Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: June 3, 2025


"Not for Alan only," she said. Miss Fenno turned on her a wondering glance. "Not for Alan only. That pain every woman expects and knows how to bear. We all know our children must have such disappointments, and to suffer with them is not the deepest pain. It's the suffering apart in ways they don't understand." She breathed deeply. "I want you to know what I mean.

These were some of the men whose names were appended to the provisional constitution drawn up on June 30, 1836. C. Fenno Hoffman, "next to Morris the sweetest song-writer America has produced," later became a member of the association, which from its inception, was the representative organization of the old families.

Viewed in this light, Miss Fenno was certainly very strong: there was an unmistakable ring of finality in the tone with which she declared, "It's impossible." Mrs. Quentin's answer veiled the least shade of feminine resentment. "I told Alan that, where he had failed, there was no chance of my making an impression." Hope Fenno laid on her visitor's an almost reverential hand. "Dear Mrs.

G.W. Cable is now studying Louisiana characters, and Judge Tourgee the general condition of the South since the war. Novels descriptive of Western life have been written by Charles Fenno Hoffman, James Hall, Timothy Flint, Thomas, and O'Connell. But none of these writers have given such original sketches of character, or have so graphically portrayed the spirit of life in the far West as Mr.

Quentin, provisionally perched on a green-reps Gothic sofa with which it was clearly impossible to establish any closer relations, concluded that, had Mrs. Fenno needed another seat of the same size, she would have set out placidly to match the one on which her visitor now languished. To Mrs.

Mary, Brashear City, or Franklin, La. Official copy: D.V. FENNO, First Lieutenant and A.A.A. General. No. 36. Vicksburg, Miss., September 28, 1865. General: I enclose a copy of the city ordinances. To illustrate the workings of this ordinance I will give you an actual occurrence in this city.

Chapin has been called to the presidency of the Association, under circumstances precisely similar to those under which he had twice before assumed the duties of the position. Mr. Chapin was married October 15th, 1849, to Matilda, daughter of John Fenno, of Boston.

"Very often," Mrs. Quentin answered. "I find pictures a great help." "A help?" "A rest, I mean...if one is tired or out of sorts." "Ah," Miss Fenno murmured, looking down. "This Beltraffio is new, you know," Mrs. Quentin continued. "What a wonderful background, isn't it? Is he a painter who interests you?"

Miss Fenno dropped beside her. In both women the stress of emotion was too strong for speech. The girl was still trembling, and Mrs. Quentin was the first to regain her composure. "You say you've suffered," she began at last. "Do you suppose I haven't?" "I knew you had. That made it so much worse for me that I should have been the cause of your suffering for Alan!" Mrs. Quentin drew a deep breath.

Quentin, keenly susceptible to such influences, read failure in every angle of the upholstery. She was incapable of the vulgar error of thinking that Hope Fenno might be induced to marry Alan for his money; but between this assumption and the inference that the girl's imagination might be touched by the finer possibilities of wealth, good taste admitted a distinction.

Word Of The Day

agrada

Others Looking