Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: May 23, 2025


Look at England, for instance, where the audacious priestcraft has mendaciously identified the Christian Sunday with the Jewish Sabbath, in spite of the fact that it was ordained by Constantine the Great in opposition to the Jewish Sabbath, and even took its name, so that Jehovah's ordinances for the Sabbath i.e., the day on which the Almighty rested, tired after His six days' work, making it therefore essentially the last day of the week might be conferred on the Christian Sunday, the dies solis, the first day of the week which the sun opens in glory, the day of devotion and joy.

Some way out at sea he inquired, "Hullo! what's wrong with that right knee of yours?" "Ricked it," answered Nicky-Nan mendaciously, and added, "I was thinkin' to consult you, sir. I be due for trainin' with the Reserve in a fortni't's time." "Want a certificate? Here, let me have a feel what's wrong."

Cayley believes I've sent you off to the ends of the earth; and I've been mendaciously assuring her that you're all right, though Miss Pendennis has had her doubts, and nearly bowled me out, once or twice." "Miss who?" I shouted. "Miss Pendennis, of course. Didn't you know she was staying with your cousin again? A queer coincidence about that portrait! Hello, here we are at Victoria.

Without waiting for an answer, he turned swiftly, following my gaze, and catching sight of the retreating back of Grace Draper. "Good Lord!" he gasped in consternation. "Do you suppose she heard what I said?" "Oh, I'm sure she didn't," I replied mendaciously. Dicky looked at me curiously. Whether he believed me or not I do not know. At any rate, he did not press the question.

Again, by a liberal construction of the publisher's announcement, MANUSCRIPT poems, which had never known print, began to coyly unfold their virgin blossoms in the morning's mail. They were accompanied by a few lines stating, casually, that their sender had found them lying forgotten in his desk, or, mendaciously, that they were "thrown off" on the spur of the moment a few hours before.

"He writes that Sara is contemplating a second venture into the state of wedded bliss." Hetty stared at him. "I I don't believe it," she said flatly. "How can it be possible? She sees no one." He laughed. "You're wrong there," said he mendaciously. "She's been seeing a great deal of a certain mutual friend of ours all summer long." "You mean?" "Brandon Booth.

Like his expressions of love in his juggling of women that was and was not the love he claimed it as being, he had moments of a predilection for mendacity like a boy wanting to hide himself within the shadows of a field and to remain there indefinitely, never to be discovered. He spoke mendaciously and yet to him it was not really a lie. "I wasn't there all that long.

The gaunt figure of Lincoln is not a thing of beauty to be gazed at from all the points of the compass; and the stern veracity of the artist would not permit him to disguise the ill-fitting coat and trousers by any arbitrary draperies, mendaciously cloaking the clothes which were intensely characteristic of the man to be modeled.

"Well, what do you know about that!" he exclaimed. "That's something you didn't tell me, Lollie." "It was hardly worth mentioning," I said mendaciously, with my heart beating until I could hear it. She had not forgotten, after all. McKnight took a bud and fastened it in his button-hole. I'm afraid I was not especially pleasant about it. They were her roses, and anyhow, they were meant for me.

"You fellers sound awake?" A woman's voice. Under his breath, "Who the devil's that?" inquired the Colonel, brushing his hand over his eyes. Before he got across the tent Maudie had pushed the flap aside and put in her head. "Hello!" "Hell-o! How d'e do?" He shook hands, and the younger man nodded, "Hello." "When did you come to town?" asked the Colonel mendaciously.

Word Of The Day

batanga

Others Looking