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He glanced at his guest, who sat quite still, the head bent a trifle, the disturbing gray eyes fixed contemplatively an him accusingly. And yet the accusation did not seem personal with the clergyman, whose eyes were nearly the medium, the channels of a greater, an impersonal Ice. It was true that the man had changed. He was wholly baffling to Mr.

Think of all the little jewels you know in Keats, in Shelley, or Wordsworth: the moments when the mists between those men and the divine "defecated to a thin transparency"; those were precisely the moments when the poets lost sight of their I-am-ness and entered into true relations with the Universe.

The speaker was a woman whom Randy had seen but a few times, and she was therefore surprised when the team stopped at the side of the road and its occupant accosted her. "It is true that mother is having Janie Clifton make some things for me," said Randy.

But a true woman can always show kindness to everyone whom she does not scorn, so though she blushed deeply at the sight of the man whose kiss she had returned, she received him cordially, and with sympathetic questions.

He hot fer true, ain't he?" "Daddy who?" asked Uncle Remus, straightening himself up with dignity. "W'ich?" "I know you in Char'son, an' den in Sewanny. I spec I dun grow away from 'membrance." "You knowed me in Charlstun, and den in Savanny?" "He been long time, ain't he, Daddy Ben?" "Dat's w'at's a pesterin' un me. How much you reckon you know'd me?" "He good while pas'; when I wer' pickaninny.

You and I are ready to forget it, and invent some false righteousness of our own, not like Jesus Christ, but like what we in our private fancies think is most graceful, or most agreeable, or most easy; or most grand, and far-fetched, and difficult. But the Holy Spirit came to convince men of righteousness; to show them what true righteousness was like. And how?

'If it hadn't been for the girl! Who but poor ould Fagin was the means of your having such a handy girl about you? 'He says true enough there! said Nancy, coming hastily forward. 'Let him be; let him be.

She can do the most extraordinary things exactly like a boy. I am always afraid of her coming to grief, but she never does." "Funny little beggar!" said Saltash. "I am quite sure of one thing," pursued Maud. "She never learnt these things at any school. She tells me she has been to a good many." "I believe that's true," said Saltash.

These poor savages are indeed the enemies of our Lord; but you, if ye be not true believers, are traitors!" I must confess that my heart condemned me while the teacher spoke in this earnest manner, and I knew not what to reply. Peterkin, too, did not seem to like it, and I thought would willingly have escaped.

There had been too many false and idle claims brought forward to admit of the true ones being accepted without investigation and delay.