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Updated: June 25, 2025


He's edicated too, an' knows books like a school teacher. He's the sharpest feller in the woods I ever seed, an' he's got jist a little the keenest scent for the right thing to do in a tight place that you ever seed in man or boy. Better'n all, he never loses that cool head o' his'n no matter what happens." "That is a hearty recommendation, certainly," said the general.

Though New York born, as it now turns out, I'm 'down east' edicated, and have got a 'coasting pilot' of my own in my head." This settled the matter, and I came to the resolution to stand on. "The wind blows fair, the vessel feels The pressure of the rising breeze, And, swiftest of a thousand keels She leaps to the careering seas " Willis. Half an hour later, things drew near a crisis.

"The early history of the northern shores of Africa, now known as Algeria," he continued, "is involved in the mists of antiquity." "Arrah! now, don't misremimber," said Ted, with a quiet grin, "that I ain't bin edicated quite up to that." "Well, the beginning of it all," said Lucien, returning the grin with a smile, "is rather foggy." "Ah! that's plain enough.

"I hearn a great deal about science, but I live up in the woods, and I can't read very much, and ye see I ain't edicated, and I made up my mind if I ever found a man as knowed what science was, I'd ask him." "Science, sir, is the sum of organized and systematized knowledge," replied the Doctor. "Now, that seems reasomble," said Jim, "but what is it like? What do they do with it?

I suspicion Tilly had more books than was good for her, but she was our only child, and I couldn't say no to her. She edicated herself to be a teacher, and stood high, and we was proud of her, sure enough, but I'm afeared all that study and readin' wasn't good for her; and then came another of his deep sighs.

"Like them! who can like them? a parcel of beggarly thievish blackguards. So your honour was edicated in Munster I mane partly edicated.

He was some like other edicated persons I've met up with: when you tried to get him to do something useful, he'd fall back on his book knowledge, roll out a string of high steppin' words, an' then look prepossessed. He was good about one thing, though: he just about took the night trick off my hands, so that I begun catchin' up with my sleep again.

I say, Murtagh, the Irish owe much to the Danes " "Devil a bit, Shorsha, do they owe to the thaives, except many a bloody bating and plundering, which they never paid them back. Och, Shorsha! you, edicated in ould Ireland, to say that the Irish owes anything good to the plundering villains the Siol Loughlin."

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