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"All we wish is the result. We ask for no credit." "Moreover," warned Mr. Slosher, "I wouldn't care to have my purpose known until after I have sold my own residence. I am a little worried, however, about the detail you suggest. No man of any consequence would injure the good will of his fellows by standing sponsor for such a venture."

"And his vices will injure his cause," said Boisberthelot. Then, after another pause, he continued, "Nevertheless, he was anxious to be reconciled. He came to see the king. I was at Versailles when some one spit on his back." "From the top of the grand staircase?" "Yes." "I am glad of it." "We called him Bourbon le Bourbeaux." "He is bald-headed; he has pimples; he is a regicide. Poh!"

Sorenson, enraged by his son's injury and burning for revenge, was oblivious to all else but his passion, while Janet Hosmer, divided between contempt and fear, had but the single thought of ridding herself of the man. "You cannot injure me," she said, in reply to his savage utterance. "I'll drive you and your father out of this town and this state," he exclaimed.

Acts which may injure the public are prevented by guessing at evil intentions; and criminal enterprises are not allowed to come to action.

"Whenever anything is done to injure the interests and degrade the honor of France, all but the dead know how to name the two conspirators-in-chief " "Sir, sire! this insinuation " "It is not an insinuation, my lord," said Joan, placidly, "it is a charge. I bring it against the King's chief minister and his Chancellor."

"She thanked me for the good opinion I entertained of her, and promised to receive G M 's offers in a way that should prevent a repetition of them. 'No, said I, 'you must not irritate him by incivility: he has it in his power to injure us.

"We not only set before ourselves a service to God in preparing volumes of new books, but we exercise the duties of a holy piety, if we first handle so as not to injure them, then return them to their proper places and commend them to undefiling custody, that they may rejoice in their purity while held in the hand, and repose in security when laid up in their repositories.

And servants also that are ever fond of pleasure, if they do not receive even slight punishments from their master, contract all sorts of vices, and the wicked ever injure such a master. These and many other demerits attach to those that are ever-forgiving! "Listen now, O son of Virochana, to the demerits of those that are never forgiving!

As our Swami says in another place: "When man has seen himself as one with the infinite Being of the universe, when all separateness has ceased, when all men, all women, all angels, all gods, all animals, all plants, the whole universe has been melted into that oneness, then all fear disappears. Whom to fear? Can I hurt myself? Can I kill myself? Can I injure myself? Do you fear yourself?

You are saying to yourself that because of my ill-success with you I am trying to injure him; but what if I could prove that he does not love you as much as he pretends ?" "Come, come, control your naughty tongue! Are you going to begin backbiting again? You are playing a mean part, Trumeau.