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Updated: June 19, 2025
Good by good by: do not altogether forget me and once more, Harry good by." What I might have said, thought, or done, I know not; but the arrival of Mrs. Bingham's carriage at the door left no time for any thing but escape. So, once more pressing her hand firmly to my lips, I said "au revoir, Emily, au revoir, not good by," and rushing from the room, regained my own, just as Mrs.
As the curtain was drawn from the long canvas Patricia's eyes were on the faces of those in whose impressions she was most interested, and they gave her great satisfaction. Mrs. Bingham's eyes were wide and startled as those of the small hen who discovers that her ungainly child is really a white swan. "She won't be patronizing Elinor after this," thought Patricia with a chuckle. "And Mr.
An article of Bingham's in the first number of the Westminster Review, in which he offered as an explanation of something which he disliked in Moore, that "Mr. Moore is a poet, and therefore is not a reasoner," did a good deal to attach the notion of hating poetry to the writers in the Review.
Fairfax's prices; the little girl; the wedding-ring but no widow's weeds; the Portsmouth postmark; the French book; Mrs. Bingham's new gown, and lastly a piece of information contributed by Mrs. Sweeting and considered to be of great importance, as we shall see presently that Mrs. Fairfax bought her coffee whole and ground it herself.
They came by ones, twos, and threes, and left all sorts of offerings there was enough grub for Bingham's nine gods of war, with plenty left over for the Peace Conference at The Hague.
Granger, while Owen looked round wildly, and Beatrice sunk her head upon her breast. "Then I will explain," said Elizabeth, still pointing at her sister. "She is Geoffrey Bingham's mistress. On the night of Whit-Sunday last she rose from bed and went into his room at one in the morning. I saw her with my own eyes.
The Church universal in all ages has always divided its membership into two great classes, and two only, the clergy and the laymen, using the terms laity and laymen synonymously and interchangeably. See Bingham's "Antiquities," Blackstone's "Commentaries," Schaffs "History," and kindred authorities. It is sheer trifling for sensible males to talk about a distinction between laymen and laywomen.
His visit was of scarcely five minutes' duration; but was evidently the opening of a breaching battery by the Bingham family in all form the object of which I could at least guess at. My embarrassments were not destined to end here; for scarcely had I returned Mr. Bingham's eighth salutation at the head of the staircase, when another individual presented himself before me.
"Well," she would say, "if we have got to sacrifice Art to steam-heat and speaking-tubes...." The young man was both amazed and exasperated by her spirit and her pertinacity; he could only be kept in trim and in temper by Bingham's frequent assurances that she was a very clever girl and a very well-meaning one, after all.
Bingham's apartments, we found that she had just left home to wait upon Mrs. O'Leary, and consequently, that Miss Bingham was alone. Trevanion, therefore, having wished me a safe deliverance through my trying mission, shook my hand warmly, and departed. I stood for some minutes irresolutely, with my hand upon the lock of the door.
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