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Updated: May 3, 2025
The aëroplane was ignored, but the wind shield was loudly and acrimoniously discussed. The day was cold and had turned grey and lowering. It was pleasant after our tour of the station to go into the long living room and sit by the fire. But the fire smoked. One after another those dauntless British officers attacked it, charged with poker, almost with bayonet, and retired defeated.
With this I have, I will not say completed the tale of the suffragist's grievances that would be impossible but I have at any rate dealt with those which she has most acrimoniously insisted upon. Argument that Woman Requires a Vote for her Protection Argument that Woman ought to be Invested with the Responsibilities of Voting in Order that She May Attain Her Full Intellectual Stature.
If the negotiation itself had been acrimoniously censured; if amicable arrangements, whatever might be their character, had been passionately condemned; it was not to be expected that the treaty would assuage these pre-existing irritations. In fact, public opinion did receive a considerable shock, and men uninfested by the spirit of faction felt some disappointment on its first appearance.
The latter asserts, that he added fresh objections to the preceding, and that, being urged by the Emperor, he recommended to him to begin his retreat that very day by way of Kalouga. Napoleon, irritated at this, acrimoniously replied, that "he liked simple plans, less circuitous routes, high roads, the road by which he had come, yet he would not retread it but with peace."
Huntley is the oldest friend you have in the world," say I, acrimoniously, still sticking to his first and most offensive form of expression, and heavily accenting it, "I wonder that you never happened to mention her existence before you went." "So do I," he says, a little thoughtfully. A pause.
This has got to stop and will whether amicably, or acrimoniously. The new members most of them from heavily agrarian central and east Europe will demand equality sooner, or later. Poor nations will give up on the entire trade architecture so laboriously erected in the last 20 years if they become convinced, as they should, that it is all prestidigitation and a rich boys' club.
It was no common person that you were bent on punishing. About that person I feel, I own, considerable difficulty in saying anything. He is placed in a situation which would prevent generous enemies, which has prevented all the members of this House, with one ignominious exception, from assailing him acrimoniously.
To Jimmie, living the obscure and comparatively peaceful life of a Socialist propagandist, the question of "sabotage, violence and crime" had been a more or less academic one, about which the comrades debated acrimoniously, and against which they voted by a large majority.
On these points I will not pretend to offer any opinion, in opposition to men who have resided as many years as I was days on the island. On the whole, it appears to me that the morality and religion of the inhabitants are highly creditable. There are many who attack, even more acrimoniously than Kotzebue, both the missionaries, their system, and the effects produced by it.
It was past midnight before the laborious four finished their review of the books and joined with Scattergood in giving Ovid a clean bill of health. "Didn't think Ovid had it in him to steal," said Kettleman. "Hain't got no business stirrin' us up like this for nothin'," said Atwell, acrimoniously. "Maybe," suggested Scattergood, "Ovid's come down with a fit of suthin'."
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