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Updated: June 27, 2025


When you know me better, Juanita," he continued, gravely, "you'll know that I would never have let you believe I sought in you the one if I had not hoped to find in you the other." "Bueno! And when did you have that pretty hope?" "When I first saw you." "And that was two weeks ago." "A year ago, Juanita. When Francisco visited you at the rancho. I followed and saw you."

Even the buccaneers, men hardened to the climate, could not endure it: they straggled back to the boats, and re-embarked. With a great deal of trouble the pirates dragged the boats "to a place farther up the river, called Cedro Bueno," where they halted for the stragglers, who drifted in during the evening.

To break the silence, and by way of a consolatory essay, I hinted to him that there might be further intervention or appeal, but the proffered oil and wine were returned with a careless shrug of the shoulders and a sententious "Que bueno? Your courts are always just." The Indian mound of the previous night's discovery was a bearing monument of the new line, and there we halted.

This is what Yriarte means by the first lines of his twenty-eighth Fable, where he declares that the ignorant rabble always sets equal value on the good and the bad: Siempre acostumbra hacer el vulgo necio De lo bueno y lo malo igual aprecio.

'We'll spend about a hundred with you to-day, my friend. 'Bueno, señor, agreed the Mexican. And he waved to his shelves. Helen, who knew only too well her father's carelessness in money matters, was not satisfied with an approximate estimate of their resources. She counted carefully. 'You should have had nearer two hundred dollars, pops, she told him gently. 'Have you felt in all your pockets?

And Martinez said: "Bueno!", but there was a sign of annoyed surprise in the way he said it, as though he had suddenly bumped against some hard reality in his plunge from the ideal heights where he always dwelt as a man unappreciated by the world, and where he could dream at leisure of becoming a general, a Dictator, and all the other things the heroes of Perez Escrich become, in that imaginative writer's novels!

"But you said nothing of this before, Senor Cranch," said he, with a gesture of indignation, turning his back quite upon Cranch, and taking a step towards the refectory. "Why should I? I was looking after the girl, not the property," returned Cranch, following the Padre with watchful eyes, but still keeping his careless, easy attitude. "Ah, well! Will it be said so, think you? Eh! Bueno.

Listen: I'll prove it without the accompaniment." And he hummed softly: "The Spanish cavalier, Went out to rope a steer, Along with his paper cigar-o, 'Car-ramba! says he. 'Mañana you will be Mucho bueno carne par mio!" Her brown eyes danced. "That doesn't prove anything except that you're an incorrigible Celt.

They emerged at the end of half an hour. It was an abrupt sally, and the great level plain before them seemed a blaze of sunlight. "Bueno," said the vaquero, halting. "Ride straight ahead. Keep to the trail. At night you will come to a river.

He jump little, maybe, but he de ver' nice pony, an' I no let him run. No, no, de odder vay, señorita, like de man ride. Poof! it no harm in de dark. Bueno, now ve go to surprise de Señor Farnham."

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