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If she wants to make a present to any of them nobles ez has been purlite to her, it's got to be something that Rough-and-Ready ain't ashamed of. I showed you that pin Mamie bought me in Paris, didn't I? It's just come for my Christmas present. No! I reckon I put it in the safe, for them kind o' things don't suit my style: but s'pose I orter sport it to-morrow.

"He was too soft to live long," his brother Nathaniel feelingly observed, on the occasion of his funeral. "Many's the time I've said to him, 'If you're arguin' a pint with a stranger, you should always draw first, then argue, and then shoot, if you judge that he's on the shoot. Bill was too purlite.

Den dey take him straight away to de palace and crown him, an', oh! arter dat dey become very purlite to him. Him know dat well 'nuff, and so him not be angry just now. Ah! me did 'xpec, to hab bin kick and spitted on dis berry day!"

He's a great fool and a great scamp." "The same to you," said Jack; "you're another. I shall hate you presently, if you go on making yourself so ridiculous. Now, mind, I'll only give you a trial of another week or so, and if you don't be more purlite in your d n language, I'll leave you."

Massa's not always so purlite as he might be!" "There is no fear," said Nigel, "not at present, anyhow, for Van der Kemp says that the force of this eruption is diminishing "

Trust the waiter for knowing something about him, and if he doesn't, why, it's only to send a purlite message upstairs, saying that two gentlemen in the coffee-room have bet a trifle that he is some nobleman Lord Maryborough, for instance, he's a little chap but we must make haste, or the gentleman will be asleep.

"She looked at me, oh what a look of pity it was", as much as to say, 'Where have you been all your born days, not to know better nor that? but I guess you don't know better in the States how could you know any thing there? But she only said it was the custom here, for she was a very purlite old woman, was Aunty.

"Is the lieutenant married, uncle?" "Not as I know of, lad; why d'ye ask?" "Because because married men are so much pleasanter than " Ruby stopped short, for he just then remembered that his uncle was a bachelor. "'Pon my word, youngster! go on, why d'ye stop in your purlite remark?"

"Is the lieutenant married, uncle?" "Not as I know of, lad; why d'ye ask?" "Because because married men are so much pleasanter than " Ruby stopped short, for he just then remembered that his uncle was a bachelor. "'Pon my word, youngster! go on, why d'ye stop in your purlite remark?"

"You see, sir, if it was a page-in-buttons I was to be, to attend on my young lady the guv'ness, I might take it into consideration; but to go into buttons an' blue merely to open a door an' do the purlite to wisitors, an' mix up things with bad smells by way of a change why, d'ee see, the prospec' ain't temptin'. Besides, I hate blue.