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Updated: May 16, 2025


'Not to say that men are utterly ignorant of that freemasonry among women which gives us all an interest in the man who marries one of us, said Nina. 'It is only your confirmed old bachelor that we all agree in detesting. ''Faith, I give you up altogether. You're a puzzle clean beyond me, said Kearney, with a sigh.

"Let me see him," said Godfrey, in his heart detesting the child the visible sign that another was nearer to Letty than he. She jumped up, almost ran into the next room, and, coming back with her little one, laid him in Godfrey's arms. The moment he felt the weight of the little, sad-looking, sleeping thing, he grew human toward him, and saw in him Letty and not Tom.

This indignity roused up once more the sinking courage of the Duke; who, with bitter words, detesting the pride and insolence of Henry, withdrew in a rage, and hasting back to Normandy, made what preparations he could for his own defence.

Thither thronged the nobles, priests, and commons all excepting the old King, who, detesting such scenes of blood, retired to his residence, and devolved the charge of the field upon the Earl of Errol, Lord High Constable, to whose office it more particularly belonged. The Duke of Albany watched the whole proceeding with a close and wary eye.

Now, gentlemen, can you censure me for detesting the Carpet-bag government of my native state after you have heard this statement? Rome in days of tyranny did no such injustice to her citizens. To be a Roman was greater than to be a king; and here let me remark Bob Squash! what's that you are squinting at through the grass?"

Shakspeare never intended to exhibit him as a buffoon; for although it was natural for Hamlet a young man of fire and genius, detesting formality and disliking Polonius on political grounds, as imagining that he had assisted his uncle in his usurpation should express himself satirically, yet this must not be taken exactly as the poet's conception of him.

Yet how can we have a real feeling and love for beauty, without detesting and recoiling from such monstrosities?"

Every man, and thou my present Reader canst do this: Be thyself a man abler to be governed; more reverencing the divine faculty of governing, more sacredly detesting the diabolical semblance of said faculty in self and others; so shalt thou, if not govern, yet actually according to thy strength assist in real governing.

But their animosity, though smothered for a while, burnt with redoubled violence. The soldiers, detesting the senate and the people, despised the weakness of a prince, who wanted either the spirit or the power to command the obedience of his subjects.

But he detests any admission of relativity in his doctrines, all the more because he cannot avow his reasons for detesting it; and zeal, here as in so many cases, becomes the cover and evidence of a bad conscience.

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