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"Nonsense, Trichy; I should have suited him in no possible way at all; nor he me." "Oh, but you would exactly. Papa loves you so well." "And mamma; that would have been so nice." "Yes; and mamma, too that is, had you had a fortune," said the daughter, naively. "She always liked you personally, always." "Did she?" "Always. And we all love you so." "Especially Lady Alexandrina."

+5+. And this naïvely utilitarian point of view is by no means confined to the lowest forms of religion; in the Old Testament, for example, the appeal to Yahveh is generally based on his assumed power to bestow temporal blessings, and this is a widespread attitude at the present day in religious communities, where salvation is commonly the end had in view by the worshiper.

Sir William stood naively before the mirror and looked at his three stars on his black velvet dinner-jacket. "Almost directly over the pit of my stomach," he said. "I hope that is not a decoration for my greedy APPETITE." And he laughed at the young women. "I assure you it is in position, Sir," said Arthur. "Absolutely correct. I will read it out to you later." "Aren't you satisfied?

An inscription upon a tomb beside it naively tells the passer-by to respect the last resting-place of one who had a shop on the Via Sacra, where he sold jewellery and millinery, and was held in much estimation by his customers.

The poem he first published, The Library, he himself tells us, was written partly in his presence and submitted as a whole to his judgment. Crabbe elsewhere indicates clearly what were the weak points of his art, and what tendencies Burke found it most necessary he should counteract. Writing his reminiscences in the third person years later, he naively admitted that "Mr.

"My dear," said he naïvely, "if I waited till I got to Barchester, I might, perhaps, be prevented." "But surely you would not wish to offend the bishop?" said she. "God forbid! The bishop is not apt to take offence, and knows me too well to take in bad part anything that I may be called on to do." "But, papa "

He redoubled his efforts, and in March 1809, 'Dentatus' was finished. 'The production of this picture, he naively explains, 'must and will be considered as an epoch in English art. The drawing in it was correct and elevated, and the perfect forms and system of the antique were carried into painting, united with the fleshy look of everyday life.

It would only make me unhappy to read it." "I am not vexed," said Eric, "and I think you will take it some day yet after I have shown you something I want you to see. Never mind about your looks, Kilmeny. Beauty isn't everything." "Oh, it is a great deal," she wrote naively. "But you do like me, even though I am so ugly, don't you? You like me because of my beautiful music, don't you?"

"It is possible that you really did not know it?" said Vanda. And she related naively, in terms of admiration for her son, the story of the loan that he had secured from the doctor. "We may not speak of it before Baron Bourlac," said Godefroid, "tell me now how your son got out of his trouble."

It was all new. And," with a bitter smile, "so different from what one expects. Mary was never any-thing but the figure of straw I told you of. I thought," naively, "that Desire had forgotten Mary." "Did you?" said John. "Why man, the woman doesn't live who would forget! And Miss Davis filled the bill to the last item even the name 'Mary'." "Oh what a pal was M-Mary!" croaked Yorick obligingly.