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Updated: June 12, 2025


"If 'tis meetin' me he's afther, all he has to do is to get on a ca-ar an' r-ride out to number nine-double-naught-nine Archey R-road, an' stop whin he sees th' sign iv th' Tip-p'rary Boodweiser Brewin' Company. I'm here fr'm eight in the mornin' till midnight, an' th' r-rest iv th' time I'm in the back room in th' ar-rms iv Or-rphyus, as Hogan says.

"'Why look here, said she, throwin' down the clothes and pullin' my coat over my head till she nearly strangled me. "'Well, I shouldn't wonder if I hadn't stripped, sais I. 'When a feller is so peskilly sleepy as I be, I suppose he is glad to turn in any way. "She never spoke another word, but I saw a storm was brewin, and I heard her mutter to herself, 'Creation! what a spot of work!

The quality, the note of Ambrose's whisper had changed. It had a slight sibilant sound. "Don't be mad if sudden-like I clap my hands over your eyes, Miss Hammond," he was saying. "Somethin's brewin' below. I never seen Gene so cool. That's a dangerous sign in him. And look, see how the boys are workin' together! Oh, it's slow and accident-like, but I know it's sure not accident.

In the meantime I'll keep my eyes and ears open, too, and let you know directly I sees any signs of trouble brewin'." When I descended to the cabin, a few minutes later, in response to the steward's summons to breakfast, I found Billy Stenson already seated at the table.

The old gray heads, whose possessors occupied that village-throne of wisdom, the jackknife-carved bench by Silas Trefethen's stove, prophesied "a spell of weather." "Storm brewin'! I feel it in my bones," declared Simes Badger, squinting at the vane on Aunt Stanshy's barn and then at the gray, scowling clouds above. The wind was from the "nor'-east."

'Whaur's the Amphitrite, Alan? asked Shargar, for Robert was dumb with disappointment and rage. 'Half doon to Stanehive by this time, I'm thinkin', answered Alan. 'For a brewin' tub like her, she fummles awa nae ill wi' a licht win' astarn o' her. But I'm doobtin' afore she win across the herrin-pot her fine passengers 'll win at the boddom o' their stamacks.

That'll be good for the small trader, an' the big brewin' companies can take to somethin' 'onester than the pizonin' bizness." "You are a would-be wise man, and you talk too much, Matthew Peke!" observed the Reverend Mr. Arbroath, smiling darkly, and still glancing askew at his watch. "I know you of old!" "Ye knows me an' I knows you," responded Peke placidly.

'Let her off out o' the wind. We'll be makin' for Harbour Round for shelter. Holdin' on, did you say? My dear man, they's a whirlwind brewin'! "But if 'twas blowin' hard a nor'east snorter, with the gale raisin' a wind-lop on the swell, an' the night comin' down if 'twas blowin' barb'rous hard, sometimes we'd get scared. "'Skipper, we couldn't help sayin', ''tis time t' get out o' this.

Mr Winstanley, who is uncommon sure o' the strength of his work, he replies, says he `I only wish to be there in the greatest storm that ever blew under the face of heaven, to see what the effect will be. Them's his very words, an'it did seem to me an awful wish all the more that the sky looked at the time very like as if dirty weather was brewin' up somewhere."

If we are savages, then Vuis and Brewin beset the forest paths and knock in the lacustrine dwelling perched like a nest on reeds above the water; tornaks rout in the Eskimo hut, in the open wood, in the gunyeh, in the Medicine Lodge. If we are European peasants, we hear the Brownie at work, and see the fairies dance in their grassy ring.

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