong (utterance_2176) +and he ran to meet the head teacher (utterance_2177) +well thomas i hope you have left all your plans behind observed george stunk (utterance_2178) +hollow relic (utterance_2179) +of gaining the king hounds and (utterance_2180) +you'll let me go say you're a stick in plants in my hand hold papa (utterance_2181) +he moaned astol ran off drawing a vase of her tiny tax as he did so (utterance_2182) +so you come back have you (utterance_2183) +observed missus green as tom stopped at the kitchen door (utterance_2184) +asked home and that his face fell (utterance_2185) +oh dear you always did put me down as versailles boy in the school when i i do my very best and almost sobbing tom put his face up against the coat sleeved (utterance_2186) +missus green was very tender hearted and spied offered somewhat free tongue and she was all sympathy immediately (utterance_2187) +dat ere's home i don't mean to hurt your feelings she said solingly (utterance_2188) +ay i don't know sobbed tom (utterance_2189) +jump said down and have a pie that's a good boy (utterance_2190) +it's fairly like home he murmured presently (utterance_2191) +missus green may you die they ought to edict an off libic monument over your grave (utterance_2192) +what was her trouble tom and donship (utterance_2193) +and yet with it all she couldn't help but like the boy (utterance_2194) +and to think the stove just again (utterance_2195) +and he mobbed his bow with his bread bent down a handkerchief (utterance_2196) +what kind of joke is that must outrow (utterance_2197) +oh it's not a joke you're handsome (utterance_2198) +having got a cambada to be sure heird of tis (utterance_2199) +sam drew a tiny box from his pocket (utterance_2200) +we'll stand still and i'll take his nat shops out (utterance_2201) +those stand of state and look happy (utterance_2202) +cried sam as the cow collected around (utterance_2203) +raise your right hand to your breast this is all statesman do (utterance_2204) +though great a minute and the petulant be finished (utterance_2205) +no this is a new painted process (utterance_2206) +sam drew a square of the ten from the box (utterance_2207) +i don't see any picture girls lovers looking at the square blankly (utterance_2208) +as a little fresh yet (utterance_2209) +the boys gathered around set up a shout (utterance_2210) +sam rower i'll get square see if i don't (utterance_2211) +he murmured so innocently is a little good picture (utterance_2212) +sylvie asked for the donkey (utterance_2213) +a donkey or pelic i did nothing of the tide (utterance_2214) +it's a donkey's head i say (utterance_2215) +and i say to your picture (utterance_2216) +i guess i know a donkey's head when i see it runs it over (utterance_2217) +felix that a sum must take here (utterance_2218) +oh you can't choke me no more (utterance_2219) +one night when both was sleeping the prince had a remarkable dream (utterance_2220) +they rushed into the room added their cries to hers and forgetting all their form of precautions left the doors open so that the guards outside hearing the clamor entered and saw the prince (utterance_2221) +she is a disgrace to her family and shall soon see her husband impaled on a stake (utterance_2222) +then that his forehead disfigured by a fearful frown he continued to abuse the prince and having tied his hands behind him tied him from the room (utterance_2223) +treated thus like some wild beast dothly shaken and neglected drives of ahannah would have suffered greatly had he not been protected by the magic world giving to him in bartella and which he had complied to conceal in his hair (utterance_2224) +advancing therefore with a large army he prepared to be siege sumpar the capital sery (utterance_2225) +a terrible battle ensued in which both kings were formed prodigies of valor (utterance_2226) +should there be any pity for the violator of the harum (utterance_2227) +if the old king my father now in his dotage was foolish enough to favour the criminal for the sake of his worthless daughter you had no need of his permission and ought not to have been influenced by him (utterance_2228) +let that wife the deucer be immediately put to that my torture and his fair mole be shut up and prison till i come (utterance_2229) +have ready also of fierce elephants suitably equipped which i savount immediately after the very too all take my army in march against the enemy then as i set out i will make the elephant trample the life out of that criminal (utterance_2230) +while he stood there calmly awaiting that his now seemed inevitable he suddenly felt his feet free and a beautiful lady appeared before him (utterance_2231) +she humbly bound downside let my lord pardon her servant for the injury which she has unconsciously caused (utterance_2232) +time and upsets born from the rays of the moon (utterance_2233) +one day as i was flying through the air wearing a white dress a swan was taking me for a lotus lard attacked me (utterance_2234) +in his anger he cursed me saying a whole wicked one for this offence you arten them to be changed into a piece of unconscious metal (utterance_2235) +the change took place immediately and i fell to the ground turned into a silver chain (utterance_2236) +on his way he saw that silver fettled descended to the ground picked it up and continued his fight (utterance_2237) +this letter of general rotmoir hearing this came one of the palace and quickly mounting near the front kohad down his tongue to deceive him placed himself behind the prince (utterance_2238) +kate forsadria's astonishment and joy when daedicately chatter the prince exclaiming is it possible (utterance_2239) +is it really you my dear friend abahadauama who hath done the steed (utterance_2240) +too these they forced their way and flying with good effects the weapons placed on the elephant for the use of tender rama (utterance_2241) +before however they had gone far they heard the noise of battle at at distance and saw the soldier in front of them scattered in all directions (utterance_2242) +we have just now encountered and utterly defeated the enemy so that there is no fear of any further assistance (utterance_2243) +i do not hardly to this (utterance_2244) +out of curiosity he held one of them outside his house (utterance_2245) +in cases of scorpan's things the maramedison men drive up patent ploughs as with human milk or juice of the milk hedge plant you forbear through calic and apply them to the parts (utterance_2246) +when the amvilical guard of our own baby slaws off aspided as burnt in the fire and its ashes are placed in a copleyed shell mixed with castile oil and applied by means of a fowl feather to the naval (utterance_2247) +may then call the dead man by his name and eagerly wait till some insects settle on the cloth (utterance_2248) +blood was described as losing out of his eyes (utterance_2249) +make the patients at the milk of the breast of a woman whose baby is more than eight days old (utterance_2250) +his campoy told him of a case in which that was said to have the sultan from ending one of these animals cooked with some jack food (utterance_2251) +a few years ago a scare arrows in connection with an insect which was said to have taken up its edward and imported german classpangles which complete foot the indigenous industry of the gasola bangled makers means that was to put it to lie low on the bangle to lip the bearers after warning her to get her affairs in order before sa a combin (utterance_2252) +his body was long and slender hard and a dial his sight keen his aim on erran (utterance_2253) +in the month of algraian karldia had gone out shooting near the swamp of nigi with a few sporting companions (utterance_2254) +one morning as dante was seated in his boat cleaning a favorite gun he suddenly started a port he thought was the cry of white hawk looking up he saw a bellay's man in coming to the water's edge with two white toplings glass to her breast (utterance_2255) +the girl put the birds into the water and once they mightiously (utterance_2256) +looking round can't they saw one of his men binding an unloaded gun at the rocks (utterance_2257) +can't you went on cleaning his gun (utterance_2258) +after county had eaten in trunk the brahman begged him to induce himself can't he give his own name his father's name and yet does of his home and then said in usual way if i can be of any service sir i shall king myself fortunate (utterance_2259) +so saying county repeated his salute and went back (utterance_2260) +the freck boat mansion of the masondas had been borrowed for the burning ceremony which was fixed for the next mark as candy did not wish to delay (utterance_2261) +in due time the pride grew arrived on his elephant with drums and music and with the parts of the procession and the ceremony began (utterance_2262) +in that passful downcast face grown with the dwelling coroner and bed acted with sandal paste he could scarcely recognize the reliced maiden of his fancy and in the fullness of his emotion a mist seemed to be cloud his eyes (utterance_2263) +delight of the lamp seemed to grow them and darkness to tanish the face of the pride herself (utterance_2264) +at first he felt angrily with the father in law the old scoundrel had shown him one girl and married him to another (utterance_2265) +close upon it followed the girl he had seen before (utterance_2266) +oh the mad girl cried the woman as they made signs to her to leave the room (utterance_2267) +while the remaining girl began to titter (utterance_2268) +the increasing laughter in the room betokened and amusing joke (utterance_2269) +with the sigh of intense leaf as of escape on bilamoli he looked once more into the face of his pride (utterance_2270) +the farm had taken this morning meal and now lay curled up on a bed of moss (utterance_2271) +whenever the fawn caught up he was quite content to frisk about (utterance_2272) +the danger was certain now it was near (utterance_2273) +the howls had struck a trail where she turned and the fawn was save (utterance_2274) +one was rolling the other had a gun in his head what should she do (utterance_2275) +her tyrant lakes could not propel the tyrant body rapidly (utterance_2276) +the dola saw the boat neering her (utterance_2277) +in the moment more the boat was on her and the man at the oars had leaned over and caught her (utterance_2278) +i was tormented by thirst but had abstained from drinking for many days according to the doctor's orders (utterance_2279) +that old man sees to give so much annoyance yet sometimes he appear to me in dreams (utterance_2280) +felicia given them orders not to speak to me of this (utterance_2281) +this maid had stolen from me certain little things of some importance and in her fear of being detected she would have been very glad if i had died (utterance_2282) +accordingly she allowed me twice to take as much as i could of the water so that in good earnest i swallowed more than a flask full i then covered myself and began to sweat and fell into a deep sleep (utterance_2283) +we say that my poor friend was on the point of falling to the ground so grieved was he to hear this (utterance_2284) +afterwards he took an ugliest date and began to beat the serving girl with all his mind shouting out ah terratrous you have killed him for me then (utterance_2285) +she mean did have saved my life so led me a help in hand for i have sweated and be quick about it (utterance_2286) +felicia recovered his spirits dried and made me comfortable and i been conscious of a great improvement in my state began to reckon on recovery (utterance_2287) +just then the other doctor bernardino put in his appearance who at the beginning of my illness had refused to bleed me (utterance_2288) +myistru frenchs goes that most able man exclaimed oh power of nature (utterance_2289) +she knows what she requires and the physicians know nothing (utterance_2290) +that simpotent my schubbornardino made uncers saying if he had drunk another bottle he would have been cured upon the spot (utterance_2291) +afterwards he turned to me and ask if i could have drunk more water (utterance_2292) +i answered no because i had entirely quenched my thirst (utterance_2293) +in like manner she was asking for what she wanted when the poor young man begged you to lead him (utterance_2294) +if you knew that his recovery depended upon his drinking two flasks of water why did you not say so before (utterance_2295) +you might then have boasted of his kill (utterance_2296) +at this words the wretched quiet sulkily departed and never showed his face again (utterance_2297) +the very evening i was taken with great precautions in a chair well wrapped up and protected from the cold (utterance_2298) +do not permit him any irregularities for though he has escaped this time another disorder now would be the death of him (utterance_2299) +then he turned to me and said my ben venotto be prudent come in no excesses and when you are quite recovered i begg you to make me a madonna with your own hand and i will always pay my devotions to it for your sake (utterance_2300) +so i made my mind up and prepared to trouble (utterance_2301) +that day many friends came to see me among others pierre larndy who was the best and dearest friend i ever had (utterance_2302) +next day there came a surgeon niccolo de mante a gutto who was also a very great friend of mine (utterance_2303) +i had harboured him in rome and provided for his costs while he had turned my whole house upside down for the man was subject to a species of dry scab which he was always in the habit of scratching with his hand (utterance_2304) +meanwhile that able physician french has called the montevarchy attended to my tio with great skill (utterance_2305) +there they suited me to wait until the duke went by (utterance_2306) +many of my friends at court came up to greet me and expressed surprise that i had undergone the inconvenience of being carried in that way while so shattered by illness this set that i ought to have waited till i was well and then to have visited the duke (utterance_2307) +at this words my sir augustino the duke's tailor made his way through all those gentlemen and said if that's all you want to know you shall know it at this very moment (utterance_2308) +george of the painter whom i have mentioned happened just then to pass and my sera augustino exclaimed there is the man who accused you now you know yourself if it be true or not (utterance_2309) +as free as me as i could not being able to leave my seat i asked george jo if it was true that he had accused me (utterance_2310) +he denied that it was so and that he had ever said anything of the sort (utterance_2311) +my seragasthena retorted you gallows bird (utterance_2312) +don't you know that i know it for most certain (utterance_2313) +george jo made off as quickly as he could repeating that he had not accused me (utterance_2314) +then after a short while the duke came by whereupon i had myself raised up before his excellency and he halted (utterance_2315) +the duke gazed at me and marveled i was still alive afterwards he bade me take heed to be an honest man and regain my house (utterance_2316) +when i reached home mikola de montalgooto came to visit me and told me that i had escaped one of the most dreadful perils in the world quite contrary to all his expectations for he had seen my ruin was able to destroy me (utterance_2317) +i answered that i had done nothing to displease him but that he had endured me and told him all the affair about the mint (utterance_2318) +he repeated get heads as quickly as you can and be of good courage for you will see a vengeance executed sooner than you expect (utterance_2319) +i the best attention to my house gave pietro pagolo that vice about stamping the coins and they went off upon my way to rome without saying a word to the duke of anybody else (utterance_2320) +you want them to immortalize that ferocious tyrant (utterance_2321) +you have never made anything so exquisite which proves you our inveterate foe and their devoted friend and yet the pope and he have had it twice in mind to hang you without any fault of yours (utterance_2322) +it was firmly believed that duke alisadro was the son of pope clavant (utterance_2323) +messer fred chestnut used also to say and swear by all his saints that if he could he would have robbed me of the dyes for that meddle (utterance_2324) +i responded that he had done well to tell me so and that i would take such care of them that he should never see them more (utterance_2325) +i now sent to florence to request loren seno that he would send me the reverse of the medal (utterance_2326) +niccolo de montalgooto to whom i had written wrote back saying that he had spoken to that mad melancholy philosopher lorred c known for it he replied he was thinking night and day of nothing else and that he would finish it as soon as he was able (utterance_2327) +nevertheless i was not to set my hopes upon his reverse but i had better invent one out of my own head and when i had finished it i might bring it without hesitation to the duke for this would be to my advantage (utterance_2328) +i composed the design of a reverse which seemed to me appropriate and pressed the work forward to my best ability (utterance_2329) +this being so as he was a fellow of much humor we used offered to laugh together about the great credit he had gained (utterance_2330) +i therefore dismounted at once got my fouling peas ready and at a very long range brought two of them down with a single ball (utterance_2331) +i never used to shoot with more than one ball and was usually able to hit my mark at two hundred cubits which cannot be done by other ways of loading (utterance_2332) +i lived at my foot and let the water run out then when i had mounted we made haste for rome (utterance_2333) +there was no answer and after one or two ineffectual attempts fraudsey turned fearfully away (utterance_2334) +i'll try and she laid a quick hand on the nose (utterance_2335) +two red spots burned on her cheeks and her pale blue eyes snapped (utterance_2336) +i'm sure i heard it raging up and down (utterance_2337) +i don't want any dinner said charlotte drawing back (utterance_2338) +yes indeed said polly cheerily just as fine as can be (utterance_2339) +assuredly said old mister king with great satisfaction in polly's pleasure and at her success in drawing charlotte out (utterance_2340) +and after this there were no more quiet days for charlotte tauderton (utterance_2341) +oh bless me too phronsie in pleased surprise (utterance_2342) +yes grandpa said phronsie coming in and shutting the door carefully i came on purpose to see you all alone (utterance_2343) +so you did dear said mister king highly gratified and pushing away his writing table he held out his hand (utterance_2344) +oh no grandpapa cried phronsie in a rapture i could never be too big for that so she perched up as of old on his knee then she folded her hands and looked gravely in his face (utterance_2345) +well my dear what is it (utterance_2346) +asked the old gentleman presently you've come to tell me something i suppose (utterance_2347) +yes grandcapa i have said phronsie decidedly and it is most important too grandpapa and oh i do wish it so much and she clasped her hands tighter inside (utterance_2348) +well then fraudsey if you wanted i suppose it must be said mister king quite as a matter of course (utterance_2349) +oh she loved you everything she had phronsie a couple of millions or so it is why (utterance_2350) +charlotte poor repeated the old gentleman (utterance_2351) +one know not exactly her father isn't rich but charlotte i think they do very well especially as i intend to keep her here for a while and then i shall never let her suffer phronsie never indeed (utterance_2352) +grandpapa said phronsie was it missus chatterton aunt to charlotte (utterance_2353) +if missus chatterton was aunt to charlotte persisted phronsie slowly it seems as if charlotte ought to have some of the money it really does grandpapa (utterance_2354) +maybe said the old gentleman with a short laugh and i shouldn't wonder if cousin eunice was sorry over a few other things too phronsie (utterance_2355) +wouldn't it make her very glad if i gave charlotte some of the money (utterance_2356) +for answer mister king set her down hastily on the floor and took two or three turns up and down the room (utterance_2357) +oh i do so wish i might she said there's so much for a little girl like me (utterance_2358) +it would be so nice to have charlotte have some with me still no answer (utterance_2359) +i was writing a note to missus fargo said phronsie putting up her lips for a kiss (utterance_2360) +sure as i can be phronsie said old mister king smiling good by dear (utterance_2361) +there that my sister's boy shall never say that but come in come in (utterance_2362) +not to be ungracious the young man threw himself into a chair (utterance_2363) +oh hang it uncle why can't you let me alone (utterance_2364) +which is a wonder interplated pickering (utterance_2365) +i know you did uncle said pickering you've done everything that's good (utterance_2366) +for heaven's sake pickering cried his uncle darting in front of the chair in its restless occupant don't say that again (utterance_2367) +i've been a lazy dog all my life and a good for not but i hope i've not sunk to that (utterance_2368) +the church bells were ringing and people on the avenue going by to service turned curious inquiring looks up at the great house and then went on talking of the recent events which had so strangely entered into and made history in the city (utterance_2369) +and all through his impassioned appeal this morning there was a note of sadness and rebuke and stern condemnation that made many of the members pale with self accusation or with inward anger (utterance_2370) +raymond had voted to continue for another year this allude (utterance_2371) +the christians of raymonds stood condemned by the result (utterance_2372) +for that had been the fact in raymond for years the saloon ruled (utterance_2373) +president marched that there his usual erect handsome firm right self competent bearing all gone his head bowed upon his breast the great tears rolling down his cheeks unmindful of the fact that never before had he shown outward emotion in a public service (utterance_2374) +what if he had begun to do as jesus would have done long ago (utterance_2375) +when had the first church yielded to such a baptism of tears (utterance_2376) +what had become of its regular precise conventional order of service undisturbed by any vulgar emotion and unmoved by any foolish excitement (utterance_2377) +they had been living so long on their surface feelings that they had almost forgotten the deeper wells of life (utterance_2378) +the meeting was tender it glowed with the spirit's presence it was alive with strong and lasting resolve to begin a war on the whisky power and raiment that would break its rain for ever (utterance_2379) +since the first sunday when the first company of volunteers had pledged themselves to do as jesus would do the different meanings had been characterized by distinct impulses or impressions (utterance_2380) +and all through it ran one general cry for deliverance from the saloon in its awful curse (utterance_2381) +graham his wife were besieged by inquiries who wanted to know what loreen's friends and acquaintances were expected to do in paying their last respects to her (utterance_2382) +grace had gone up to virginia's and after talking it over with her in maxwell the arrangement had been made (utterance_2383) +i am and always have been opposed to large public funerals said grey whose complete wholesome simplicity of character was one of its greatest sources of strength but the cry of the poor creatures who knew loreen is so earnest that i do not know how to refuse this desire to see her and pay her poor body some last little honour what do you think mister maxwell (utterance_2384) +i will be guided by your judgment in the matter (utterance_2385) +i am sure that whatever you and miss page think best will be right (utterance_2386) +under the circumstances i have a greatest taste for what seems like display at such times but this seems different (utterance_2387) +it happened that that afternoon a somewhat noted newspaper correspondent was passing through raymond on his way to an editorial convention in a neighbouring city (utterance_2388) +she was a common street drunkard and yet the surfaces of the tent were as impressive as any i ever witnessed in a metropolitan church over the most distinguished citizen (utterance_2389) +it struck me of course being a stranger in the place with considerable astonishment to hear voices like those one naturally expects to hear only in great churches or concerts at such a meeting as this (utterance_2390) +mister maxwell spoke of the fact that the dead woman had been fully prepared to go but he spoke in a peculiarly sensitive manner of the effect of the liquor business on the lives of man and women like this one (utterance_2391) +raiment of course being a railroad town and the centre of the great packing interests for this region is full of saloons (utterance_2392) +then followed what was perhaps the clear part of this strange service (utterance_2393) +it was one of the simplest and at the same time one of the most impressive sights i ever witnessed (utterance_2394) +there must have been a hundred of these women and i was told many of them had been converted at the meetings just recently (utterance_2395) +the next moment he fell back in amazement before the impetuous rush of a starry eyed flushed cheek the young woman who demanded (utterance_2396) +where is he pete miss billy gasped the old man (utterance_2397) +aunt hannah's cheeks too were flushed in her eyes starry but with dismay and anger the last because she did not like the way peter said miss billy's name (utterance_2398) +it was one matter for her to object to this thing billy was doing but quite another for pete to do it of course it's she (utterance_2399) +retorted aunt hannah testaly as if you yourself didn't bring her here with your crazy messages at this time of night pete where you see (utterance_2400) +interposed billy tell mister bertram i am here or wait i'll go right in in surprise of (utterance_2401) +pete had recovered himself by now but he did not even glance toward aunt hannah (utterance_2402) +miss billy miss billy you're an angel straight from heaven you are oh i'm so glad you came (utterance_2403) +it'll be all right now all right he's in the den miss billy (utterance_2404) +billy turned eagerly but before she could take so much as one step toward the door at the end of the hall aunt hannah's indignant voice arrested her billy stopped (utterance_2405) +pete go tell your master that we are here and ask if you will receive us pete's lips twitched (utterance_2406) +but his face was preternaturally grave when he spoke (utterance_2407) +a fine figure brushed by him and fell on its knees by the couch with a low cry bertram's eyes flew open (utterance_2408) +don ling found him there a minute later polishing a silver teaspoon with a fringed napkin that had been spread over bertram's tray (utterance_2409) +in the hall above aunt hannah was crying into william's grey line and duster that hung on the hall rack aunt hannah's handkerchief was on the floor back at hillside (utterance_2410) +then very gradually it dawned over them that there was after all something strange and unexplained at all (utterance_2411) +as if to make sure that she was here like this he drew her even closer bertram was so thankful that he did have one arm that was easible (utterance_2412) +why of course stammered billy i couldn't help thinking that maybe you had found out you didn't want me (utterance_2413) +demanded bertram angry and mystified (utterance_2414) +as for my not painting again you didn't understand pete deary (utterance_2415) +she pulled herself half away from birchum's encircling arm (utterance_2416) +billy drew a quivering sigh (utterance_2417) +good heavens is kate and this too bertram's voice was savage now (utterance_2418) +well she wrote a letter (utterance_2419) +billy laughed gaily but she shifted her position and did not meet her lover's eyes (utterance_2420) +and you never did think for a minute billy that you cared for him (utterance_2421) +he had not meant slow to mark that swift lowering of her eyelids (utterance_2422) +billy was so glad bertram had turned the question on her love instead of arcrites (utterance_2423) +after a minute billy stirred inside half a (utterance_2424) +you see i wasn't in love with mister r crank (utterance_2425) +and and you didn't care it specially for from his winklep (utterance_2426) +billy put a soft finger on his lips (utterance_2427) +bertram kissed the finger and subsided humph he commented (utterance_2428) +well what is that is that kate too demanded bertram grimly (utterance_2429) +there was another silence then suddenly bertram stirred (utterance_2430) +billy i'm going to marry you tomorrow he announced decisively (utterance_2431) +i don't know as i can trust you out of my sight till then you'll read something or hear something or get a letter from kate after breakfast to morrow morning that will set you saving me again and i don't want to be saved that way (utterance_2432) +i'm going to marry you tomorrow i'll get he stopped short with a sudden frown confound that lie forgot (utterance_2433) +five days indeed sir (utterance_2434) +i wonder if you think i can get ready to be married in five days (utterance_2435) +don't want you to get ready retorted bertram promptly i saw maria ready and i had all i wanted of it (utterance_2436) +if you really must have all those miles of tablecloths and napkins and doyies and lace rufflings will do it afterwards not before but (utterance_2437) +besides i need you to take care of me cut in bertram craftily (utterance_2438) +the tender glow on billy's face told its own story and bertram's eager eyes were not slow to read it (utterance_2439) +sweetheart see here dear he cried softly tightening his good left arm (utterance_2440) +billy my dear (utterance_2441) +it was aunt hannah's plaintive voice at the door where a little later (utterance_2442) +we must go home and william is here too and wants to see you (utterance_2443) +you mean little be before oxtopa (utterance_2444) +aunt hannah glanced from one to the other uncertainly (utterance_2445) +yes nodded billy demurely (utterance_2446) +yes i know that is a good while cut in bertram merrily (utterance_2447) +we wanted it to morrow but we had to wait on account of the new licensed spot (utterance_2448) +in my reason travels in the vest i felt that out there freedom as an idea has become feeble and ineffectual (utterance_2449) +the same thing is happening now with the people of the west (utterance_2450) +they are flattered into believing that they are free and they have the sovereign pie in the hands (utterance_2451) +as it has become more and more evident to me that the ideal of freedom has grown tenuous in the atmosphere of the vest (utterance_2452) +the mentality of that of a slave owning community with a mutilated multitude of men tied to its commotion and political prattmer (utterance_2453) +he who cares to house leaves must chain himself to them he who builds worlds to create exclusion for others builds walls across his own freedom he who distrust freedom in others loses his moral right to it (utterance_2454) +have they quiet a true love of freedom (utterance_2455) +the great epoch of the cell of her people the mahapata gives us a wonderful vision of an overflowing life full of the freedom of inquiry and experiment (utterance_2456) +in the age of the bouder came humanity was told in our country to its eternal step (utterance_2457) +it hardened into an age of innote construction (utterance_2458) +the organic unity of her varied and elastic society gave way to a conventional order which proved its artificial character like the next rebel law of exclusion (utterance_2459) +life has at any qualities i admit but they are natural and are and harmony with our vital functions (utterance_2460) +by squeezing human beings in the grape of an inelastic system and forcibly halting them fixed we have ignored the laws of life and growth (utterance_2461) +we have forced living sails into a permanent passivity made in them incapable of moulding circumstance to bear an intrinsic design and of mastering their own destiny (utterance_2462) +a stupefaction has become so absolute that we do not even realize that this possessed in with fortune dogging us taps for ages cannot be a mere accident of history removable only by a narrow accident from outside (utterance_2463) +they will be incapable of holding our just freedom in politics and of fighting and freedom's cause (utterance_2464) +it represents the active aspect of inocia which has the appearance of freedom but not its truth and therefore gives rise to slavery both within its boundaries and outside (utterance_2465) +it is at the foot of woman that belay the laurels that without her smile would never have been gained it is so image that strings the lyre of the point that any means of voice in the blaze of eloquent faction and guides her brain in the august toils of stately concerts (utterance_2466) +is there no hope for them so full of help (utterance_2467) +it makes the heart ache but the picture such vicissitudes to their imagination (utterance_2468) +the knowledge that such changes can occur flicks over the mind like the thought of death with scouring all our gay fancies with its back like wing and chaining the healthy atmosphere of her hatness with its venomous explorations (utterance_2469) +my own (utterance_2470) +what did what could you do (utterance_2471) +i bet about my chamber like a silly bird in the cage (utterance_2472) +do not think of moving to day (utterance_2473) +do not keep the messenger an instant (utterance_2474) +chiefs on my pony (utterance_2475) +right only one word to your own and greet her (utterance_2476) +ferdinand to henrietta (utterance_2477) +god bless you my henrietta my beloved my matchless henrietta (utterance_2478) +what is the separation not cause me (utterance_2479) +pangs that i could not conceive inhuman with frequent occasion (utterance_2480) +and yet i ought to be grateful that he was uninjured last night (utterance_2481) +i dare not now oh how foolish i was (utterance_2482) +do not be angry with your henrietta but i am nervous about concealing our engagement from papa (utterance_2483) +days must elapse before you can reach path and i know fordinand i know your office is more difficult than you will confess (utterance_2484) +would combat my own as soon as you can and write to me at the post office as he settled (utterance_2485) +the consciousness that your thornier makes me restless (utterance_2486) +i wish to meet him with as much calmness as i can command (utterance_2487) +on the prats and heights where he had fallen with the flagstruf in his hand lay prince and rubolgonski bleeding profusely and unconsciously uttering a gentle piteous and childlike moon (utterance_2488) +certainly he again felt that he was alive and suffering from a burning lashrating pain in his head (utterance_2489) +was his first thought (utterance_2490) +he feebly mowed his leg and uttered a vague sickly groan which aroused his own pity (utterance_2491) +lift this young man up and carry him to the dressing station (utterance_2492) +prince andrew remembered nothing more he lost consciousness from the terrible pain of being lifted out to the stretcher the jolting while being moved and the probing of his wound at the dressing station (utterance_2493) +during this transfer he felt a little stronger and was able to look about him and even speak (utterance_2494) +he asked on seeing the prisoners (utterance_2495) +i command a escortion replied ratnin (utterance_2496) +prince ratman named lieutenants of telean (utterance_2497) +after looking at him napoleon smiled (utterance_2498) +you does no hindrance to courage muttered chateau ren in a failing voice (utterance_2499) +a splendid reply said napoleon (utterance_2500) +prince andrew who had also been brought forward before the emperor's eyes to complete the show of prisoners could not fain to attract his attention (utterance_2501) +his face shone with self satisfaction and pleasure (utterance_2502) +the soldiers were carried prince andrew had noticed and taken the little gold icon princess mary had hung round her brother's neck but seeing the favour the emperor showed the prisoners there now hastened to return the holy image (utterance_2503) +prince andrew did not see how and by whom it was replaced but the little highcarn with its thin gold chain suddenly appeared upon his chest outside his uniform (utterance_2504) +how good it had been to know where to seek for help in this life and ought to expect after it beyond the grain (utterance_2505) +how happy in calm i should be if i could now see lorne have mercy on me (utterance_2506) +either to a power indefinable incomprehensible which i no truly cannot entruss but which i cannot even express in words the great old or nothing said he to himself or to that god who has been sown into this amulet by mary (utterance_2507) +the straiters moored on (utterance_2508) +the quiet home life and peaceful happiness of bone hills presented itself to him (utterance_2509) +he is a nervous pitiless subject said larry and will not recover (utterance_2510) +that too far you will of course undertake (utterance_2511) +then something has happened he has some special information some great news (utterance_2512) +when blok appeared it was evident that something had gone wrong with him (utterance_2513) +gone now just when he most warned him never (utterance_2514) +he did triple edic (utterance_2515) +you shall be dismissed this child from the sawe you are disgraced to the force (utterance_2516) +it is that or your great gluggony (utterance_2517) +my gentleman made himself most pleasant (utterance_2518) +well at any rate for my sense i accepted (utterance_2519) +we entered the first restaurant that of the renited trans you know it perhaps messia (utterance_2520) +i had no fear of him not till the very last when he played me the feeble tone (utterance_2521) +i suspected nothing when he brought out his pocket book it was tuftful monsieur i saw that and my conscience increased called for the reckoning and paid with an italian band note (utterance_2522) +excuse me one moment pray (utterance_2523) +he went out monseigneur and placed bath he was no more to be seen (utterance_2524) +why let him out of his side (utterance_2525) +it was only now at the leventar that the italian had become inculpated and the question of his possible anxiety to escape had never been considered (utterance_2526) +he left everything behind (utterance_2527) +hand it to me said the chief and when it came into his hands he began to turn over the leaves hurriedly (utterance_2528) +i do not understand not more than a word here and there (utterance_2529) +it is no doubt he tells him (utterance_2530) +of course such a consummate ass as you have proved yourself would not think of searching the restaurant of the immediate neighborhood or of making inquiries as to whether he had been seen or as to which way he had gone (utterance_2531) +it was a note for a hundred liarer a hundred francs and the restaurant bill was no more than seventeen francs ha (utterance_2532) +he was much pressed in a great hurry (utterance_2533) +directly he crossed the threshold he called the first cab and was driving away but he was talked the devil (utterance_2534) +he wished to pass on to leave her she would not consent then they both got into the cab and were driven away together (utterance_2535) +but this thy host so wide dispreed wakes in my heart one doubt and read lest treating grammar good and great ill thoughts thy johnny's dimmelate (utterance_2536) +he is my eldest prouder he is like a father dear to me (utterance_2537) +i go to leave my broader dance who makes the wood his residence (utterance_2538) +no tide but this thy heart should frame the simple truth while lips broke away (utterance_2539) +as guahadas and war at each to arda's pope in friendless page the dayguard sank with glory dead and night over all the sky was prayer (utterance_2540) +soon as king who has total care had quartered all the armitaire well honoured where it lay his head beside satruna on a bed (utterance_2541) +thus sighing and distressed and misery and beat a grave with fevered heart dead marked relief distracted in his mind the chief still mourned and frowned no rest (utterance_2542) +rest deuce minded i'll keep my watch while rama lies asleep for in the whole wide world is none dearer to me than ruggle's son (utterance_2543) +harve and no doubt or jealous fear i speak the truth with heart sincere for from the grace which he has shown will glory on my name be true great store of merit shall i gain and dutious form no wish in vain (utterance_2544) +let me unpassed by many a row of followers armed with shaft and bow for well of brahmas we are prepared who lies asleep by seatter's side (utterance_2545) +what walked like these i spoke designed to move the highsold forests mind but he upon his duty bent plied his partialness of argument oh how can slambuh close by the eyes while lowly couched with seat our lies the royal robber (utterance_2546) +he whom no wider team are now nor heavily gart can overthrow see go her how he lies alas would satire couched on guard crash (utterance_2547) +now as his son is forced to fly the king el long will see all attire craft of his gutch in hound fore long in a due grief this land will fall (utterance_2548) +but ah was said conciliah howe fair she and my own mother now how fair is the king (utterance_2549) +what hopes of an said rugna said my mother miss arbibezier but the sad queen will die who bore the hero for her grief is sore (utterance_2550) +to wait the king would cry and conquered by his misery die (utterance_2551) +when fate has brought the mournful day who it sees my father pass away how happy in the lives a day allowed his funeral rights to pay (utterance_2552) +thus horrid stood with many a sigh lamenting and the night went by (utterance_2553) +when guaha saw the long armed chief whose eye was like a lotus leave what line shoulders strong and fair high mattled prostrading despair pale bitterly afflicted he real does an artclate creals a tree (utterance_2554) +concilia by her war or pressed the senseless poet's limbs caressed as a fond cow in love and fear carelessness of her youngling deer turning holding to her war she said weeping and sore disquieted what tarbans or my son are these of sudden pain or swift disease (utterance_2555) +the life of us and all the life depend their child on only dying (utterance_2556) +ramae luchman forced to flee i leave by not but seeing thee for as the king has passed away thou art my only help to day (utterance_2557) +show me the cows whereon he lay tell me the forty eight i pray (utterance_2558) +then garments tail of jolding tart he trank the water luxman brought and then obedient to his vows he fasted with his gentle spouse (utterance_2559) +he has stands the tree which slammed them shave he eels the cross beneath it late where rama and his consort spent to night together ere they went (utterance_2560) +he seized (utterance_2561) +where why cita (utterance_2562) +scold by the fiery god of day high on this mighty hill i lay (utterance_2563) +each ball and eve he brought me food and filial care my life renealed (utterance_2564) +sweeped to the south his calls he bent and cleft a yielding element (utterance_2565) +the holiest parrots of the air came round me as thy marvel tete and cried as their bright legions met i'll say his seat on leaving yet (utterance_2566) +thus cried the saints and told the name a fam who hold the struggling dame (utterance_2567) +then from the flood some party paid due offerings to his browder's shade (utterance_2568) +seven nights in deadly swarm i perished but struggling life returned at last (utterance_2569) +around i bent my wondering view but i in response was strange and near (utterance_2570) +on comrades to the cave i cried and all would in the portal hide (utterance_2571) +here adow with hospitable care has to fradis with the noblest fair preserving us about to die with this thy plantifal supply (utterance_2572) +but how will pious lady say may we thy gracious boon repay (utterance_2573) +he seized the aestiic dame replied well bothers amiable satisfied (utterance_2574) +a life of holy works i need and from your hands no soave is need (utterance_2575) +then speak again the bonnet chief we came to thee and found relief (utterance_2576) +now listen to a new distress and aides holy wateres (utterance_2577) +our renderings in disvasty cave exposed to times agreeva gave (utterance_2578) +once more den lady grand relief and let thy suppliants go in peace again upon their errands pet for king savie vasiah we dread (utterance_2579) +and the great task of a solarin set alice is unaccompliced yet (utterance_2580) +and hold his waters roar and grave terrified with each crested wave (utterance_2581) +the mount is lost in toil and pain and now my friends what hopes remain (utterance_2582) +your hearts with strong affection fraud he is well in every labor salt and a true valor of your band was pleasant wide in every land (utterance_2583) +come let us all from food abstain and perish does since hope is vain (utterance_2584) +far better does to end our lives and leave our route our homes and wives leave of a deal little ones and all then by his vangeful hand to fall (utterance_2585) +our forfeit lives and surely pay for idle search and long delay and thou refused king will beat us die the favour of his friend to buy (utterance_2586) +then tara softly spake to cheer the bower's heart suppressed by fear this pair no more your doubts dispel come in this ample cavern well (utterance_2587) +thou fondly hopest in this cave the vengeance of the foe to brave (utterance_2588) +but lucksman's arm a shallow will send off deadly shafts doe's worlds to rent (utterance_2589) +thy loving kinsman true one wise looks on these tail with favouring eyes (utterance_2590) +he hauled the princess furious tread he saw his eyes glow fiercely red (utterance_2591) +swift sprang the bowder to his feet up starting from his golden seat (utterance_2592) +on grateful born or king ra'audal and fateless to die plighted vow (utterance_2593) +now if thy pride dessone were he high thought that prince has done for tea struck by his arrows shalt thou fall and barley meat in yea'ama's hole (utterance_2594) +still open to the gloomy guard lies the sand path thy broader trod (utterance_2595) +then to thy private world be true nor let thy steps that part pursue (utterance_2596) +his eased and taras tarry eyed thus to the angry prince replied not to my lord shouldst thou address a speech so fraud would be denounce not thus reproached my lord should be and list of all o prince by thee (utterance_2597) +from parts of crew he never strays nor wonders in falbaden ways (utterance_2598) +their volds of rivor's heart for cat by ramas saved the lasting depth (utterance_2599) +restored to fame by rabba's grains to empire over the banner rays from saint lystread and toil set free ristowed to rumor and to me by grief and care and exile tried kneel to the bliss so long denied like the shammitra once alas (utterance_2600) +the matrons of the viner rays say marks of the theory in thy veins they see thine eyes like blood are red and will not yet be comforted (utterance_2601) +she seized a luxury gave a scent one by her gentle argument (utterance_2602) +so tarrol's pleading just and mild his softening heart and reconciled (utterance_2603) +the hero's side i will not leave but he the conquest shall achieve (utterance_2604) +so strong are dull so brave and bold so pure in thought so humble soled that thou deservest well to reign and all emoundrow's best again (utterance_2605) +lentau by brada aid an all his foes beneath his arm will fall (utterance_2606) +whatever hand it was the chat down berbon rome after his death was plundered devastated and ravaged by a brutal greedy licentious and fanatical sultry (utterance_2607) +wherefore for the future write us nothing at all but appoint us the time and place of meeting and we will bring our sword for you to cross protesting that the shame of any delay in fighting shall be yours seeing that when it comes to an encounter there is an end of all writing (utterance_2608) +sir answered the spaniard permit me to do my office and say what the emperor has charged me to say (utterance_2609) +nay i will not listen to thee said francis if thou do not first give me a patent sign by thy master containing an appointment of time and place sir i have orders to read you that cartel and give it you afterwards (utterance_2610) +burgundy felt being put out began again sir (utterance_2611) +nay said frances i will not suffer him to speak to me before he has given me appointment of time and place (utterance_2612) +give it me or return as thou hast come (utterance_2613) +i am quite willing said the king let him have it (utterance_2614) +the piece of cambray was called the lady's peace in honor of the two princesses who had associated it the morally different and a very unequal worth they both had minds of a rare order and trained to recognize political necessities and not to attempt any but possible successes (utterance_2615) +all the great political actors seemed hurrying away from the stage as if the drama were approaching its end (utterance_2616) +in fifteen sixty two at the battle of drou he was aged and so ill that none expected to see him on horseback (utterance_2617) +he fully armed save only his head answered him right well sir this is the real medicine that hath cured me for the battle which is toward and up preparing for the honor of god and our camp (utterance_2618) +the ladies peace concluded a cambray in fifteen twenty nine lasted up to fifteen thirty six incessantly troubled however by far from pacific symptoms proceedings and preparations (utterance_2619) +at last he decided upon retreating (utterance_2620) +it was gasilaso delavaga the prince of spanish posy the spanish petrarch according to his fellow countrymen (utterance_2621) +long miransee signed a similar one for peatma (utterance_2622) +they all repaired together to the house prepared for their reception and after dinner the emperor being tired lay down to rest on a couch queen ellen her before long went and tapped at his door and sent a word to the king that the emperor was awake (utterance_2623) +frances with the cardinal the lorain and the constable the momentse soon arrived (utterance_2624) +on entering the chamber he found the emperor still lying down and chatting with his sister's queen who was seated beside him on the chair (utterance_2625) +yes said charles i had made such cheer that i was obliged to sleep it off (utterance_2626) +frances stood the congress with his own collar (utterance_2627) +only seven of the attendants remained in the emperor shamper and there the two sovereigns conversed for an hour after which they moved to the hall where a splendid supper awaited them (utterance_2628) +the ganties pleaded their privilege of not being liable to be taxed without their own consent (utterance_2629) +orders had been sent everywhere to receive him as kings of france are received on their joyous assession (utterance_2630) +will let's go as a delightful child (utterance_2631) +there was no their such child there never had been and there never would be (utterance_2632) +well let's give his mother serfee mettelics and jovna was sure of that (utterance_2633) +lilich's eyes were dark and large her cheeks were rosy her lips were made for kisses and for laughter (utterance_2634) +but it was not these chimes and la lachega they gave her mother the keenest joy (utterance_2635) +she felt cold with her husband (utterance_2636) +he was always fresh and cool with a frigid smile and wherever he passed cold current seemed to move in the air (utterance_2637) +it even seemed to acsaraphy met alex and jovna that she was in love with her future husband and this made her happy (utterance_2638) +the bride was also good looking she was a tall dark eyed dark haired girl somewhat teamed but very tactful (utterance_2639) +he had connections and his wife came of good invalential people (utterance_2640) +this might at the proper opportunity prove useful (utterance_2641) +after their marriage there was nothing in the matter of sergey and mother stovich to suggest anything wrong to his wife (utterance_2642) +later however when his wife was about to have a child sarah gamolastovitch established connections elsewhere of a light and temporary nature (utterance_2643) +seraphia alexandrovna found the sout and to her own astonishment was not particularly hurt she awaited her infant with a restless anticipation that swallowed every other feeling (utterance_2644) +safiena alexandrovna drifted farther and farther away from him (utterance_2645) +lutch good then ran away standing with her plump little legs over the carpets and hid herself behind the curtains near her bed (utterance_2646) +where is my baby girl the mother asked as she looked for lilacca may believe that she did not see her (utterance_2647) +then she came out a little farther and her mother as though she had only just caught sight of her seized her by her little shoulders and exclaimed joyously here she is my laeletchka (utterance_2648) +her mother's eyes glowed with passionate emotion (utterance_2649) +her mother went to hide (utterance_2650) +well letge could turn away as they're not to see but watch her much gustathily all the time (utterance_2651) +where is maema matchka asked la lajca (utterance_2652) +a smile of absolute bliss played on her red lips (utterance_2653) +lulutch goes getting near her mother's corner (utterance_2654) +her mother was growing more absorbed every moment by her interest in the game her heart beat with short quick strokes and she pressed even closer to the wall disarranging her hair still more (utterance_2655) +will let cucus suddenly glanced toward her mother's corner and screamed with joy (utterance_2656) +through the half closed doors he heard the laughter the joyous outcries the sound of romping (utterance_2657) +even phodosia felt abashed now for her mistress now for herself (utterance_2658) +he liked coming here where everything was beautifully arranged this was done by sarah thea alexandrovna who wished to surround her little girl from her very infancy only with the loveliest things (utterance_2659) +serfy maelax and jovna dressed herself tastefully this too she did for la lutchka with the same end in view (utterance_2660) +one thing sarah gamodostovich had not become reconciled to and this was his wife's almost continuous presence in the nursery (utterance_2661) +it's just as i thought i knew that i'd find you here he said with a dirisive and condescending smile (utterance_2662) +merely you see that the child should feel its own individuality he explained an answer to serfy ma alexandrovna's puzzled glance (utterance_2663) +she's still so little said serfie ma alexandrovna (utterance_2664) +i don't insist it's your kingdom here (utterance_2665) +i think it over his wife answered smiling as he did coldly virginialy (utterance_2666) +then they began to talk with something else (utterance_2667) +that the mistress does it well that's one thing but that the young lady does it that's bad (utterance_2668) +why asked fedosio the curiosity (utterance_2669) +this expression of curiosity gave her face the look of a wooden roughly painted doll (utterance_2670) +yes that's bad repeated agatio with conviction terribly bad well (utterance_2671) +it's the truth i'm saying remember my words the gaffia went on with the same assurance and secrecy (utterance_2672) +it's the surest sign (utterance_2673) +the old woman had invented this sign quite suddenly herself and she was evidently very proud of it (utterance_2674) +madam madam she said quietly in a trembling voice (utterance_2675) +seraphy ma alexandrovna gave a start (utterance_2676) +fodosia's face made her anxious (utterance_2677) +what is it fidosia she asked with great concern as there anything wrong with lulutchka (utterance_2678) +no madam said fedosia she gesticulated with her hands to reassure her mistress and to make her sit down (utterance_2679) +let's cause asleep may god be with her (utterance_2680) +only i'd like to say something you see we'll let kins always hiding ourself that is not good (utterance_2681) +i can't tell you how bad it is said fedosia and her face expressed the most decided confidence (utterance_2682) +understand nothing of what you are saying (utterance_2683) +you see madam it's a kind of omen explains phydosia abruptly in a shamefaced way (utterance_2684) +nonsense said seraphya alexandrovna (utterance_2685) +who told you all this asked seraphy ma alexandrovna in an austere low voice (utterance_2686) +no exclaimed seraphy metellic san jovna in irritation as though she wished to protect herself somehow from this sudden anxiety (utterance_2687) +what nonsense as though the electric could die (utterance_2688) +she saw clearly that there could be no possible connection between a child's quite ordinary diversion and the continuation of the child's life (utterance_2689) +she made a special effort that evening to occupy her mind with other matters but her thoughts turned and moaned terribly to the fact that lulutch could love to hide herself (utterance_2690) +when the lutchka was still quite small and had learned a distinguished between her mother and her nurse she sometimes sitting in her nurse's arms made a sudden roguish grimace and hid her laughing face in the nurse's shoulder (utterance_2691) +then she would look out with a slight glance (utterance_2692) +though she reproached herself at once for this unfounded superstitious dread nevertheless she could not enter wholeheartedly into the spirit of lulutchka's favorite game and she tried to diverte lilact his attention to something else (utterance_2693) +she eagerly complied with her mother's new wishes (utterance_2694) +serfie ma alexandrovna tried desperately to amuse lulutchka (utterance_2695) +perhaps thought sarephia alexandrovna she is not as strongly drawn to the world as other children who are attracted by many things (utterance_2696) +if this is so is it not a sign of organic weakness (utterance_2697) +serfy malcolma herself began the game once or twice though she played it with a heavy heart (utterance_2698) +she suffered as though committing an evil deed with full consciousness (utterance_2699) +it was a side day for serfee malics and jovna (utterance_2700) +her mother covered her with a blue blanket (utterance_2701) +lilitch could drew her sweet little hands from under the blanket and stretched them out to embrace her mother her mother bent down (utterance_2702) +she seemed so small and so frail under the blanket that covered her (utterance_2703) +sarah femaleics and jovina remained standing over lullegica's bed a long while and she kept looking at lilaccoa with tenderness and fear (utterance_2704) +i'm a mother is it possible that it shouldn't be able to protect her she thought as she imagined the various ills that might befall olatchka (utterance_2705) +she prayed long that night but the prayer did not relieve her sadness (utterance_2706) +several days passed the luxury caught cold (utterance_2707) +the fever came upon her at night (utterance_2708) +when seraphia alexandrovna awakened by fidosia came to lulutchka and saw her looking so hot so restless and so tormented she instantly recalled the evil omen and a hope was despair took possession of her from the first moments (utterance_2709) +a doctor was called and everything was done but as usual on such occasions but the inevitable happened (utterance_2710) +and the lucks they grew feebler from our to hour (utterance_2711) +nothing made her so unhappy as the reiterations of phidosia uttered between sobs she hid herself and hid herself arioletchka (utterance_2712) +fever was consuming lilacca and there were times when she lost consciousness and spoken delirium (utterance_2713) +three days passed torturing like a nightmare (utterance_2714) +saphia alexandrovna hid her face behind the curtains near la lajca's bed how tragic (utterance_2715) +await mamotka whispered elega (utterance_2716) +when much his white face became blurred and everything grew dark before lilacca (utterance_2717) +she met her husband (utterance_2718) +saphia alexandrovna was standing by the coffin and looking dully at her dead child (utterance_2719) +semo my dear don't agitate yourself said sergey maudosovitch in a whisper (utterance_2720) +you must resign yourself to your fate (utterance_2721) +she'll be up in a minute persisted serfia malics and jovna her eyes fixed on the dead little girl (utterance_2722) +sarah gamotta stovich looked round him cautiously he was afraid of the unseemly and of the ridiculous (utterance_2723) +see my don't agitate yourself he repeated (utterance_2724) +he was confused and annoyed (utterance_2725) +her face seemed tranquil and her eyes were dry (utterance_2726) +she went into the nursery and began to walk round the room looking into those places where la letchka used to hide herself (utterance_2727) +she walked all about the room and bent now and then to look under the table or under the bed and captain repeating cheerfully where's my little one where is my lulutchka (utterance_2728) +after she had walked round the room once she began to make her quest in you (utterance_2729) +fedosia motionless with the dejected face sat in a corner and looked frightened at her mistress then she suddenly burst out sobbing and she wailed loudly (utterance_2730) +she hid herself and hid herself a little like garret air and jellic little soul (utterance_2731) +when she entered the parlor there were several people between her and la la lajca (utterance_2732) +there was an oppressive feeling of heaviness and seraphy malics and jovina's hiders she approached lulatchka (utterance_2733) +willoughtchka lay there still in pale and smiled pathetically (utterance_2734) +the little one did not reply (utterance_2735) +serfee malics and jovna stood up erect side in a lost way smiled and called loudly welhetchka (utterance_2736) +lulutch goes being carried out (utterance_2737) +at this moment the heavy bead of the storm on the roof ceased with miraculous suddenness leaving the outside world empty of sound save for the drip drip drip drip of eaves (utterance_2738) +we had ever sort of people with a soft nod and as i was look out at a popular game i seldom all (utterance_2739) +at the same instant i heard the rip of still through cloth and felt the sharp stab in the left leg (utterance_2740) +then i scouted to see what had cut me and found that the filler had lost a hand (utterance_2741) +in place of it he wore a sharp still hook (utterance_2742) +there was no doubt of his bean alive for he was breathing hard like a man does when he gets it over the head it didn't sound good (utterance_2743) +when a man breathes that way he's mostly all gone (utterance_2744) +mean got better to overhead often enough in those days (utterance_2745) +sour wand is fine a put of wound in shape to heel but it's no soothin syrup (utterance_2746) +their coffin wears their ship and the gravel was the sea blow high blow low what care we and the quarter that we gave them was to sink them in the sea done on the coast of the high barberi (utterance_2747) +it fair made my hair rise to hear him with a big still song desert outside and the quiet moonlight in the shadows and him sittin up straight and gaunt his eyes blazing each side his big eagle nose and his snakey hair hanging over the raw cut across his head (utterance_2748) +however i made out to get him bandits up and in shape and pretty soon his sort of want to sleep (utterance_2749) +and again it seemed that barbery song it tot go out and look at the old colorada flowing by just to be sure i hadn't died and gone below or else he just talk (utterance_2750) +he began when he was a kid and he gave his side of conversations paused (utterance_2751) +i used to listen by the hour but i never made out anything really important as to who the man was where he'd come from what he'd done (utterance_2752) +i didn't pay an intention tone for he was quiet (utterance_2753) +usual i didn't bother with his talk for it didn't mean anything a something in his voice may be turned (utterance_2754) +he was lying on his side the black eyes of his blazing at me but now both of them saw the same distance (utterance_2755) +where am i clothes he asked very intense (utterance_2756) +one little squeeze talk about your deadly weapons (utterance_2757) +but he'd been too sick too long a bit (utterance_2758) +in a minute or so he came to (utterance_2759) +now you're a nice sweet proposition said i as soon as i was sure he could understand me (utterance_2760) +they're safe enough let me have them he begged (utterance_2761) +now look here said i you can't get up to day you ain't fit (utterance_2762) +i know he pleaded but let me see them (utterance_2763) +just a satisfied farmer passed over his old duds (utterance_2764) +i've been robbed she cried (utterance_2765) +where's my coat he asked (utterance_2766) +you had no co when i pitch you up i replied (utterance_2767) +he looked at me modest suspicious but didn't say anything more he would never answer when i spoke to him (utterance_2768) +after he didn't a fair mill he fell asleep (utterance_2769) +when i came back that even in the book was empty and he was gone (utterance_2770) +i didn't seem to get for two days (utterance_2771) +and i caught sight of him quite away's all (utterance_2772) +yes he's suspicious i stole their old codahis thinks i and afterwards i found that my surmise had been correct (utterance_2773) +however he didn't stay long in that frame of mind (utterance_2774) +i ran up pulling a gun (utterance_2775) +the mix was flat on his face his arms stretched out (utterance_2776) +on the middle of his back number one armed friend (utterance_2777) +anyway i thrust the muzzle of my colt into the sailor's face what's this i asked (utterance_2778) +i mean he met monte your frontonial curvis said he (utterance_2779) +the gleam died from his eye the snarl lifted his lips (utterance_2780) +in any case he flew pocal proto leave me and my friend together (utterance_2781) +during the next two months she was a good deal about town most of doinad jobs a saul and mauvnon (utterance_2782) +however i didn't pay much attention to that being at the time i'll mighty busy hold in down my card games (utterance_2783) +that's all right said i which you'd better stay right there (utterance_2784) +i want to make up to you for trouble said he (utterance_2785) +what kind of good thing i asked treasure said he (utterance_2786) +he looked all right enough now the drunk nor loco (utterance_2787) +sit out said i over there the other side of the table (utterance_2788) +he did so a far away said i (utterance_2789) +and it's a big thing said handy saw on the chimney for they's not only gold but all trewels and diamonds (utterance_2790) +it will make us rich and i doesn't like us and you can kiss the book on that (utterance_2791) +that may all be true said i but why do you tell me (utterance_2792) +why don't you get you treasure without the need of dividement (utterance_2793) +wadmate he answered is just plain gratitude (utterance_2794) +didn't you save my life and nus me and take care of me when i was not killed (utterance_2795) +look here anderson or handy solomon whatever you please to call yourself i rejoin to this you for going to do business with me and i do not understand yet just what it is you want of me you'll have to talk straight (utterance_2796) +it's all very well to say gratitude but that don't go with me (utterance_2797) +but devil's a preacher if ney lost your pen fetter said he (utterance_2798) +well it's this then i got to have boat to get there and she must be stopped (utterance_2799) +and i got to half help with the treasure if his life was fell said it was (utterance_2800) +it's money i got to have and it's money i haven't got and can't get and listen to let somebody in his partner (utterance_2801) +wamia asked why not he retorted (utterance_2802) +we talked the matter over at length (utterance_2803) +i stood after a larger party (utterance_2804) +he strongly opposed this as depreciating the shares but i had no intention of going alone into what was then considered a wild and dangerous country finally we compromised (utterance_2805) +a third of the treasure was to go to him a third to me and the rest was to be divided among the man whom i should select this scheme did not appeal to him (utterance_2806) +the censor existed for us no responsibility we each reported dutifully at the roll call of habit and draw back into our blankets with a grateful sigh (utterance_2807) +i remember the moon sailing a good gate among a parently stationary clouds i recall a deep black shadow lined before distant silvery mountains i glanced over the starr motionless canvasses each of which concealed a man the air trembled with the belloman of cattle in the corrals (utterance_2808) +simmonly but a moment later the cook's howl brought me to consciousness again (utterance_2809) +three were to care for the rumoda five were to move the straight herd from the corrals to good feet three brendan crews were told to brand the cows we had collected in the cut of the afternoon before that's took up about half the man (utterance_2810) +the rest were to make a shore drive in the salt grass (utterance_2811) +we were the only ones who did go foot however although the crowds were not more than two hundred yards as distance (utterance_2812) +between the upright bars of grease wood we could see the cattle and near the opposite side the men built in a fire next the fence (utterance_2813) +we pushed open the wide gate and entered (utterance_2814) +one stood waiting for them to finish the sheaf of long jay h stack and irons in his hand (utterance_2815) +all the rest squatted on their heels along the fence smoking cigarettes and chat and gather (utterance_2816) +the first rays of the sun slanted a cross and one great sweep from the remote mountains (utterance_2817) +homer wouldn't an old california john wrote in among the cattle (utterance_2818) +as a loop settled he jerked sharply upward exactly as one would strike to hook a big fish (utterance_2819) +homer wrapped the rope twice with thrice about the horn and set over in one strip to avoid the tight line and to preserve the balance (utterance_2820) +nobody paid any attention to the calf (utterance_2821) +behind him followed his anxious mother her head swinging from side to side near the fire the horse stopped (utterance_2822) +the two bold dogs immediately pass upon the victim (utterance_2823) +it was promptly flopped over on its right side (utterance_2824) +thus the calf was unable to trouble (utterance_2825) +when once you have had the wind knocked out of you or a rab or two broken you cease to think of unnecessarily rough (utterance_2826) +hot iron the old one of the bulldoggers (utterance_2827) +marker yelled the other (utterance_2828) +the brand impressed the iron smoothly against the flank (utterance_2829) +perhaps the cat blazed a little less the heat scorched (utterance_2830) +the brand show a chairy which is the proper colour to indicate du paeland and a successful mark (utterance_2831) +then he nicked out a swallow tail on the other (utterance_2832) +it seems to me that great dilvan necessary twaddles broad as to the extreme cruelty of brandon (utterance_2833) +undoubtedly it is to some extent painful it could some other method of ready addentification be devised it might be as well to adopt it in preference (utterance_2834) +inextinguishable laughter fall this spread of this doctor through arizona (utterance_2835) +the mansion of puncher descended to examine politely the ear tags of wild cattle on the open range ran around up (utterance_2836) +a cafe usually bellows when the iron bites but as soon as released he almost invariably ghost of feet and are to look an idlely about (utterance_2837) +besides which it happens but once in a live time and is over in ten seconds a comforted knight that those of us who have had our teeth feel (utterance_2838) +one of the little animals was but a few months old so the rider did not bother with its hind legs but tossed his loup over its neck (utterance_2839) +mister frost's bull calf alone at pictorial history shows the attitudes (utterance_2840) +and then of course there was a gorgeous contrast between all this frantic and uncomprehending excitement and the absolute matter of fact and proputability of horse and rider (utterance_2841) +as he knew his business and as the calf was a small one the little beast went over promptly bit the ground with the whack and was pounced upon and held (utterance_2842) +he would catch himself on one foot scrambled vigorously and in by struggling back to the upright (utterance_2843) +you can imagine what happened next (utterance_2844) +this is productive of some fun of it fails (utterance_2845) +but now the brand was a full swing (utterance_2846) +when the nooses fell they turned and walked toward the fire as a matter of course rarely did the cast fail (utterance_2847) +men ran to and fro busy and intent (utterance_2848) +sometimes through four calves were on the ground at once (utterance_2849) +thus adien dissipated (utterance_2850) +no more nick calves they announced (utterance_2851) +then he would spit on his hands and go out at alone (utterance_2852) +of luck attended his first effort as sarcasm was profound there is your little calf said he (utterance_2853) +would you like to have me toad it to you or do you reckon you could toddle this far with your little old iron (utterance_2854) +toward noon the work slack (utterance_2855) +finally homer rode over to the calumny men and reported the brandon finished (utterance_2856) +the latter counted the marks in his tally book (utterance_2857) +one hundred and seventy six he announced (utterance_2858) +the markers squatted on their heels told over the bits of ears they had saved (utterance_2859) +the toll amounted to but in hundred and seventy five (utterance_2860) +finally wouldn't discover it in his hit pocket (utterance_2861) +they had been doing a restless heavy work all the morning they did not seem to be tired (utterance_2862) +a somewhat in some crank physical culture periodical that at cowboy's life was physically ill balanced like an horseman's in that it exercised only certain muscles of the body (utterance_2863) +drank as he had been used to do when he was at otter's court frequent atonements (utterance_2864) +before deranged the scorch of the enemy i saw steeds white with foam and after the shout of a battle a fearful torrent (utterance_2865) +these tidings came to urban (utterance_2866) +not i by my confession unto heaven said she there is nothing more hateful unto me than this (utterance_2867) +and the tears she said in the word she had spoken awoke him (utterance_2868) +and evil betide me said he if thou returnest here until thou knowest whether i have lost my strength so completely as thou didst say (utterance_2869) +then d'yrant went to see urban (utterance_2870) +sir said he i am going upon a quest and i am not certain when i may come back (utterance_2871) +take heed therefore unto thy possessions until my return (utterance_2872) +but one person only will go at me (utterance_2873) +and he desired enna to mount her horse and to ride forward and to keep a long way before him (utterance_2874) +and unless i speak unto thee say not thou one word either (utterance_2875) +and though thou shouldst desire to see my defeat in my death by the hands of those men yet do i feel no dread (utterance_2876) +and he received him and that not feebly (utterance_2877) +and say not one word unto me unless i speak first unto thee (utterance_2878) +i will do as far as i can lord said she according to thy desire (utterance_2879) +i made him said he it is vain to a tempestuing forward (utterance_2880) +i cannot by any means refrain from sleep through weariness said he do thou therefore wash the horses and sleep not (utterance_2881) +and when she saw the dawn of day appear she looked around her to see if you were waking and thereupon he woke (utterance_2882) +and they left the wood and they came to an open country with metals on one hand and mow was mowing the meadows (utterance_2883) +my lord he added will be displeasing to thee if i ask whence thou comest allsome (utterance_2884) +wilt thou follow my council said the youth and take thy meal for me (utterance_2885) +what sort of meal he inquired (utterance_2886) +then they washed and took their repast (utterance_2887) +i go now lord said he to meet the knight and to conduct him to his lodging (utterance_2888) +i will do lord said she as thou sayest (utterance_2889) +and after they had eaten and drank d'aray went to sleep and so did thei need also (utterance_2890) +the date seem uninport but throughout the period the officers and men of the ship have been unremittingly busy (utterance_2891) +bows attacked the ship's doors surveyed relisdon restowed them saving very much space by unstoic numerous cases and stoleing the contents in the lazarette (utterance_2892) +without steam the leak cannot be kept under with the handpomp by two daily efforts of a quarter of an hour to twenty minutes (utterance_2893) +as the ship was and in a present heavily laid in condition would certainly have taken three to four hours each day (utterance_2894) +the large green tent was put up and propus supports made for it (utterance_2895) +the engine rooms staff and antices people on the engines scientists were stolen their lavatories the cook refitting of galley and so forth not a single spot but had its band of workers (utterance_2896) +the man's base such as it is therefore extends from the fore hatch the stem on the main deck (utterance_2897) +under the forecastle of stalls of fifteen ponies the maxin in the space would hold the narrow irregular space in front is packed tight with faud (utterance_2898) +meadly behind the forecastle bulkhead as a small boogy hatch the only inches of the men's mess deck and bad weather (utterance_2899) +above the fore hatchet as the ice house (utterance_2900) +we manage to get three tons of ice one hundred six or two caucases of mutton and three caucases of beef besides some boxes of sweet breads and kidneys into this space (utterance_2901) +the sex containing this last add it to the goods already mentioned make a really heavy deck cago and one is naturally anxious concerning it but everything that can be done by lashing and scuring has been done (utterance_2902) +forage i originally ordered thirty tons of compressed oatin hay from melbourne (utterance_2903) +the scene is wholly enchanting in such a view from some sheltered sunny corner in a garden which blazes with masses of red and golden flowers tends to feelings of inexpressible satisfaction with all things (utterance_2904) +a great mass of people assembled (utterance_2905) +cay and i lunch with the party in the new zeal and companyship rupoo (utterance_2906) +telegram to say tara nova had arised sunday night (utterance_2907) +a third sledge stands across the brake of the poop in the space hitherto occupied by the after which (utterance_2908) +the quantity is two in half tons and the space occupied considerable (utterance_2909) +the ship was over two feet by the stern but this will soon be remedy (utterance_2910) +they must perforce be chained up and they are given what shelters afforded on deck but their position is not enviable (utterance_2911) +it is a pathetic attitude deeply significant of cold and misery cagily some poor beast admits a long pathetic wine (utterance_2912) +there are gently one or two on watch which eases matters but it is a squash (utterance_2913) +later in the day the wind has veered to the westward heading us slightly (utterance_2914) +oats and atkinson with intimate and assistance from others were busy keeping the ponies on their legs (utterance_2915) +there was nothing for it but to grapple with the evil and nearly all hands were laboring for hours in the weights of the ship heaving coal sacks overboard and relashing the petrol cases et cetera in the best man possible under such difficult and dangerous circumstances (utterance_2916) +no sooner would some semblance of order restore than some exceptionally heavy way would tear away the lashing and the work had to be done all over again (utterance_2917) +from this moment about four a m the engine room became the centre of interest (utterance_2918) +the water gained in spite of every effort (utterance_2919) +the outlook appeared grim (utterance_2920) +the amount of water which was being made but the ship so roughly handled was most uncertain (utterance_2921) +williams had to confess he was beaten and must draw fires what was to be done (utterance_2922) +the bill's pampas depended on the main engine (utterance_2923) +on one occasion i was waste deep when standing on the rail of the poop (utterance_2924) +the after god were organized in two poddies by evans to work buckets the men were kept steadily going on the choked hand pumps this seemed all that could be done for the moment and what a measure to count as the soul save god of the ship from sinking practically an attempt to bale or out (utterance_2925) +occasionally a heavy sea would bear one of the moaway and he was only save by his chain (utterance_2926) +now this is how othor hunted the stag (utterance_2927) +and the last dog that was let loose was a favorite dog of otter caval was his name (utterance_2928) +then they sounded the duck horn for slaying and they all gathered round (utterance_2929) +one wished that it should be given to the lady best beloved by him and another to the lady whom he loved best (utterance_2930) +and after mid day they beheld an unshapely little man upon a horse and after him a day more damsel also on horseback and after her a knight of lodge stature bowed down and hanging his head low and sorrowfully in cloud and broken and worthless armour (utterance_2931) +i know not who they are said he but i know said glenarva this is the knight whom d'yrant pursued and me thanks that he comes not here by his own free will (utterance_2932) +but geranta's overtaken him in a vengeing insult to the maiden to the uttermost (utterance_2933) +lady said he at the gate there was a knight and i saw never a man of so pitiful an aspect to look upon as he (utterance_2934) +i do said he he tells me that he is ederan but some of nood (utterance_2935) +then she replied i know him not (utterance_2936) +so glenarva went to the gate to meet him and he entered (utterance_2937) +and drank greets thee well and in greeting thee to compel me to come here to do thy pleasure for the insult which thy maiden received from the dwarf no need did he overtake thee (utterance_2938) +sir said she when thinkest thou that deraint will be here (utterance_2939) +to morrow i think you will be here with the maiden (utterance_2940) +i am lord said he and i have met with much trouble and received wounds unsupportable (utterance_2941) +well it ought there from what i hear it be whose winner to be merciful told thee (utterance_2942) +the mercy which thou desirest lord said she will i grant to him since the deserts insulting to thee that an insult should be offered to me as to thyself (utterance_2943) +thus will it be best to do said otter let this man have medical care until it be known whether he may live (utterance_2944) +to go to a verner handmaiden said he (utterance_2945) +and the steward of the household so ordered her (utterance_2946) +and being young he changed himself and grew to hate the sin that seemed so like his own of maudrett autha's nephew and fell at last in the great battle fighting for the king (utterance_2947) +and when drouin came to the place where one of her was he saluted her (utterance_2948) +then they went in and dismounted (utterance_2949) +heaven protect thee said otter and the welcome of heaven be unto thee (utterance_2950) +and inasmuch as thou hast vanquished edinburghn the son of nud thou hast had a prosperous career (utterance_2951) +and from that time she became his wife (utterance_2952) +and the maiden took up her abode in the palace and she had many companions both men and women and there was no maiden more steamed than she in the island of britain (utterance_2953) +and a year and a second and a third he proceeded thus until his fame had flown over the face of the kingdom (utterance_2954) +and he greets thee well as an uncle should greet his nephew and as the vassal should greet his lord (utterance_2955) +and the neighbouring chiefs knowing this grow insolent toward him and covered his land in possessions (utterance_2956) +and ah that told during the cause of the mission and of the coming of the ambassadors to him out of cornwall truly said derang be it to my advantage of disadvantage lord i will do according to thy will concerning this embassy (utterance_2957) +what discourse said glenarva do i hear between you (utterance_2958) +said deraint i think i shall have enough of knighthood with me and they set forth (utterance_2959) +and never was there seen a fair host journeying towards the seven (utterance_2960) +and he said to derent i am a feeble and an aged man and whilst i was able to maintain the dominions for thee and for myself i did so (utterance_2961) +and every one asked that which she desired (utterance_2962) +and they were not long in giving so eat was every one to bestow guess and if those who came to ask us none departed unsatisfied (utterance_2963) +then derates and abases to the men of cornwall to ask them this (utterance_2964) +and they all said that it would be the fullness of joy and honour to them for joy to come and receive their homage (utterance_2965) +so he received the image of such as were there (utterance_2966) +and the day after the followers of otter intended to go away (utterance_2967) +a number of other days were observed for the christian church at various times as the birthday of jesus the gospels give no date and appear to be quite uncertain really ignorant about it (utterance_2968) +yet there is no evidence that he was born on that day (utterance_2969) +widest discrepancy and historical document to say nothing about inspiration (utterance_2970) +again matthew says that to escape the evil designs of herod marian joseph with the infant jesus fled into egypt looks as nothing about this hard flight nor of herod's intention to kill the infant messiah (utterance_2971) +when we come to the more important chapters of our jesus we meet with queer difficulties (utterance_2972) +boys always on a friday that the cruspixions commimorated the weak in which that they occur is very sweet year (utterance_2973) +good friday falls not before the spring equinox but as soon after the spring equinox is the full moon allows thus making the calculation to depend upon the position of the sun and a zodiac and the phases of the moon (utterance_2974) +the pagan austeria has become the christian easter (utterance_2975) +that in the absence of evidence ordent offers of folly and metaphysical arguments against the scypical sessus one (utterance_2976) +if we are to have any mythology at all he seems to argue why object to adding to it the miss of jesus (utterance_2977) +the immediate companions of jesus appear to be on the other hand as mythical as he is himself (utterance_2978) +who was matthew it was mark (utterance_2979) +who were john peter judis and mary (utterance_2980) +there is absolutely no evidence that they ever existed (utterance_2981) +if peter ever went to rome with the new doctrine how is it that no historian has taken note of him (utterance_2982) +here again we see the presence of a myst (utterance_2983) +he was the only one who saw them (utterance_2984) +peter paul john james judis occupied a stage almost exclusively (utterance_2985) +it is impossible to explain why the contemporaries of jesus the authors and the historians of this time you not take notice of him (utterance_2986) +for they had been in a conspiracy against him (utterance_2987) +howis is his unanimous signs to be accounted for (utterance_2988) +how van are we to decide which other numerous canadates for divine honors should be given our votes (utterance_2989) +and such a faith is never free it is always maintained with a sword now and by hell fire hereafter (utterance_2990) +yet the most impossible utterances are put in jesus mouth (utterance_2991) +only a mythical jesus convertually hand over the gormo of the evis to quarters who have petitions to press upon his attention (utterance_2992) +moreover if jesus could keep his promise there would be to day no misery in the world no orphans no childless mothers no shipwrecks no floods no famines no disease no crippled children no insanity no wars no crime no wrong (utterance_2993) +have these prayers been answered (utterance_2994) +how me self delired prophets these extravagant claims have produced (utterance_2995) +and who can number the bitter disappointments caused by such impossible promises (utterance_2996) +the same which the preachers of to day give he parried his hands with many words and at length said that the promise was betaken with the provision that what we asked for would be given if god thought it for a good (utterance_2997) +but he said if you ask evening in my name i will do it and if it were not so i would have told you (utterance_2998) +did he not mean just what he said (utterance_2999) +self effort and not prayer is a remute against ignorance slavery poverty and moral degradation (utterance_3000) +but i am determined not only to know if it is possible the whole truth about jesus but also to communicate that truth to others (utterance_3001) +but there is more of a moral tonic in the opening canadid discussion of a subject like the one in hand than in the multitude of platitudes (utterance_3002) +i never deliver a lecture in which i do not either directly or indirectly if full in free expression to my faith in everything that is worthier faith (utterance_3003) +if i do not believe in dogma is because i believe in freedom (utterance_3004) +oh he tears down but he is not built up is another criticism about my work it is not true (utterance_3005) +no preacher of preachers more constructive (utterance_3006) +class in truth and jail yag in the mouth of a student is that building up or tearing down (utterance_3007) +when brinal lighted a new torch to increase the lie of the world what was his foreward the stake (utterance_3008) +count your rights political religious social intellectual and telling which of them was conquered for you by the priest (utterance_3009) +i wish to tell you something (utterance_3010) +the first list be in personal the epithets irreverent blasphemer atheist and infidel are flung in a man not from pity but from envy (utterance_3011) +not having the courage or the industry of our neighbour who works like a busy bee in the world of men and books searching with a sweat of his brow for the real bread of life waiting the open page of for him with his tears pushing into the wee hours of the night his quest and made by the fairest of all loves (utterance_3012) +as i approached the city i heard bell's ringing and a little later i found the streets a stir with throngs of well dressed people in family groups winding their way hither and thither (utterance_3013) +looking about me i saw a gentleman in a neat black dress smiling at his hand extended to me with great cordiality (utterance_3014) +he must have realized i was a stranger and wished to hinder his hospitality to me i accepted it gratefully i clasped his hand he pressed mine (utterance_3015) +we gazed for a moment slightly into each other's eyes (utterance_3016) +of course you are going there too i said to my friendly guide (utterance_3017) +yes he answered i conduct the worship i am a priest (utterance_3018) +an idle i whispered taken by surprise (utterance_3019) +they worship god they did not exist (utterance_3020) +but the greeks loved their gods i protested my heart clammed in my breast (utterance_3021) +no i said in a low voice (utterance_3022) +he was an idle man and not a god (utterance_3023) +it made athensacy of light it created the beautiful the true the good yes our religion was divine (utterance_3024) +it had only one fault and drove to my guide what was that (utterance_3025) +i inquired without knowing what his answer would be it was not true (utterance_3026) +produce him (utterance_3027) +i wished her to myself what blasphemy (utterance_3028) +van taking heart i told my guide how more than once i had felt apollo radiant presence in my heart and told him of the immortal lines of homer concerned in a vinepolo (utterance_3029) +do you doubt homer (utterance_3030) +i said to him homer the inspired bard (utterance_3031) +no no a pearl is modern idle (utterance_3032) +he is a god and the son of a god (utterance_3033) +the air was heavy with incense a number of men in gorgeous vestments were passing to and fro bow and and kneeling before the various lights and images (utterance_3034) +observing my anxiety to understand a mean of all this my guide took me aside and in a whisper told me that the people were silibraying the anniversary of the birthday of their beautiful saviour jesus the son of god (utterance_3035) +forget apollo he said with his suggestion of severity in his voice (utterance_3036) +there was no such person he was only an idle (utterance_3037) +if you would assurch for apollo at all the universe you would never find any one answer into his name or description (utterance_3038) +i want to see jesus i hasten turning toward him (utterance_3039) +will he not be here this morning (utterance_3040) +will you not speak to his worshippers i asked again (utterance_3041) +will he not permit them to touch him to caress his hand to class his divine feet to inhale the embrosal fragrance of his breath to bask in the golden light of his eyes to hear the music of his immaculate accents (utterance_3042) +i asked my eyes filled with wonder in my voice quivering with excitement (utterance_3043) +would not that then i venture to ask impatiently make jesus as much of an idle as apollo (utterance_3044) +and if faith it uses as a god proves him a god while will not faith in apollo may kill a god (utterance_3045) +i make his offensive explanation of a given phenomenon (utterance_3046) +the mind grace for knowledge the child ask questions because of an emborning desire to know (utterance_3047) +now and then they came close enough to stop at each other (utterance_3048) +with this mythos the prontom man was satisfied and he was developing intelligence realized its inadequacy science was born without realization (utterance_3049) +the method of one eyed people live in an india has in replace by accurate information concerning the hindoos (utterance_3050) +and this is precisely the use to which this have been put (utterance_3051) +as to you someth (utterance_3052) +there is in man of faculty for fiction (utterance_3053) +it thinks less than guesses (utterance_3054) +in his reflection which introduces up the end to the mouth of imagination curving its pace and subdue in its relentless spirit (utterance_3055) +we filled a space abound over us with spirits fairies gods and other invisible and airy beings (utterance_3056) +recovered the rainbow we reach out for the moon (utterance_3057) +our feet not really being to touch the firm ground until we have reached the years of discretion (utterance_3058) +science was not born till man had retreated (utterance_3059) +grown up people create science (utterance_3060) +the cradle is the womb of all the fairies in face and mankind (utterance_3061) +this school is the birthplace of science (utterance_3062) +religion of the science of the child (utterance_3063) +in the discussion of this subject i appeal to the mature not the child mind (utterance_3064) +he is god's mouthpiece and no one may disagree with him (utterance_3065) +the only way i may command your respect is to be reasonable (utterance_3066) +let us place ourselves entirely in the hands of the evidence (utterance_3067) +as intelligent beings would desire to know where this jesus his worship is not only cost in the world millions of the people's money but which is also drawing to his service the time the energies the affections the devotions and the labor of humanity is a myth or reality (utterance_3068) +and again when the artists following malicorne's advice was a little plate in arriving and when saint agnan had been obliged to be absent for some time it was interesting to observe that though no one witnessed them those moments of silence full of deep expression which united in one side two souls most disposed to understand each other (utterance_3069) +in a word malicorne philosopher that he was though he knew it not had learned how to inspire the king with an appetite in the midst of play and with desire in the assurance of possession (utterance_3070) +in this manner therefore without leaving her room and having no confidant she was able to return to her apartment thus removing by her appearance a little tarty perhaps the suspicions of the most determined sceptic (utterance_3071)