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Updated: June 13, 2025


"That woman maddens me." "Yes, she is the fact is, you ought not to be here." "Not be here!" she exclaimed. "This is my home. It is she who ought not to be here. I shall speak to my uncle." "Wait! Have a little patience," said Fellowes. "After all, she is Mrs. Dearmer, a lady of fashion, a lady who has been to Court. You would be astonished at the power she wields in certain directions.

As for Monica, she saw the white dawn peep at the window, and closed her tear-stained eyes only when the life of a new week had begun noisily in Walworth Road. In consequence of letters exchanged during the week, next Sunday brought the three Miss Maddens to Queen's Road to lunch with Miss Barfoot.

But as we cannot live without yielding to this natural and imperious instinct of death, we relieve ourselves from time to time, by wars. Then a whole nation slaughters another nation. It is a feast of blood, a feast that maddens armies and intoxicates the civilians, women and children, who read, by lamplight at night, the feverish story of massacre.

"Nevertheless, I should not have said what I did," says Stephen, remorsefully, "I know that. Whatever I might have thought, I should have kept it to myself; but" in a low tone "it maddens me to see you give yourself voluntarily to one incapable of appreciating the treasure that has fallen to his share a treasure beyond price when there are others who, for a word, a glance, a smile, would barter "

"She has a sweet, true face," I said, "and she wears a very beautiful smile to-night." He sprang to his feet. "Yes, yes a smile that maddens me; a smile that tells me nothing, nothing!

'You know you had no business there, lecturing a set of men old enough to be your grandfathers, and talking them all to death, no doubt. 'Well, Aunt Kitty, if oppression maddens the wise, what must it do to the foolish? 'If you only allow that it was foolish 'No; I had rather know whether it was wrong.

Randal offered him more wine; he refused it. "I'm afraid," he said. "Wine maddens me if I take too much of it. You have heard of men forgetting their sorrows in drink. I tried it yesterday; it set my brains on fire; I'm feeling that glass I took just now. No! I'm not faint. It eases my head when I rest like this. Shake hands, Randal; we have never had any unfriendly words; we mustn't begin now.

Doesn't he go about boasting of it now, and saying that girl! But kiss me and I'll forget it; I'll forgive you. Kiss me only once, and I shall be certain you don't care for him. That's the thought maddens me outright. I can't bear it now I've seen you look soft. I'm stronger than you, mind." He caught her by the waist. "Yes," Rhoda gasped, "you are. You are only a brute."

"'Tis tu gert a thing for me to say no wummon was ever plaaced like what I be now. I do mean to see passon at Sancreed, uncle. He'll knaw what's right for me. If he bids me stay, I'll stay. 'Tis the thot o' Joe Noy maddens me. My head'll burst if I think any more. I'll go to passon." "Whether you'll stay, Polly! Why shouldn't 'e stay? Surely it do " "Doan't 'e talk no more 'tall, uncle.

"Those whom the God chooses to destroy, he first maddens," said Mr. Gibson to himself of himself, throwing himself back upon early erudition and pagan philosophy. Then he looked across to the river Exe, and thought that there was hardly water enough there to cover the multiplicity of his sorrows. But something must be done. He had proceeded so far in forming a resolution, as he reached St.

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