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Updated: May 6, 2025


This only has seemed to me, all my life since, worth while." Here I must interject that such a statement is somewhat sweeping. In fact, it sweeps a whole lot of fine and legitimate ambitions straight into the rubbish heap of the Not-worth-while. I think the writer would wish to modify it.

"I have a little place," Mr. Boulder would say in his deep tones that seemed almost like a sob, "a sort of shooting box, I think you'd call it, up in Wisconsin; just a plain place" he would add, almost crying "made of logs." "Oh, really," the visitor would interject, "made of logs. By Jove, how interesting!" All titled people are fascinated at once with logs, and Mr.

Delaport Green tried to interject some civil remarks, but Lady Groombridge paid not the slightest attention. The only visitors who interested her in the least were Rose and Edmund Grosse. She could hardly remember why she had invited Mrs. Delaport Green and Molly when she met them in London, and Billy was always Lord Groombridge's guest.

He denounced slavery in no very measured terms, and soon provoked the Southern men to interject 'Why don't you go into the South? 'Why, Sir, was the reply, 'you know, it would be as much as my life is worth. 'Nonsense! we will give you five hundred dollars to go, and you shall be safe. 'To what State, Sir? 'Georgia, replied one voice; 'Alabama, another; 'North Carolina, another.

The Doctor, who had been listening, had an idea that it was the right moment to interject "Se non e vero," but he was not quite certain of the words, and was afraid of being caught out. After dinner, Forcheville went up to the Doctor. "She can't have been at all bad looking, Mme. Verdurin; anyhow, she's a woman you can really talk to; that's all I want.

For all its mischances and melancholy ending the Greeley campaign had shortened the distance across the bloody chasm. Feminism and Woman Suffrage The Adventures in Politics and Society A Real Heroine It would not be the writer of this narrative if he did not interject certain opinions of his own which parties and politicians, even his newspaper colleagues, have been wont to regard as peculiar.

I may interject, as possibly suggestive to professional men, that such current comment on historical events will lead them on, as it led me irresistibly, to digest the principles thus drawn out; reproducing them in concise definitions, applicable to the varying circumstances of naval warfare, an elementary treatise.

"Mind whaur yer comin'!" Such expressions as these Jess and Meg could interject into the even tenor of their conversation, in a way that might have been disconcerting in dialogues conducted on other principles.

Tientietnikov made no rejoinder, and the conversation came temporarily to an end. But Chichikov was not to be discouraged; wherefore, while waiting for supper and talking on different subjects, he seized an opportunity to interject: "Do you know, it would do you no harm to marry." As before, Tientietnikov did not reply, and the renewed mention of the subject seemed to have annoyed him.

It wrestles with it throws it into the shade. We involuntarily take several more steps forward. "Life is capable of self-multiplication" has almost a creative faculty. Here we interject a perfect bravura of "bravoes," and, stepping boldly up to the front, demand of Professor Bastian to "throw up the sponge," take a back seat, and there formulate us a new definition of "life."

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