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Updated: May 28, 2025
The verdict was unanimous. A new star had risen in the artistic firmament. One look at the headings, and Stefan dropped the papers in disgust, but Mary pored over them all, and found him quite willing to listen while she read eulogistic extracts aloud. Thus started, the fuse of publicity burnt brightly.
Madison declared she had improved wonderfully, and, in his enthusiasm, wrote eulogistic articles about her in the papers that were copied far and wide. Indeed, she could thank him for all the success she had had. He was at the theatre every night, watching her from the front, taking the liveliest interest in her success, and promoting it in every possible way.
Boltay was not the sort of man to accept indiscriminate laudation from any one, so he somewhat curtly interrupted this eulogistic flux of words. "To whom have I the pleasure of speaking, pray? and what are your honour's commands?" "I am Abellino Kárpáthy," replied the stranger. It was only the armoury behind him that prevented Mr. Boltay from falling flat.
After their mutual embraces were over, Lady Helena, and Mary Grant, and John Mangles, were informed of the principal incidents of the expedition, and especially of the new interpretation of the document, due to the sagacity of Jacques Paganel. His Lordship also spoke in the most eulogistic terms of Robert, of whom Mary might well be proud.
This, with an eulogistic peroration on the moral qualities of the Vraibleusians and the political importance of Vraibleusia, would, he had no doubt, not only save his neck, but even gain him a moderate pension.
Stryker's "American Register" for 1849:241. "The American Almanac" for 1850:324. "An Economic and Social History of New England," 11:825. Hunt's "Lives of American Merchants":139. Life of Eli Whitney, "Our Great Benefactors":567. Unfortunately only the most general and eulogistic accounts of the careers of most of the rich shippers have appeared in such biographies as have been published.
Yet that saying, eulogistic as it is, is far from expressing all the vast powers and acquirements of Lewis Morris. Though self-taught, he was confessedly the best Welsh scholar of his age, and was well-versed in those cognate dialects of the Welsh the Cornish, Armoric, Highland Gaelic and Irish.
Available ones are: E.C. Brooks, Woodrow Wilson as President , eulogistic, but contains extracts from speeches; W.B. Hale, Woodrow Wilson, The Story of His Life ; H.J. Ford, Woodrow Wilson ; A.M. Low, Woodrow Wilson, an Interpretation , a friendly and substantial analysis by an English newspaper correspondent; W.B. Dodd, Woodrow Wilson and His Work , sympathetic, written in the spirit of the investigator, and the best life up to the time of its publication.
But it is a foolish and immoral thing to risk one's life for a stone, a coin, or nothing at all. "Is the object deserving?" we must ask, "or shall I reserve myself for greater need?" Too easily does our sympathetic and sentimental age, recklessly eulogistic of altruism, hurry into self-sacrifice. Altruism in itself is worthless. That an act is unselfish can never justify its performance.
The excellence of the music, the masses of flowers, the number of great names and well-advertised society beauties present, would subsequently provide material for long and eulogistic paragraphs in the half-penny press and the Ladies' Weeklies.
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