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Updated: June 20, 2025
Every disposition is made by the wary antagonists. Sherman, eagle-eyed and prompt to join issue, gains a brief repose before the gray of morning looses the fires of hell. McPherson, young and brilliant, whose splendid star is in its zenith, firmly holds his exposed lines along the railroad between two valleys. In his left and rear, the forest throws out dark shades to cover friend and foe.
"One and all, from Mam'zelle to ladies like her Ladyship, they do like to feel that a man belongs to themselves." "You think that is it, Burton?" "Not a doubt of it, Sir Nicholas." "How do you know them so well, never having married, you old scallywag!" "Perhaps that's why, Sir. A married man looses his spirit like and his being able to see!" "I seem lonely, don't I Burton," and I laughed again.
She opens a little drawer, which looks like a flower garden, all full of little knots of pink and blue and red, and various fancies of the toilet, and looks into it reflectively. She looses the ribbon from her hair and chooses another, but Moses gave her that too, and said, she remembers, that when she wore that "he should know she had been thinking of him."
But certainly some there are that know the resorts and falls of business, that cannot sink into the main of it; like a house that hath convenient stairs and entries, but never a fair room. Therefore, you shall see them find out pretty looses in the conclusion, but are no ways able to examine or debate matters.
Outside the summer-house he looses his hold of her a moment, flings himself, one shoulder forward, heavily against the door, and breaks it open for the second time. Then in one stride he is beside her once more. Neither speaks. But even at the door, she checks again stands clinging to the door-post, and will not move. "No, no, I've never been unfaithful to him yet. I won't; I've never never...."
A great principle anchored to a common word or a familiar illustration never looses its hold upon the mind; it is like seeing the laws of Astronomy in the swing of a pendulum, or in the motion of the boy's ball, or the law of the tides and the seasons appearing in the beating of the pulse, or in inspiring and expiring the breath.
A stimulus repeated too frequently looses effect. As opium, wine, grief. Hence old age. Opium and aloes in small doses. 2. A stimulus not repeated too frequently does not lose effect. Perpetual movement of the vital organs. 3. A stimulus repeated at uniform times produces greater effect. Irritation combined with association. 4.
Which thing is only applicable to that book which binds and looses on the account of a man's being a visible saint or a visible apostate.
J , said he, 'I'll follow you. 'Then, said I, 'if you'll change wehicles' for, mind ye, I had no notion of damaging my own 'I'll bet you a hat I gets over. 'Done, said he, and out he got; so I takes his 'oss by the head, looses the bearing-rein, and leading him quietly up to the place and letting him have a look at it, gave him a whack over the back, and over he went, gig and all, as clever as could be!"
Power to heal, to redeem, to guide, and to guard. Power of the sceptre and shield; the power of the royal hand that heals in touching, that binds the fiend, and looses the captive; the throne that is founded on the rock of Justice, and descended from only by steps of Mercy. Will you not covet such power as this, and seek such throne as this, and be no more housewives, but queens?
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