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Updated: June 28, 2025


For his own part, Amber cared nothing for it; he had christened it, mentally, the Evil Eye with a smile to himself; nonetheless he half-seriously suspected it of malign properties. He was imaginative enough for that or superstitious, if you prefer.

And I'm afraid you'll think me very curious I came to find out who you were, and how you came to find me and bring me home here. And and I wanted to know well, everything about my arrival. And you you've made it all very difficult. You insist on doing all this for me. You're you're not so kind as I thought." Joan's complaint was made half-laughingly and half-seriously.

It's pouring through him now in a story, don't you see; but we're all in it 'In a way, yes, that's what I've felt, Mother interrupted. 'It's all a kind of dream here, and I've just waked up. The unchanging village, the forests, the Pension with its queer people, the Magic Box 'Like a play in a theatre, he interrupted, 'isn't it? 'Exactly, she laughed, yet half-seriously.

Among the happy necessities of the time was the finding of a proper apartment. Nancy and Bert spent delightful Saturdays and Sundays wandering in quest of it; beginning half-seriously in February, when it seemed far too early to consider this detail, and continuing with augmented earnestness through the three succeeding months.

So she came, and was present at all the rejoicings and all the talks that followed Fred's return. She took her part in the discussions about Fred's future. "Help me, my pet," said Madame d'Argy, "help me to find a wife for him: all we ask is that she should be like you." In answer to which Fred declared, half-laughing and half-seriously, that that was his ideal.

Even in his admirable critical essays on Burns, on Richter, on Scott, Diderot, and Voltaire, which are free from his later mannerism written in English, and not in Carlylese his sense of spirit is always more lively than his sense of form. He finally became so impatient of art as to maintain half-seriously the paradox that Shakspere would have done better to write in prose.

And as there's no time like now, I'll ask her to-day . . I have scarcely seen her this last fortnight. But that shall be atoned for . . later. Give me your blessing, ma belle!" Half-seriously, half in joke, he knelt beside her chair. But the entrance of the kitmutgar with a note brought him swiftly to his feet. "Talk of an angel! It is herself," he exclaimed as he broke the seal.

"Let me loosen the clasp for thee," said Gethin; but Morva, remembering the touch of the brown fingers, quickly reached the door. "No no, I must show them to mother." "Hast thanked Gethin, lass?" said the old man. "Not much, indeed," she answered, turning back at the door, "but I thank thee, Gethin, for remembering me," and, half-playfully and half-seriously, she made him a little bob curtsey.

So she came, and was present at all the rejoicings and all the talks that followed Fred's return. She took her part in the discussions about Fred's future. "Help me, my pet," said Madame d'Argy, "help me to find a wife for him: all we ask is that she should be like you." In answer to which Fred declared, half-laughing and half-seriously, that that was his ideal.

I advise you, Ralestone, that if Fen makes you the proposition I think he's going to, to grab it. It'll mean hard work for you and plenty of it, but there is a future to it." "I don't know how to thank you," the boy began when Holmes frowned at him half-seriously. "None of that. I was really doing Fen a favor, but you needn't tell him that.

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