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Updated: May 28, 2025
"You do not answer, Rose," he urged complainingly, "Must I then lose your sympathy, and meet the ordeal alone?" "No, no. I will be with you," she cried, quickly. "As my wife?" Again she was silent, trembling like a leaf. "Speak." "Yes," falteringly, "as your wife, August." The words seemed to have been forced from her lips. She regretted them as soon as uttered.
Has a family upon whom a faction unlawfully bestowed the diadem of a rightful prince, retained a due sense of so great a trust and favour?" These and his other proclamations betrayed an Irish pen; probably Sir Thomas Sheridan's. One of Charles's English adherents, Lord Elcho, who kept a journal of the campaign, notes, complainingly, the Irish influence under which he acted.
"What on earth should I play it for at this time of night?" said Mr. Mortimer irritably. "It woke me up," said Mr. Bennett complainingly. "And I had had great difficulty in dropping off to sleep. I was in considerable pain. I believe I've caught the mumps from young Hignett." "Nonsense! You're always imagining yourself ill," snapped Mr. Mortimer. "My face hurts," persisted Mr. Bennett.
It was true of her, what Marianne had observed when she went to sleep for the first time in the old woman's house; she was waking and sleeping, laughing and weeping, almost all at the same time. Every occurrence and every emotion affected her very strongly, but she soon got over it and recovered her balance. She continued to weep. "You make one's heart so heavy," said Damie complainingly.
"The way was so long and dark," she cried, "such a long, long path. Will I have to go all alone?" and Rose could feel the terrified shiver. "You will not have to go anywhere," began the girl, in a soothing tone. "I shall stay here with you." "But you were gone," complainingly. "I will not go again." "Then sit here and hold my hands. I think it was a dream. I am not going to die.
"Since Lanstron became chief of intelligence of the Browns information seems to have stopped," said Westerling, but not complainingly. He appreciated Bouchard's loyalty. "Yes, they say he even burns his laundry bills, he is so careful," Bouchard replied. "But that we ought to know," Westerling proceeded, referring very insistently to a secret of the Browns which had baffled Bouchard.
All this she said, not complainingly, but in her usual twittering manner of imparting information, as though it were an incident of a five-o'clock tea, but Lydia felt a pang of remorse for her usual thoughtless attitude of exasperated hilarity over Miss Burgess' peculiarities.
But when I came up to the bedside of this poor woman, I saw that she was crying. "She's cried herself half-dead," a nurse said, complainingly. "Nobody can stop her. She's taking on so for Dr. Thorne." "I don't blame her," said a little patient from a wheeled-chair. "Everybody knows what he did for her. She's got one of her attacks, and look at her! There can't anybody but him stop it.
And as he walked meditatively he remembered a conversation he had held with Valentine long ago, when the latter had spoken complainingly of the tyranny of an instinctive purity. The very words he had used came back to him now: "The minds of men are often very carefully, very deftly poised, and a little push can send them one way or the other.
It was after midnight when Nature laid a commanding and relentless touch upon the girl, and, crouching by the hearth, her head in her arms folded upon a chair, she slept. Outside the storm sobbed itself into silence; the rain dripped complainingly from the roof of the porch and then ceased.
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