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"If I had not," replied Dyer, "I should not, in this company, have said a word upon the subject." Burke described him as 'a man of profound and general erudition; his sagacity and judgment were fully equal to the extent of his learning. Prior's Malone, pp. 419, 424. Malone in his Life of Dryden, p. 181, says that Dyer was Junius. Johnson speaks of him as 'the late learned Mr.

"Cough, that I may see." The hunchback began to cough. "It is not you." Then the hunchback said aloud "How do you mean, it is not I? Do you not recognise my voice? Open the door!" "Who's there?" said the dyer, opening the window. "There, you have awakened my husband, who returned from Amboise unexpectedly this evening."

Look at the manifestly laboured defence of every official act of inhumanity except where condemnation could not be avoided through the impudent admissions made by the actors themselves; look at the special pleading introduced to defend General Dyer even against himself; look at the vain glorification of Sir Michael O'Dwyer although it was his spirit that actuated every act of criminality on the part of the subordinates; look at the deliberate refusal to examine his wild career before the events of April.

At this the widow held Mary's ankles more tightly, asking, while she wiped the drops from her brow: "What is going on?" and the child answered quickly, never taking her eyes off the scene: "Look, look up at the balcony of the Curia; there stands the chief of the Senate Alexander the dyer of purple he often used to come to see my grandfather, and grandmother could not bear his wife.

This Kauffman makes frequent trips to Dorfield, giving orders to Dyer, and on one occasion Kauffman, who stops at the Mansion House while in town, hired Tom Linnet to place a bomb in the Airplane Factory, causing an explosion which destroyed many government airplanes and killed several employees.

Old Sperry Dyer, that wanted to git Lyddy himself, used to call 'em cup an' sasser, 'There they be, he'd say, when he stood outside the meetin'-house door an' they drove up; 'there comes cup an' sasser. Lyddy was a little mite of a thing, with great black eyes; an' if Josh hadn't been as tough as tripe, he'd ha' got all wore out waitin' on her.

Dr. Marshman, when in England, met this course by frankly printing the whole private correspondence of Carey on the subject of the property, or thirty-two letters ranging from the year 1815 to 1828. One of the earliest of these is to Mr. Dyer, who had so far forgotten himself as to ask Dr. Carey to write home, alone, his opinion of his "elder brethren," and particularly of Dr. Marshman.

Captain Dyer in the thick of it the while, going from man to man, warning them to keep themselves out of sight, and to aim low. "Take care of yourselves, my lads. I value every one of you at a hundred of those black scoundrels. Tut, tut, who's that down?" "Corporal Bray," says some one. "Here, Emson, Smith, both of you lend a hand here: we'll make Bantem's quarters hospital.

The report that she was injured in the fire by which her stable was burned, proves to be a canard. Her owner declares her to be unhurt and in fine condition." The Colonel nodded his approval. "That's what I've telegraphed the Dyer brothers. I'm sure they won't refuse to take her when they know the facts in the case. It was a close shave, though.

Fuller's last letter to Carey forms the best introduction to the little which it is here necessary to record of the action of the Baptist Missionary Society when under the secretaryship of the Rev. John Dyer. Mr.