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Updated: June 18, 2025
This much I feel obliged to say, out of justice to her character, which was uniformly considerate." "You have seen her with men of her own world and yours," was the harsh response. "She had another side to her nature for the man of a different sphere. And it killed my love that you can see and led to my sending her the injudicious letter with which you have confronted me.
His artillery, with the horses dragging the pieces, sank into the almost bottomless mud, where they stuck fast even the foot-soldiers found it difficult to march through the quagmire and the whole movement was speedily abandoned. When General Burnside issued the order for this injudicious advance, two of his general officers met, and one asked: "What do you think of it?"
The Lord Chief Justice "summed up strongly for an acquittal," as a morning paper said; he declared that "a more ill-advised and more injudicious proceeding in the way of a prosecution was probably never brought into a court of justice," and described us as "two enthusiasts who have been actuated by a desire to do good in a particular department of society."
'Not at all, said Claude, 'only an injudicious attempt to put a little life into a tortoise. 'A bad comparison, said Lily; 'but what is all this? Here come the children in dismay! What is the matter, my dear child? This was addressed to Phyllis, who was the first to come up at full speed, sobbing, and out of breath, 'Oh, the dragon-fly! Oh, do not let him kill it!
Having written thus much on the matter in hand, Zamoyski turned again to politics and the discussion at some length of the situation in Italy, out of which many of the Poles fondly hoped their freedom was to come. The English mistrust of Napoleon, he argued, was as injudicious as unfounded, and could do nothing but harm by forcing France into the arms of Russia.
She could not but own that she should be very glad of a little tea, and Susan immediately set about making it, as if pleased to have the employment all to herself; and with only a little unnecessary bustle, and some few injudicious attempts at keeping her brothers in better order than she could, acquitted herself very well.
Nevertheless Tientietnikov, a youth of retiring disposition, experienced no leanings towards the nocturnal orgies of his companions, orgies during which the latter used to flirt with damsels before the very windows of the headmaster's rooms, nor yet towards their mockery of all that was sacred, simply because fate had cast in their way an injudicious priest.
'They are too hard upon him, I said to myself. 'If he has been stern and injudicious with his poor young brother, he has long ago repented of his hardness. He is very good to them all, but they will not try to understand him: it is not right of Gladys to treat him as a stranger. I am sorry for them all, but I begin to feel that Mr. Hamilton is not the only one to blame.
Oh dear me, how very whimsical! Amazingly whimsical to be sure! 'Come in, you fool! returned the dwarf, 'and don't stand there shaking your head and showing your teeth. Come in, you false witness, you perjurer, you suborner of evidence, come in! 'He has the richest humour! cried Brass, shutting the door behind him; 'the most amazing vein of comicality! But isn't it rather injudicious, sir ?
The first they visited received Theodore with injudicious condescension almost as if he were a suppliant. He said he hoped that the young candidate, if elected, would treat the liquor men fairly, to which the "suppliant" replied that he intended to treat all interests fairly. The suggestion that liquor licenses were too high brought the retort that they were not high enough.
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