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Updated: May 4, 2025
He forced me at the end of the few days' honeymoon to return to the Court, and then from that time forth I saw him only surreptitiously with the aid of d'Altenstein, who was the aider and abettor of it all, yet loving me, and working only, as she thought, poor soul, for my happiness. "I was soon undeceived in my Prince.
"We ever did hold for King Harry, sir," returned the old esquire. "Yea, but against his true friends, York and Warwick. One is cut off, ay, and his aider and defender, Salisbury, who should rather have stood by his King, has suffered a traitor's end at Pomfret." "My Lord of Salisbury! Ah! that will grieve my poor young lady," sighed Ridley.
" ... I declare that this talk of leaving the slave to his fate is not a true representation of the case; and it indicates a strange dullness of comprehension with regard to our position and purpose. What! Is it to forsake the slave when I cease to be the aider and abettor of his master? What!
Hammond, done with drilling and duty, and getting the route forever, going in for quiet, country life in bonnie Scotland, with Miss Beatrix Stuart for aider and abettor. Charley and his wife came to New York for the wedding. They had told Mr.
The vagaries and peculiarities of Captain Yorke, with his ignorance and indifference to city ways and manners, had more than once drawn public notice upon him; the episode of Daisy as a peanut-vender, with the old sailor as her aider and abetter, being but a trifling circumstance compared to some others; and Mrs.
Threats were made here and there that leading Catholics should be arrested; at all events, the ringleader should be made to suffer. All seemed to settle down upon that Father Ryan must necessarily have been the aider and abettor, if not the suggestor, in such a high-handed proceeding.
Whenever there was any insurrection or public disorder, the crown employed martial law; and it was, during that time, exercised not only over the soldiers, but over the whole people; any one might be punished as a rebel, or an aider and abettor of rebellion, whom the provost martial, or lieutenant of a county, or their deputies, pleased to suspect. * Neal, vol. i. p. 479. Vol. iv. p. 510.
So Milton presents an example of "sure and flawless perfection of rhythm and diction"; Joubert is characterized by his intense care of "perfecting himself"; Falkland is "our martyr of sweetness and light, of lucidity of mind and largeness of temper"; George Sand is admirable because of her desire to make the ideal life the normal one; Emerson is "the friend and aider of those who would live in the spirit."
Fifteen minutes later, in the attic room, a lonely little girl sobbed into the tightly-clutched sheet: "I know, father-among-the-angels, I'm not playing the game one bit now not one bit; but I don't believe even you could find anything to be glad about sleeping all alone 'way off up here in the dark like this. If only I was near Nancy or Aunt Polly, or even a Ladies' Aider, it would be easier!"
I never thought of your takin' me for her. We we ain't a bit alike we ain't, we ain't!" Timothy chuckled softly; but Nancy was too disturbed to answer the merry flash from his eyes. "But who ARE you?" questioned Pollyanna. "You don't look a bit like a Ladies' Aider!" Timothy laughed outright this time. "I'm Nancy, the hired girl.
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