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Updated: May 7, 2025


It bodes guid to naebody whan there's a conjunc o' twa sic wanderin' stars o' blackness as you twa." "His ain mither!" exclaimed Malcolm, brooding in horror over the frightful conjecture. The door opened, and the mad laird came in. His eyes were staring wide, but their look and that of his troubled visage showed that he was awake only in some frightful dream.

'He's incurably unjust to my father. 'Your father has been with you all the time, Harry? I guessed it. 'Well? 'It generally bodes no good to the Grange. Do pardon me for saying that. I know nothing of him; I know only that the squire is generous, and THAT I stand for with all my might. Forgive me for what I said. 'Forgive you with all my heart. I like you all the better.

Each individual has a right to choose his own career in life, so long as that career is respectable and bodes no evil to humanity. If, as your father threatens, he refuses to give you support while you are exploring the field of literature, you should feel grateful to him for this unintentional incentive to success.

Besides that, everything that takes the employer away from the people who do his work, and removes him from contact with them, is a bad thing, and always bodes ill to any harmonious relation between capital and labor.

"This meeting bodes luck," said Cuddie; "and they hae walth o' beef, that's ae thing certain, for here's a raw hide that has been about the hurdies o' a stot not half an hour syne it's warm yet." Encouraged by these appearances, they returned again to the house, and, announcing themselves as men in the same predicament with the inmates, clamoured loudly for admittance.

Of such as these the Republic was not made. Let us pray that the future of our country is not in the hands of these fin-de-siecle gilded youths, but rather in the calloused palms of young men yet unknown, labouring upon the farms of the land. When we compare the young manhood of Abraham Lincoln with the specimens we are now producing, we see too well that it bodes ill for the twentieth century

Jane Coop stopped dead at the outer edge of the colonnade. "I thought you said it was a Temple of Love, dearie: all white marble, with doves and lovers'-knots and and hearts. It's a tomb, that's what it is, and I'm going to sit outside. I don't like it; it bodes no good. Let's go back, dearie; I don't like the place or the hotel or the town. If we go quickly we can catch the first boat.

That omen bodes unhappiness to him or her who sees it, and I was already unhappy." "Because I was not here to comfort you, Harry. Well, that is remedied." She shook her head, and did not return the reassuring pressure of his hand. "Listen!" she said.

There is another and a far more subtle form of Irony, in which a character uses riddling speech interpreted by another actor in a sense different from the truth as it is known to the spectators; this too can be used in such a manner as to charge human speech with a sinister double meaning which bodes ruin under the mask of words of innocence.

The terms of surrender were shamefully violated, Fort Loyal and Falmouth were reduced to ashes and over one hundred men, women and children murdered by the savages. From May to October their bodes lay exposed to the elements and wild beasts but were finally buried by Major Benjamin Church as he passed on an expedition to the eastward.

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