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Updated: June 16, 2025
Swift is most charming when he is feigning to complain of his task: "Here is such a stir and bustle with this little MD of ours; I must be writing every night; O Lord, O Lord!" "I must go write idle things, and twittle twattle." "These saucy jades take up so much of my time with writing to them in the morning." Is it not a stealthy wrong done upon Mrs.
There I read the following lines in the leading daily: "Baltimore, Md. An unexpected tragedy occurred here last evening. Mr. S , the well-known financier and politician, died at his supper-table, while drinking the health of a hundred assembled guests. He is considered to be a great loss to the Southern cause. The city is filled with mourning."
James K. Polk often made the journey from Nashville to Washington in his private carriage. Keeping down the Cumberland River to the Ohio, and up this to Wheeling, he would strike into the National Road eastward to Cumberland, Md.
Through one of his most modern representatives he has but lately called her a "chaperon." A chaperon! MD was not a sentimentalist. They are, every now and then, "poor MD," but obviously not because of their own complaining. Swift called them so because they were mortal; and he, like all great souls, lived and loved, conscious every day of the price, which is death.
He then had charge of all the cavalry on the hills overlooking Santiago, where we afterwards dug our trenches. He had command that afternoon and night, and for the rest of the time commanded our regiment at this point. Yours very truly, H. P. BARDSHAR. CAMBRIDGE, MD., March 27, 1902. THEODORE ROOSEVELT, President of the United States. Washington, D. C.
Among those who voted in the affirmative were Messrs. Barney of Md., Armstrong of Va., A.H. Shepperd of N.C., Blair of Tenn., Chilton and Lyon of Ky., Johns of Delaware, and others from slave states. It has been conceded directly, or impliedly, by all the committees on the District of Columbia that have reported on the subject.
Story That Ends Twice. #Corley, Donald.# *Daimyo's Bowl. *Odell. Spring of Cold Water. Wind. #Crew, Helen Coale.# Born in Baltimore, Md., 1866. Graduate of Bryn Mawr College, 1889. First short story, "The Lost Oasis," Everybody's Magazine, Nov., 1910. Lives in Evanston, Ill. *Parting Genius. #Delano, Edith Barnard.# Born in Washington, D. C. Married in 1908.
And this is because the letters written by Madame de Sevigne were all saved, and not many written to her; because Swift burnt the letters that were the dearest things in life to him, while "MD" both made a treasury of his; and because Prue kept all the letters which Steele wrote to her from their marriage-day onwards, and Steele kept none of hers.
'Pray take care of the young surgeon, M. Le Coq, and see that he wants for nothing. As the lad gets no money from his relations, he may be in need. Charles, on March 28, writes thus to 'Madame de Beauregard, which appears to be an alias of Madame de Talmond: The Prince. March 28, 1750. 'A Md. Bauregor.
Vesta was glad to hear her father praised by her husband, and hopes rekindled of some happier family reunion, when she should feel the heartache die within her that now raged intermittently during her vestal honeymoon. A letter came on the fourth day which dashed these hopes to the ground, and it was as follows: "DORCHESTER COUNTY, MD., October , 1829.
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