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Updated: June 5, 2025
But, alone in the still house, Raymond felt as if a linen cover also enshrouded him he lost his appetite and took to lying at night with his hands clasped under his head thinking! Thinking, he called it but he was only drifting. He was abdicating thought. He got so that he could see himself as if detached from himself "And a dub of a chap, too, I look to myself," he reflected, ambiguously.
He could not deny it; so he laughed and said, "Ah, well! ah, well! Suit yourself. Take your trunk and pitch into Vesuvius, if you like. I won't stand in your way." His acquiescence was ungraciously, and I believe I may say ambiguously, expressed; but it mattered little, for in three days from that time I took my trunk, Halicarnassus his cane, and we started on our travels.
At length, in March, 1790, the subject of the petition was discussed, when the Assembly adopted a decree concerning it. The decree, however, was worded so ambiguously, that the two parties in St. Domingo the whites and the people of color interpreted each in their own favor.
I retorted ambiguously, enjoying the Inspector's manifest delight in this scene as much as I did my own secret thoughts and the prospect of the surprise I was holding in store for them. "But your interference with the clock and the discovery you made that it had been going at the time the shelves fell, was not unknown to us, and we have made use of it, good use as you will hereafter see."
"You mustn't say anything definite. You must speak ambiguously. Besides, in case they did write, we would fix it up in the office." Caesar began to laugh naively. Afterwards, the two abbes, a little excited by the food and the good wine, started in to have a violent discussion, speaking Italian. Caesar paid the bill, and pretending that he had an urgent engagement, took leave of them and went out.
"Thumb him," said Miss Spenceley, "and we'll soon settle the argument." "How thumb him? The term is not familiar." "Show him, Pinkey." Her eyes were sparkling, for Wallie's tone implied that the expression was slang and also rather vulgar. "He'll unload his pack as shore as shootin'." Pinkey hesitated. "No time like the present to learn a lesson," she replied, ambiguously.
If we remember that the wanderer reverses the way of birth, we shall not be surprised that he finds a smaller garden in the larger. That is probably the uterus. The wanderer attains the most intimate union with his ideal, the mother, in imagining himself in her body. This phantasy is continued still less ambiguously,—but I do not wish to anticipate.
This was the end of revenging the death of Germanicus; an affair ambiguously related, not by those only who then lived and interested themselves in it, but likewise the following times: so dark and intricate are all the highest transactions; while some hold for certain facts, the most precarious hearsays; others turn facts into falsehood; and both are swallowed and improved by the credulity of posterity.
"I told you, she'd be afraid to refuse you," said George Sheldon, when the dentist came home from Barlingford, where Tom Halliday's widow was living with her mother. Philip had answered his brother's questions rather ambiguously at first, but in the end had been fain to confess that he had asked Mrs. Halliday to marry him, and that his suit had prospered.
Terriberry speared a bit of pineapple with the long nail of his forefinger and added ambiguously: "M'bet you." "Aw, g'long! Food for infants, this wish I had a barrel of it." "Doc, you got a nawful capac'ty." Mr. Terriberry looked at her in languishing admiration. "That's why I like you. Honest t'God I hate to see a lady go under the table firs' shot out o' the box.
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