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I kalkerlate my grandfather was a fraud, and took me in on that job. I would ha' betted my bottom dollar on the weppin, and now it ain't worth a cent!" There was a pretty good laugh round at "Colonel Crockett's rifle," and what it had brought down, but the American took it all with very good temper.

"Just tell me what is the precise meaning of 'ha! ha! and what of 'he! he!" "The precise meaning? There you puzzle me, uncle." "I mean, what do you mean by them?" "Oh, I put 'ha! ha! when they giggle, and 'he! he! when they only chuckle." "Then this is a caricature, my lady?"

There was one amongst them, a fine, though stern-looking man of middle age, and who was addressed by the appellation of Count Berthé. He spoke our language almost as well as if he had been a native. He appeared to be interested when he heard that my name was Goldie, and one day after dinner, when the cloth was withdrawn, and my wife's relation had ordered the punch upon the table "Ha! Goldie!

"Gien 't had been my ain line fishin', I could aye ha' taen him i' the boat wi' me; but I dinna ken for the herrin'. Blue Peter wadna objeck, but it's some much work, an' for a waikly body like the laird to be oot a' nicht some nichts, sic weather as we hae to encoonter whiles, micht be the deid o' 'm."

Ha, Beltane Pentavalon!" Then did Sir Benedict, laughing loud and joyous, haste to re-form his swaying ranks, the bloody gap in his column closed up and Sir Pertolepe's knights, hemmed in thus, smote and were smitten and but scant few were they that won them free.

'And he niver told me a word on it, not when he saw me like to break my heart in thinking as Kinraid were dead; he kept it a' to hissel'; and watched me cry, and niver said a word to comfort me wi' t' truth. It would ha' been a great comfort, sir, only t' have had his message if I'd niver ha' been to see him again.

"Forgive me for what? I have done nothing." "To get on with women you must always admit you are in the wrong ha, ha, ha!" laughed the General; "now I have it from my wife women know everything ha, ha, ha!" laughed the General. "Have another glass of sherry?" "No, thanks; couldn't take any more."

Well, I shall have to call upon Mrs. , if that's what you mean. A mere matter of form. I shall go over after lunch. But it needn't interfere with your work. You can go on with the "Anabasis" till I come back. And remember NEANISKOS is not a proper name, ha! ha! ha! The quadratics will keep till the evening. He was merry over his prospects, and I was not altogether otherwise.

I read it in thy haggard face, the hour is drawing nigh When power and wealth can aid thee not, when, Richard, thou must DIE! What mean those pale, convulsive lips? What means that shrinking brow? Ha! Richard of the lion-heart, thou art a coward now!

Ha, ha! who would have thought that! and yet I remember she made a soft fool of me for a minute in the wood of St. Valier!" La Corriveau spoke in a hard tone, as if in reproving Mere Malheur she was also reproving herself. "She is unlike any other woman I ever saw," replied the crone, ashamed of her unwonted sympathy. "The devil is clean out of her as he is out of a church."