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Updated: May 9, 2025


"'Fairly and softly, good sir! as Hunsdrich the porter said when I would have drunk the mulled wine, while he was on the cold staircase " "Essper! do you mean to enrage me?" "'By St. Hubert! as that worthy gentleman the Grand Marshal was in the habit of swearing, I " "This is too much; what are the idle sayings of these people to me?"

He had pledged his word, and for all that he belonged to the class whose right to honour was denied by the aristocrats, his word he had never yet broken. That circumstance as personified by Maximilien Robespierre should break it for him now was matter enough to enrage him, for than this never had there been an occasion on which such a breach could have been less endurable.

At some of the little tables, groups of visitors were already sitting. While Herr Klueber, yielding condescendingly to 'the caprice of his betrothed, went off to interview the head waiter, Gemma stood immovable, biting her lips and looking on the ground; she was conscious that Sanin was persistently and, as it were, inquiringly looking at her it seemed to enrage her.

"What I fancy I said to Melbury must have been enough to enrage any man, if uttered in cold blood, and with knowledge of his presence. But I did not know him, and I was stupefied by what he had given me, so that I hardly was aware of what I said.

Surely there is no better way, to stop the rising of new sects and schisms, than to reform abuses; to compound the smaller differences; to proceed mildly, and not with sanguinary persecutions; and rather to take off the principal authors by winning and advancing them, than to enrage them by violence and bitterness.

Moreover among the genuine martyrs for conscience' sake by far the majority of those who suffered not a few were zealots who took up their parable against the judges when under examination in a fashion calculated to enrage persons of a far less choleric disposition than the bishop of London. In Ireland, and in several English dioceses, there were no actual martyrdoms.

The gang engaged him in various little matters, in which we grieve to relate that though his intentions were excellent, his success was so ill as thoroughly to enrage his employers; nay, they were about at one time, when they wanted to propitiate justice, to hand him over to the secular power, when Clifford interposed in his behalf. How vain is all wisdom but that of long experience!

At her hip was a pistol a formidable weapon with which to face a man; but a puny thing indeed with which to menace the great beast before her. She knew that at best it could but enrage him and yet she meant to sell her life dearly, for she felt that she must die. No human succor could have availed her even had it been there to offer itself.

He was shivering with a kind of ague. For nearly twenty minutes, neither of the men spoke. A fly buzzed noisily about the room, and the ticking of the clock was like the beat of a hammer. As the chime struck one, Campbell turned round, and, looking at Dorian Gray, saw that his eyes were filled with tears. There was something in the purity and refinement of that sad face that seemed to enrage him.

"I only desire to take an observation for my own satisfaction." "Then you won't have the satisfaction," said the boatswain. Desmond bit his lip, and Tom expected to hear him every moment say something, which would be sure to enrage the boatswain.

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