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Updated: May 13, 2025


"He's a dev'lish sly fellow, and a dev'lish rich fellow; and there's many a nobleman would like to have such a valet in his service, and borrow from him too. And he ain't a bit changed, Monsieur Morgan. He does his work just as well as ever he's always ready to my bell steals about the room like a cat he's so dev'lishly attached to me, Morgan!"

Rachel, what are you in a passion about? Ladies ought never to be in a passion. Ought they, Doctor Tusher? though it does good to see Rachel in a passion Damme, Lady Castlewood, you look dev'lish handsome in a passion." "It is, my lord, because Mr. Henry Esmond, having nothing to do with his time here, and not having a taste for our company, has been to the ale-house, where he has SOME FRIENDS."

Let me have your address, or come and look me up at the club. I'm dev'lish glad you're getting on so well, my boy, though you were a fool not to stay up at Oxford and take your degree. After all, though, perhaps you aren't quite the cut for the Church or a fellowship, and and the Sylvesters are dev'lish good people to know, Dick. Ta, ta! Don't forget to come and see me."

You see I had supped at the 'Rose' along with Tom Trippet and half-a-dozen pretty fellows; and I had eased a great fat-headed Warwickshire landjunker what d'ye call him? squire, of forty pieces; and I'm dev'lish good-humoured when I've won, and so Cat and I made it up: but I've taught her never to bring me stale beer again ha, ha!"

This lack of temper probably arose from indifferent health, for he was very valetudinary, and realised two verses, wherein he says fortune assigned him " One eye not over good, Two sides that to their cost have stood A ten years' hectic cough, Aches, stitches, all the various ills That swell the dev'lish doctor's bills, And sweep poor mortals off."

"Do you hear anything listen, man!" A faint throbbing upon the air, a pulsing beat growing louder and louder. "Do you hear it, Anthony, do you hear it?" "No yes begad, Perry, it sounds like " "Another horse at full gallop, Anthony and coming up behind us. Another horseman from the same direction!" "Dev'lish strange, Perry. How many more of 'em?" "There will be no more!"

Why should I? Past's dead, and damn the Future. Dig, pass the brandy." "And I tell you," said Barnabas, "that in the future are hope and the chance of a new life, once you are free of Gaunt." "Free of Gaunt! Hark to that, Dig. Must be dev'lish drunk to talk such cursed f-folly!

If you have suppressed any letters to him, you may have done yourself a great injury; and, if I know anything of Arthur's spirit, may cause a difference between him and you, which you'll rue all your life a difference that's a dev'lish deal more important, my good madam, than the little little trumpery cause which originated it."

He was a dandy, the understudy as John soon discovered of one of the "Bloods;" a "Junior Blood," or "Would-be," a tremendous authority on "swagger," a stickler for tradition, who had been nearly three years in the school. "The Demon is right," said he. "A new boy can't be too careful, Verney. Your being funny in hall just now made a dev'lish bad impression." "But I didn't mean to be funny.

"She's a dev'lish fine woman, that Mirabel," said Tiptoff; "though Mirabel was a d d fool to marry her." "A stupid old spooney," said the peer. "Mirabel!" cried out Pendennis. "Ha! ha!" laughed out Harry Foker. "We've heard of her before, haven't we, Pen?" It was Pen's first love. It was Miss Fotheringay.

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