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Updated: June 2, 2025
But a close inspection in the dormitory looking-glass revealed no blemish on his handsome features. What a go is life! Let us examine the case of Jackson, of Dexter's.
She hesitated before she answered in the negative, and this too in a way to give more meaning to her reply, although nothing could be farther from her intentions. "The happy man may then be an American and a seaman! Here is great encouragement. Do you object to sixty?" "In any other man I should certainly consider it a blemish, as my own dear father is but fifty." Mrs.
It afterward split a coral patch in two at the Keeling Islands, and did not receive a blemish. Better timber for a ship than pasture white oak never grew. The breast-hooks, as well as all the ribs, were of this wood, and were steamed and bent into shape as required.
"You may," said Charles, "unless he proves his point. A Prince must be just, you know!" "That's fair," said Margaret. "Of course," retorted Lady Ogilvie. "He'll be right if he says I've an eye like an ox and a mouth like a frog." "Save your ears, Master Wheatman!" said Charles, grinning at me. "What's the blemish?" "Davie!" said I.
It ought naturally to be easier to breed a pure white dog from white parents than to breed correctly marked and well tanned puppies from perfect black and tans; but the efforts of many breeders do not seem to support such a theory in connection with the English Terrier, whose litters frequently show the blemish of a spot of brindle or russet.
Thus what can one make of a plain fisherman who talks in this wise about a rainstorm? The most serious blemish in 'William Tell' is the introduction of Johannes Parricida in the fifth act, an idea which Goethe attributed to feminine influence of some sort.
"Rumolt", "Bindolt", and "Hunolt" have no historical basis and merely help to swell the retinue of the Burgundians. "Worship". This word has been frequently used here in its older meaning of 'worth', 'reverence', 'respect', to translate the M.H.G. "eren", 'honors'. ADVENTURE II. Of Siegfried. Of this hero I sing, how fair he grew. Free he was of every blemish.
This day I got a little rent in my new fine camlett cloak with the latch of Sir G. Carteret's door; but it is darned up at my tailor's, that it will be no great blemish to it; but it troubled me.
The corn he sent home to his customers was not always quite so good as the samples he had produced at market; and he now and then forgot to name some capital blemish in the horses he sold at fair.
He watched the stallion out of sight through the lilacs, seeing visions of fair Shire colts mighty of bone and frame and free from blemish, then turned, as ever he turned to the immediate thing, and spoke to his body servant. "How's that last boy, Oh My? Showing up?" "Him pretty good boy, I think," was the answer. "Him young boy. Everything new. Pretty slow. All the same bime by him show up good."
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