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Updated: May 28, 2025
Won't other people people who come after reproach you?" Helbeck lifted his shoulders, his dark face half amused, half sad. "She died a hundred years ago, pretty creature! She has had her turn; so have we in the pleasure of looking at her." "But she belongs to you," said the girl insistently. "She is your own kith and kin."
"Well, granting that she will marry again," said I, rather insistently, "it doesn't follow that her parents will consent to a marriage with any one less than a duke the next time." "They've had their lesson." "And she is probably a mercenary creature, after all. She's had a taste of poverty, after a fashion. I imagine "
This man with the piercing dark-blue eyes before him, who looked so resolute, who had the air of one who could say, "This is the way to go," because he knew and was sure; he was not to be denied. "Who was Virginie Poucette?" repeated the Young Doctor insistently, yet ever so gently. "Was she such a prize among women? What did she do?" A flood of feeling passed over Jean Jacques' face.
She went about the house, pathetically reminiscent of Elinor Doyle in those days when she had sought sanctuary there; but where Elinor had seen those days only as interludes in her stormy life, Lily was finding a strange new peace. She was very tender, very thoughtful, insistently cheerful, as though determined that her own ill-fortune should not affect the rest of the household.
Experience and reason prove that an organization destined to affect the masses and hold its grip on them, will not live and thrive only on an occasional appeal or a printed message. These are indeed of great value, particularly the insistently repeated message in print. We are great believers in the force of a persistent, regular and frequent circularization.
The tone is Bolingbroke's, and it was the lesson George had insistently heard from early youth. How sinister was the advice, men did not see until the elder Pitt was in political exile, with Wilkes an outlaw, and general warrants threatening the whole basis of past liberties. The first writer who pointed out in unmistakable terms the meaning of the new synthesis was Junius.
The Captain of Justice cannot overbear these." And I shook the paper insistently. "My orders are that none is to pass not even the Governor himself," he answered firmly. It was very daring of Cosimo, and I saw his aim. He was, as Gambara had said, a very subtle gentleman. He, too, had set his finger upon the pulse of the populace, and perceived what might be expected of it.
She had to make a superhuman effort to keep her attention fixed on Mary. 'Go! said the hoarse whisper close beside her, and the girl lifted her wasted hand, and pushed her visitor from her. 'Go! it repeated insistently, with a sort of wild beseeching; then, brokenly, the gasping breath interrupting, 'There's naw fear naw fear fur the likes o' you! Catherine rose.
It is not even like bodily health, which has its variations, but is on the whole likely to result from a certain defined regime of diet, exercise, and habits; and what would still more preserve me from making a deliberate attempt to capture it would be that it comes perhaps most poignantly and insistently of all when I am uneasy, overstrained, and melancholy.
In each case it is a question of trying to get control of other people's money. And in the case of woman it is of "trying on" in connexion with her public partnership with man that principle of domestic partnership, "All yours is mine, and all mine's my own." Next to the plea of justice, the plea which is advanced most insistently by the woman who is contending for a vote is the plea of liberty.
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