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Updated: June 28, 2025
It looks as if you don't like to tell me straight out. Come, come, Mary Ann, tell me why why it is impossible." She looked up at last and said slowly and simply, "Because I am not good enough for you, Mr. Lancelot." He put his hands suddenly to his eyes. He did not see the flood of sunlight he did not hear the mad jubilance of the canary. "No, Mary Ann," his voice was low and trembling.
Very early were they afloat again, and as they glided up the stream Sylvia watched the earth's awakening, seeing in it what her own should be. The sun was not yet visible above the hills, but the sky was ready for his coming, with the soft flush of color dawn gives only to her royal lover. Birds were chanting matins as if all the jubilance of their short lives must be poured out at once.
'It beckons the the " "She fell at Edith's feet, and over the lagoon came again the tinklings, now with a quicker note of jubilance almost of triumph. "We watched beside her throughout the night. The sounds from Nan-Tauach continued until about an hour before moon-set. In the morning Thora awoke, none the worse, apparently. She had had bad dreams, she said.
With the birth of the man himself was it first born, and to the time of its perfect growth and birth into speech the burden of it was borne by every ruddy drop of his heart's blood, by every vigor of his body, nerve and artery, eye and ear, and all the admirable servitors of the soul, steadily bringing to that invisible matrix where it houses their costly nutriments, their sacred offices; while every part and act of experience, every gush of jubilance, every stifle of woe, all sweet pangs of love and pity, all high breathings of faith and resolve, contribute to the form and bloom it finally wears.
And all the time it took to dawn into brilliance and fade out into darkness, had measured but a few weary steps by the side of her companion, lost in the meditation of a glad sermon for the next Sunday about the lost sheep carried home with jubilance, and forgetting how unfit was the poor sheep beside him for such a fatiguing tramp up hill and down, along what was nothing better than the stony bed of a winter-torrent.
Having so delivered herself, Emmy Lou sat down, not at all disconcerted to find that she had been holding her Primer upside down. Following this, Emmy Lou was told that she had "passed;" and seeing from the jubilance of the other children that it was a matter to be joyful over, Emmy Lou went home and told the elders of her family that she had passed.
He leaned his empty weapon against the wall, and strode out to the little girl who was perched up on the trough. "Chrismus gift, Cunnel!" he cried, cheerily. "Ter-morrer's Chrismus." The echoes caught the word. In vibratory jubilance they repeated it.
With a thrill at her heart she watched him receding through the open wash of air and water, shouting in the jubilance of his manhood. The mischievous pleasure of her coquetries was forgotten, and in a rush of glad confidence she felt a woman's pride in him.
They pray that the gods may occupy the dwellings prepared for them "in joy and jubilance," and the reference to festivals in the historical texts are all of such a character as to make us feel that the Babylonian could appreciate the Biblical injunction to "rejoice" in the divine presence, on the occasions set apart as, in a peculiar sense, sacred.
Upon these two incongruous qualities Spinrobin always insists. "The deaf shall hear !" came sharply from the clergyman's lips, the sentence uncompleted, for the housekeeper cut him short. "They're out!" she cried with a loud, half-frightened jubilance; "Mr. Skale's prisoners are bursting their way about the house.
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