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Updated: April 30, 2025
"No, oh no," cried Anne, flushing so guiltily that the stranger looked curiously at her, as if she half suspected her of matrimonial designs on Mr. Harrison. "But I saw it in an Island paper," persisted the Fair Unknown. "A friend sent a marked copy to me . . . friends are always so ready to do such things. James A.'s name was written in over 'new citizen."
"You can believe anything that I say." "A young man of character! Perhaps that goes with the Scotch costume. I have read the Scots are a noble people." "They haven't a thing on the Americans. You must know me better and discover " But again her eyes had gone, almost guiltily, to that watch. And when she raised them again they were not smiling but very strangely resolved.
Seeing Malahin, the guard sighs guiltily and throws up his hands. "We can't go number fourteen," he says. "We are very much behind time. Another train has gone with that number." The station-master rapidly looks through some forms, then turns his beaming blue eyes upon Malahin, and, his face radiant with smiles and freshness, showers questions on him: "You are Mr. Malahin? You have the cattle?
She came forward and shook hands with him, looking the while curiously into his face. "And Madam?" "It's a habit," said Mr. Hoopdriver, guiltily. "A bad habit. Calling ladies Madam. You must put it down to our colonial roughness. Out there up country y'know the ladies so rare we call 'em all Madam." "You HAVE some funny habits, brother Chris," said Jessie.
Her eyes laughed. Uncle William shook his head guiltily. "Not more'n five or six dollars," he said. "I reckon mebbe I did put it a leetle low." A smile had bloomed again in his face. "If he can pay the price, he'll have to have it, I reckon for all o' me." "Yes, he can pay it. He is very rich, and he cares for pictures. He has hundreds. He buys them everywhere in Paris, London, St.
"I heard you read the verses in your theme class last week. And at the close of the hour I asked you to let me have them and several other things. I used these first because I had all the prose I needed for this time." "I see," said Miss Raymond. "Have you told her yet that you want them?" "No," said Helen, guiltily. "I was going to write her a note as soon as I got home.
Before she folded the sheet she looked again at that word "reconstruction" and thought of eliminating it. It was too obviously allied to "redemption"; and she felt that Mrs. Kame could not understand redemption, and would ridicule it. Honora went downstairs and dropped her reply guiltily into the mail-bag. It was for Hugh's sake she was sending it, and from his eyes she was hiding it.
"And we won't come back, Till it's over, over there." Gregory's eyes narrowed. When "it was over, over there," perhaps it would be over everywhere. Then, and only then, would he reach "the land of his dreams." He looked guiltily at Dickie Lang and was glad that she could not read his thoughts concerning the end of the long trail. "What were you thinking of, just then?
Why didn't you keep with the rest of the school, as you ought to have done?" "It sounds a most horrible greedy confession," replied Beatrice guiltily, "but I'm afraid it was all the fault of buns! They just threw us late, and we missed the others. We'll never buy buns again! Never! Never! O peccavi! We have sinned!" And she looked so humorously contrite that Mrs.
Is the idea that we are tinder the eye of beings of whom we have but vague notions, more forcible than the thought that we are viewed by our fellow men; than the fear of being detected by ourselves; than the dread of exposure; than the cruel necessity of becoming despicable in our own eyes; than the wretched alternative, to be constrained to blush guiltily, when we reflect on our wild career, and the sentiments which it must infallibly inspire?
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