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Updated: May 10, 2025
'I don't care to cross the stile, thank you, Madame. I shall remain at this side. 'You shall do wat I tell you! exclaimed she. 'Let go my arm, Madame, you hurt me, I cried. She had griped my arm very firmly in her great bony hand, and seemed preparing to drag me over by main force. 'Let me go, I repeated shrilly, for the pain increased.
If you knew what it meant, you there, you would not do so much of this. I fell on my knees, and then toppled over backward on the floor; and it griped me again, perhaps one hour, perhaps two. I lay there all alone and then another one comes another little one two, yes, two, like this. I took him up as I did the first one, and then I put him on the bed, the two side by side.
I will master my own foe;" and, so saying, with a vigorous effort he gained his knee, and with both hands griped the hound's throat, so that the beast twisted in vain, to and fro, with gnashing jaws, and in another minute would have panted out its last.
Having griped a man one day a little too hard, I ordered him to be shot, for fear of myself incurring the guilt of what might happen. On this a friend, who happened to be then at dinner with me, begged him as a present. How he came here, I know not. The Grand Duke of Tuscany, on hearing his story, said it was the very same person who had presented him with the lion." "Oh!
"I'll vindicate him!" he said. And he did. Ray's pale, anxious face turned all sorts of colors when the general jumped up from his chair and griped his hand like a vise, and looked into his brave young eyes and said things to him that filled them with tears and his soul with confusion.
So, after taking Claude and Etienne to stay with Madame Boche, who was to bring them to the dinner later that afternoon, he hurried over to the Rue de la Goutte-d'Or to borrow ten francs from Lorilleux. Having to do that griped him immensely as he could guess the attitude his brother-in-law would take. The latter did grumble a bit, but ended by lending him two five-franc pieces.
Suddenly the character of the motion changes, from being principally stool, it becomes almost entirely blood and mucus; he is dreadfully griped, which causes him to strain violently, as though his inside would come away every time he has a motion, screaming and twisting about, evidently being in the greatest pain, drawing his legs up to his belly and writhing in agony.
His theory once met with an unexpected confutation. He had gone one morning to bathe in Mount's Bay, and as he bathed, a crab griped his toe, when the young philosopher roared loud enough to be heard at Penzance. Mr. Coleridge related the following occurrence, which he received from his American friend, Mr.
The next he emerged, and a few strokes of his broad wing carried him into the air, while a large fish was seen griped in his claws. As the voyageurs had before noticed, the fish was carried head-foremost, and this led them to the conclusion that in striking his prey beneath the water the osprey follows it and aims his blow from behind.
The beast, though sinking, griped him fast with her talons, digging through plate and mail; but Rinaldo plied his sword in utter desperation, and at last accomplished her destruction. Rinaldo then entered the cavern, and found there the wonderful horse, all caparisoned. He was coal-black, except for a star of white on his forehead, and one white foot behind.
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