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Updated: June 6, 2025


"Dar ye go agin," said she; "now quit a callin' me witches and sich, or else say why?" "Didn't I see you dis berry even'?" said Dolf. "In course ye did; we was to Mrs. Hopkins's when de meeting was ober." "And wasn't Elder Spotts dar, too?" "In course he was; yer knows it well enough." "I knows it too well," said Dolf.

Hopkins's generosity, and predicted that, when Senator Hartington made the motion in the upper house and Mr. Jameson in the lower, the General Court would unanimously agree that there would be no evening session on the following day. The Honorable Alva was the hero of the hour. That afternoon Cynthia and her father walked through the green park to make their first visit to the State House.

There was Sir Monier Williams's "Brahmanism and Hinduism," Hopkins's "The Religions of India," a work on crystallomancy, Mr. Lloyd Tuckey's standard work on "Hypnotism and Suggestion," and some half dozen others whose titles I have forgotten. And as I looked at them, I began to understand one reason for Godfrey's success as a solver of mysteries no detail of a subject ever escaped him.

There will be no end of a fuss in the school to-day." Ruth did not reply. "And they will press you hard." Still Ruth made no answer. "You know what it will mean if you tell?" Ruth's grave eyes were fixed on Mrs. Hopkins's face. "Child, I don't want to doubt you nobody who knows you could do that but it will mean ruin to poor Susy and to many and many a girl at the Great Shirley School.

"If you have no answer, it may go badly with you at the trial." The young man winced. "Well, I will tell you," he said. "Why should I not? And yet I hate to think of this old scandal gaining a new lease of life. Did you ever hear of Dawson and Neligan?" I could see, from Hopkins's face, that he never had, but Holmes was keenly interested. "You mean the West Country bankers," said he.

Hopkins's house, thinking as he went of the pleasant surprise his visit would bring to his longing and doubtless pensive Susan; for though she knew he was coming, she did not know that he was at that moment in Oxbow Village. As he drew near the house, the first thing he saw was Susan Posey, almost running against her just as he turned a corner.

Hopkins's pie," declared Patsy, stoutly. "It belongs to whoever gets the votes." "Well, that's Hopkins. He knows the game, and Forbes don't." "Can't he learn?" asked the girl. "No. He's an idiot. Always was a crank and an unsociable cuss when a boy, and he's worse now he's grown up. Oh, I know Forbes, all right; and I haven't got no use for him, neither." Argument was useless in this case.

But still some softness was there; and when she heard that Miss Trefoil had gone, and that her visit had not, in Mrs. Hopkins's opinion, "led to much," she wrote to say that she would return. She made no request and clothed her suggestion in no words of tenderness; but simply told her grandson that she would come back as the Trefoils had left him. And she did come.

Believing the repelling force to be but seven, the Indians were quite sure of success. I was convinced that Mr. Hopkins's inferences were correct; but in order that no mistake should be made, I sent two veterans in frontier service, Privates Clary and Hoey, to reconnoitre both flanks.

For the Benefit of the Whole Kingdome.... London, 1647. Hopkins's and Stearne's accounts fit into each other and are the two best sources for ch. Has nothing to do with witches; shows the spirit of the times. A strange and true Relation of a Young Woman possest with the Devill. By name Joyce Dovey dwelling at Bewdley neer Worcester ... as it was certified in a Letter from Mr. James Dalton unto Mr.

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