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'Will he stay long away? pray tell me. The Doctor looked into my troubled face with inquiring and darkened eyes, like one who half reads another's meaning; and then he said a little briskly, but not sharply 'Well, I don't know, I'm sure, Miss; no, indeed, you must have mistaken; there's nothing that I know. There was a little pause, and he added 'No.

"Yes, I feel that. It is the only guide I have, and I try my best to follow it. But whether the Unseen Power sees us and reads all our thoughts as Christians think, or only set things going, so to speak, is more than I am able to say.

"Ah, Rose!" said Josephine; "it is delightful terrible, I mean to have a little creature about one that reads one like this. What shall I do? What shall I do?" "Why, do the best you can under all the circumstances. His wound is healed, you know; he must go back to the army; you have both suffered to the limits of mortal endurance.

'Then follows some passage from the life of Christ. Elsmere reads it and expounds it, in the first place, as a lecturer might expound a passage of Tacitus, historically and critically.

In the garden of the cottage, in a secluded part of it, there is a summer-house call it beauty's bower with Margaret within and honeysuckle, clematis, and the passion flower, twining and intertwining, kissing and embracing, around, above, below, on every side. There they are sitting. He reads a book and a paragraph has touched a chord in one of the young hearts, to which the other has responded.

I don't read Emerson either, but I like him when Paul reads him for me." "Well, I warn you there is an awful lot of him here!" Moya's voice was a trifle husky as she read on. "Old as Jove, Old as Love'" "I thought Love was young!" Christine in a whisper aside. "'Who of me Tells the pedigree? Only the mountains old, Only the waters cold, Only the moon and stars, My coevals are."

Ever since he had learned to read, he had liked to find stories about them in the newspapers, with pictures of them and their palaces. He had read these stories as a child reads fairy tales. They were his creatures of dreams, belonging to a world above reality, above pain and inconvenience.

It reads thus: "The kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchantman seeking goodly pearls: who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all that he had and bought it." By this "pearl of great price" Jesus meant true religion, as he did by the treasure hid in the field in the former parable.

We would have been millionaires if we had only worked with pick and spade one little day on our property and so secured our ownership! It reads like a wild fancy sketch, but the evidence of many witnesses, and likewise that of the official records of Esmeralda District, is easily obtainable in proof that it is a true history.

Newton certainly knows any proposition that he now at any time reads in his book to be true; though he has not in actual view that admirable chain of intermediate ideas whereby he at first discovered it to be true.