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He rose and laughed a little a curious sort of laugh; and Nina watched him, perplexed. "Where are you going, Phil?" she asked. "I don't know. I where is Eileen?" "She's lying down a headache; probably too much sun and salt water. Shall I send for her?" "No; I'll go up and inquire how she is. Susanne is there, isn't she?" And he entered the house and ascended the stairs.

"Monsieur will forgive the fact," he begged, "that I am not better housed. If it were not for little Susanne here," he added, patting her upon the shoulder, "I doubt whether I should keep a roof above my head at all." "It is not like this," Herr Freudenberg declared, "that genius should be treated." "Indeed," Mademoiselle Susanne intervened, "it is what I tell him always.

See what the League have done your holy League! while you sat plotting with the black crows!" She pointed into the dark room behind her, and the movement disclosed a younger girl clinging to her skirts, and weeping silently. "Come here, Susanne," Felix said; he had turned pale and red and shifted from one foot to another, under the lash of the elder girl's scorn. "Your sister is not herself.

"But your sister," he continued, "is distraught. She has sat at the window all day as you see her now sometimes looking at it. Oh, Felix," in a voice shaken by tears, "this has been a dreadful day for this house!" The young Portail assented by a groan. "And Susanne?" he asked. "Is with Mistress Marie, terrified almost to death, poor child.

Think then on Susanne, and never commit the fault of arranging this little room below that of madame's, but place it always above, and do not shrink from disfiguring your mansion by hideous divisions in the windows.

Think then on Susanne, and never commit the fault of arranging this little room below that of madame's, but place it always above, and do not shrink from disfiguring your mansion by hideous divisions in the windows.

When I paused, he took up the story and finished it with ease, and and poetical justice, I may say, Mr. Raleigh. Susanne was the sister of Mrs. Laudersdale's father, though far younger than he. She met a young American gentleman, and they became interested in each other.

Susanne Schindler that was her name was the daughter of a respectable notary's clerk, who was obliged to wander about the world a great deal, and perished in Hungary just as she reached womanhood. Her mother had died when she was born, and an old woman had taken care of her out of friendship. People called the lass 'beautiful Susel, and she was wonderfully charming.

For you might have called Susanne, who goes to school, and I have thought you liked her better than you do me." "No, I do not like her now. She pinched little Jacques Moet until he cried out and then she laid it to Pierre Dessau, who was well thrashed for it, and I called her a coward. I am afraid girls are not brave." "Come nearer and let us hide in this thicket.

The clerk soon made his appearance with the rough balance-sheet required. It did more to restore the good humour of the old man than even the soothing of his daughter. "Oh! here we are La Belle Susanne Debtor to . Total, 14,864 pounds, 14 shillings, 3 pence. Contra Credit. 27,986 pounds, 16 shillings, 8 pence. Balance to profit and loss, 13,122 pounds, 2 shillings, 5 pence.