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Really," he added with irritation, "there are enough bothers in life without rubbish of this kind, which comes from living among savages and absorbing their ideas. I am beginning to think that I shall have to give way and leave Africa, though it will break my heart just when, after all the striving, my efforts are being crowned with success."

We live very close to the graveyard, and my boy Ed said he had been seeing his brother Charley in his room every night. If he was livin' right he would not be seeing Charlie every night. Charlie never bothers me. He was my boy that died and is buried in this graveyard above our house." The following is a very old Negro sermon I found in an old scrap book dated 1839, belonging to Mrs.

This work finished, and the bedding for the horses arranged in the "fingers" as Polly had directed, the two girls stood near the entrance of the cave, wondering what possibly could have happened to keep Polly and Eleanor so long. "I just felt in my bones that it was an awful risk to go into the black hole of the unknown!" cried Barbara. "It isn't that that bothers me at all, Bob.

"There bean't a letter that bothers him," cried Abel, triumphantly, to the no less triumphant foster-mother. Jan had, indeed, gone through the whole alphabet, with the utmost ease and self-confidence; but his remembrance of the names of the letters he drew so readily proved to be far less perfect than his representations of them on the floor of the round-house.

You murder your grandmother, or rob a bank, or burn down an orphanage with the orphans all in bed upstairs, or something trivial like that, and if you make an off-planet getaway, you're reasonably safe. Of course there's such a thing as extradition, but who bothers? Distances are too great, and communication is too slow, and the Federation depends on every planet to do its own policing.

Zerlina cannot see that it is not exactly a position of a woman's own choosing, although under strong pressure she has been known to admit that there have been cases in which women have been made aunts whether they would or no; and she thinks it is perhaps by way of protest against such usage that they so shamefully neglect their duties in that walk of life to which their bothers and sister-in-law have seen fit to call them.

"I know the old saying but the trouble is I know Uncle Stanley, too, and that's what bothers me..." At this point I had meant to tell you more of Wally Cabot most perfect, most charming of lovers but first I find that I must describe a passage which took place one morning between Mary and Uncle Stanley's son Burdon.

What could be valuable enough to cause all these wild goings-on?" "Diamonds. Rubies. Maybe a radium needle in a lead shield. The possibilities are endless." "Uhuh. Only one thing bothers me a little. Why use a plastic cat as a container to smuggle things into Egypt? There must be better ways." "This way hasn't been very successful," Rick agreed. "Anyway, here's the hotel.

Go and play till the Good People capture you!" "But I don't just want to play. I want to make something beautiful. God! And I don't know enough. Do you get it? Do you understand? Nobody else ever has! Do you understand?" "Yes." "And so But here's what bothers me: I like fabrics; dinky things like that; little drawings and elegant words. But look over there at those fields. Big! New!

Because of you the little bothers of the world are gone, and the big bothers never did exist, because of you. Oh, I can say what I mean at last, and if it's nonsense I don't care, because of you...." Presently she said, "And now I wonder if I am very proud or very much ashamed of having spoken." "You said once," Mr. Russell reminded her, "that life was just a bead upon a string.