Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 26, 2025
Her hands were burning hot, and she would not eat anything, and her throat was very sore. "If I was you, Mum," said Mrs. Viney, "I should take and send for the doctor. There's a lot of catchy complaints a-going about just now. My sister's eldest she took a chill and it went to her inside, two years ago come Christmas, and she's never been the same gell since."
He took pains to let Kedzie overhear this. It pleased her. Millions were something she decided she would like. Gilfoyle developed wonderfully in the sun of Kedzie's interest. He told Kalteyer that there was no money in handling chewing-gum in a small way as a piker; what he wanted was a catchy name, a special selling-argument, and a national publicity campaign.
"Anyhow, he and Sylvia are planning a musical tour in Germany in the autumn," said Michael. "'It's a long, long way to Tipperary," remarked Aunt Barbara enigmatically. "Why Tipperary?" asked Michael. "Oh, it's just a song I heard at a music-hall the other night. There's a jolly catchy tune to it, which has rung in my head ever since.
She did not search for any occult meaning in the lines, nor did they convey anything special to her; but they remained with her for the rest of the day, haunting her, in among her other thoughts, and forcing themselves upon her attention with the irritating persistency of a catchy tune. On the cliffs she paused to look about her. It was a desolate scene.
Let us, by clear and sound thinking, by definite and bold expression enlighten Public Opinion. To-day Public Opinion is shifting as the winds, swinging like a boat with the ebb and flow of the tide. These are days of loose thought, wild words, catchy phrases, especially in social and religious matters. Words and phrases are passed off as ideas, and fragments of an idea as the whole idea.
They seem to have no place in their souls for the ludicrous, the comic, or the joyous. They were shocked by my smiles and peals of laughter. They have a strange preference for the minor key in music, for the dirge. No wonder when our bands would play lively music that they were quite ready to take up the catchy airs, but they would add a mournful cadence to the most stirring of our American airs.
He's away in some thick hole in the forest now, recovering himself. We couldn't have come up with him anyhow, boys, for them blood-spots had stopped. I guess his leg wasn't smashed; and he'll soon be as big a bully as ever. Follow me now, quick! Mind yer steps, though! Them bushes are awful catchy!"
The third movement is a slow waltz, called "The Dance of the Sylphs," a very catchy air, swaying delicately in the bassoons and 'cello; a short "Evening Song" is followed by "Midnight." This is a parade that reminds one strongly of Gottschalk's "Marche de Nuit." The march movement is followed by an interlude depicting the mystery of night, as Virgil says, "tremulo sub lumine."
Patiently he waited, holding her thus while the mercy of her flowing tears dulled the first sharp edge of her grief. Bye and bye the sobs ceased, and a faint, catchy little voice struggled up through the red curls to the man's ears. "Ye air awful good to me, you air. Oh, I needed ye so, and I feared I feared mebbe ye wasn't never comin' again!" "My dear, my dear," Young soothed, much moved.
Yet he preferred her poems of action, like that of Salmon Faubel, whose bride became so homesick in Edom that she was in a way to perish, so that Salmon took her to her home and found work there for himself. He even sang one catchy couplet of this to music of his own: "For her dear sake whom he did pity, He took her back to Jersey City."
Word Of The Day
Others Looking