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Updated: July 6, 2025
Nor are they only destroyed from without, but also from within, when those who have no share in the power bring about a revolution, as happened to Gelon, and lately to Dionysius; to the first, by means of Thrasybulus, the brother of Hiero, who nattered Gelon's son, and induced him to lead a life of pleasure, that he himself might govern; but the family joined together and endeavoured to support the tyranny and expel Thrasybulus; but those whom they made of their party seized the opportunity and expelled the whole family.
It is for this reason that the Chinese are consistently treated as though they were hewers of wood and drawers of water, helots who are occasionally nattered in the columns of the daily press and yet are secretly looked upon as men who have been born merely to be cuffed and conquered.
'You should take into account the authoress's disappointed vanity. 'Yes, poor thing! How he must have nattered her! 'Besides, there is the loss of the money, which, I fear, falls as seriously on good Miss Hacket as on the goose herself. 'Does it, indeed? That must not be. How much is it? 'Fifteen pounds; and that foolish Constance fancies that poor Dolores assisted in duping her.
Dosson: wouldn't the old gentleman have sat all day in the court anyway? and wasn't the boulevard better than the court? It was his theory too that he nattered and caressed Miss Francie's father, for there was no one to whom he had furnished more copious details about the affairs, the projects and prospects, of the Reverberator.
He has ten years of repose and preparation, during which he is lauded and nattered, yet retaining simplicity of habits, sleeping but five hours a day, finding time for state dinners, flute-playing, and operas, of all which he is fond; for he was doubtless a man of culture, social, well read if not profound, witty, inquiring, and without any striking defects save tyranny, ambition, parsimony, dissimulation, and lying.
The boyish tenderness underlying Overman's nature, which she discovered later, had made his ugliness and brute strength added charms. He had a pathetic way of looking at her with a doglike worship, as though conscious of his defects, which pleased and nattered her own sense of the perfection of beauty.
A mercantile city of Graeco-Gauls had become Latinised, bureaucratic, and nattered itself that it was like its new parent on the Tiber. It called itself Gallula Roma, Arelas. Consequently, we find in Arles a strong current of Roman blood mingled with the Greek and Gallic, and there has been practically no other admixture.
"I am sure I am very much nattered by Miss Tracy's kindness," put in Eustace; "but is the match solely between ladies?" No, for the last two years, after a match between ladies and between gentlemen, there had a final one taken place between the two winners, male and female, in which Hippo had hitherto always carried off the glory and the belt.
This was, however, so far from a recommendation to Jean, that after the first Barbe gave it to be understood that all were Trudchen's providing. They suspected that Barbe nattered and soothed 'her boy, as she termed him, with hopes, but they owed much to the species of authority with which she kept him from forcing himself upon them.
"You were not here to suggest it," he returned quietly, with gaze only for blue eyes. She suffered them to linger. "I suppose I should feel nattered that a suggestion from little me " "A suggestion from little you would, I fancy, go a long ways with many people." A spark shone now in the man's steady look; the girl seemed not afraid of it. "I am fortunate," she laughed. "A compliment from Mr.
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