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"I have offended thee too far," replied Dakianos: "thy life would be my death, it would give me too much inquietude." Then at one blow striking off the head of the old man, "Now," cried he, "my secret is my own!" The first care of Dakianos was immediately to make a grave and to inter this unfortunate victim of his avarice.

It seems impossible that there can be gathered together anywhere else in the world as many men as they have." "I don't wonder ye think so, but ef ye'd been whar I wuz to-day ye'd think thet all the world wuz marchin' round in blue uniforms. Over heah hit seems ez ef all the cedars on the hills hed suddintly turned inter Rebel soldiers.

Thorns are sometimes interlaced with the lily, to express the "Lilium inter Spinas." The ROSE. She is the rose of Sharon, as well as the lily of the valley; and as an emblem of love and beauty, the rose is especially dedicated to her. The plantation or garden of roses is often introduced; sometimes it forms the background of the picture.

Dum dicit: 'patrem excitabo, irrepsi tamen et male repugnanti gaudium extorsi. At ille non indelectatus nequitia mea, postquam diu questus est deceptum se et derisum traductumque inter condiscipulos, quibus iactasset censum meum, 'videris tamen' inquit 'non ero tui similis.

Nor need you wonder at this; for, besides that I husbanded the provision that fell to my share better than they, I had provisions of my own which I did not share with my comrades; yet, when I buried the last, I had so little remaining, that I thought it could not hold out long: So I dug a grave, resolving to lie down in it, because there was none left alive to inter me.

Yo' done frighten me inter a conniption fit if yo' hollers dat way." Here he rounded the turn himself and almost bumped into Jack. Even the darkey's volubility was stilled at the sight before them. A great part of the wall of the crevasse the wall which they had hoped to climb, had broken off and fallen into the gulf.

D'ye reckon, being a sportin' man and an A 1 feller, he's goin' to waltz down inter that hotel, rigged out ez he is? D'ye reckon he's goin' to let his partners get the laugh outer him? D'ye reckon he's goin' to show his head outer this yer ranch till he can do it square? Not much! Go 'long. Dad, you're talking silly!" The old man weakened.

To which Byron, inter alia: "Mr. Southey, with a cowardly ferocity, exults over the anticipated death-bed repentance of the objects of his dislike, and indulges himself in a pleasant 'Vision of Judgment, in prose, as well as verse, full of impious impudence. What Mr.

Horace, who was a contemporary of Labeo's, says that he was a maniac, or, at any rate "considered very crazy in the company of the sane": "Labeone insanior inter Sanos dicatur."

'See them Arichat Frenchmen step back when I bid?" "But an auction ain't taking anythink off a dead man. It's business." "We know it ain't, but there's no goin' in the teeth o' superstition. That's one o' the advantages o' livin' in a progressive country." And Dan began whistling: "Oh, Double Thatcher, how are you? Now Eastern Point comes inter view.