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Updated: June 12, 2025
It was a strange experience thus to bury our comrades by stealth; but, alas! during these latter days it has ceased to seem strange, because of its frequency. =Work in Ladysmith Town.= Meanwhile in the town, and sometimes with the soldiers in the fight, Mr. Cawood and Mr. Hardy were rendering splendid service. Mr. Cawood looked ten years older.
Churton, glancing round on her small audience, encountered the girl's eager eyes fixed on her face; and she reflected that even if her words should avail nothing so far as Cawood was concerned, their effect would not be lost on others whose hearts were more open to instruction.
Let them disbelieve who know not Fan, who have never known one like her. One afternoon in early August Fan accompanied Mrs. Churton on a visit to some cottages on the further side of Eyethorne village; she went gladly, for they were going to see Mrs. Cawood, a young married woman with three children, and one of them, the eldest, a sharp little fellow, was her special favourite. Mrs.
Perronel was moreover to break up her business, dispose of her house, and await her husband's return at the Dragon. Stephen came back after a happy month with his friend, stored with wondrous tales and descriptions which would last the children for a month. He had seen his uncle present himself to the Cardinal at Cawood Castle. It had been a touching meeting.
Perronel was moreover to break up her business, dispose of her house, and await her husband's return at the Dragon. Stephen came back after a happy month with his friend, stored with wondrous tales and descriptions which would last the children for a month. He had seen his uncle present himself to the Cardinal at Cawood Castle. It had been a touching meeting.
It was published in the spring of 1579 by Gabriel Cawood, 'dwelling in Paules Churchyard, and was followed one year later by a second part, Euphues and his England. These books were the work of John Lyly, a young Oxford Master of Arts. Remembering the willingness of i and y to bear one another's burdens, we may still exclaim, with Dr.
Leven himself, conceiving the battle utterly lost, in which he was confirmed by the opinion of others then on the place near him, seeing they were fleeing upon all hands toward Tadcaster and Cawood, was persuaded by his attendants to retire and wait his better fortune.
Cawood; I have held her in my arms when she was a baby, and have known her well up till now when she is having babies of her own." "And very good things to have, ma'am in moderation," he remarked, with a twinkle in his eye. "And since she makes you so good a wife, don't you think you ought to comply with her wishes in some things?" "Why, yes, ma'am, certainly I ought; and what's more, I do.
Cawood was a good-tempered industrious little woman; but her husband Cawood the carpenter was a thorn in Mrs. Churton's tender side. Not that he was a black sheep in the Eyethorne fold; on the contrary, he was known to be temperate, a good husband and father, and a clever industrious mechanic.
I do not object to my wife going; if it is a pleasure and comfort to her I am glad of it. I only say, let us all have the same liberty, and go or not just as we please." "We all have it, Mr. Cawood. But if you believe that there is One who made us, and is mindful of us, you must know that it is a good thing to obey His written word, and serve Him in the way He has told us."
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