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The cattle were grazing in a good meadow off toward the river, half a mile from camp. At dusk the boys went off to take charge of them. After dark the wolves began to howl in all directions and sometimes it sounded as if a hundred hungry ones were fighting over a single carcass. Then the buffalo bulls chimed in with the music and bellowed, apparently by thousands, at the same time.

If I were to see again the cliffs of old England, I would sing too." "It must be like finding a new beetle," said Venning. "We are not out of the woods yet," chimed in Mr. Hume, grimly, "so just give your attention to our stores. We must carry up as much as we can, for, 'taboo' or not 'taboo, I do not like the idea of leaving all our things here."

Here the Italians and Rumanians chimed in, reminding their kinsmen that it was the same American statesmen who in the peace conditions first presented to Count Brockdorff-Rantzau made over the German population of the Saar Valley to France at the end of fifteen years as the fair equivalent of a sum of money payable in gold, and that France at any rate had raised no objection to the barter nor to the principle at the root of it.

He gave me the prayer, 'Lord, give me all in this house. And He just did! Before I left the house, every one had got a blessing. The last night of my visit I was too happy to sleep, and passed most of the night in praise and renewal of my own consecration, and these little couplets formed themselves, and chimed in my heart one after another, till they finished with 'Ever, ONLY, ALL, for Thee."

"And I'm five," Mary's sister chimed in. "I want you to promise me," said Victoria, "that you won't let brother play in that shed. And the very next time I come I'll bring you both the nicest thing I can think of." Mary began to dance. "We'll promise, we'll promise!" she cried for both, and at this juncture Mrs.

A bell chimed in that silence. To Yourii it seemed to celebrate the moment in which each had found the other. Sina, laughing, broke away from him and ran back. "Auntie will wonder what has become of me! Wait here, and I'll be back soon."

Cameron came up to Wilford and expressed her preference for Margaret, as being a good name an aristocratic name, and her own. "Yes, but not half so pretty and striking as Rose Marie," Juno chimed in. "Rose Mary! Thunder!" Father Cameron exclaimed. "Call her a marygold, or a sunflower, just as much. Don't go to being fools by giving a child a heathenish name. Give us your opinion, Katy."

But in my opinion you are a fool to take on jobs you are not hired to do and get no money for." "Oh, I don't care about the money." "You don't, eh?" chimed in the derisive note of another chauffeur who had at the instant come out of the doorway. "Say, who are you, anyway? One of the Vanderbilts?" "Quit heckling the young one, Peters," put in the chauffeur of the red cheeks.

"I thought you were dead," she said, turning to the smiling Mr. Tucker. "I never dreamed of seeing you again." "Nobody would," chimed in Mr. Clark. "When do you go back?" "Back?" said the visitor. "Where?" "Australia," replied Mr. Clark, with a glance of defiance at the widow. "You must ha' been missed a great deal all this time." Mr. Tucker regarded him with a haughty stare.

Varax himself lay dead upon the field, too fortunate not to survive his disgrace. It was hardly more than daylight on that dull January morning; nine o'clock had scarce chimed from the old brick steeples of Turnhout, yet two thousand Spaniards had fallen before the blows of eight hundred Netherlanders, and there were five hundred prisoners beside.