Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: May 8, 2025
"Really, Mr Nourse, I don't exactly perceive the necessity " But at that moment the fore and main-top-gallant-masts went over the side; and the look-out man at the fore-top-gallant-mast head, who had been called down by the first lieutenant, but did not hear the injunction, was hurled into the sea to leeward. "Helm down!" cried the master.
Joe, Nourse and then Dwight, one after the other, had all bowed down before her. "Oh, that was very simple!" she thought. "They're only men!" It would be a woman this time, and one of the most brilliant kind. "What a dull little fool she'll find me, in spite of all I do or say!" It would be all the more difficult because Mrs. Crothers was older. "That will count against me.
An illustrated lecture on the Yellowstone Park, by Professor George L. Maris. "Work or How to Get a Living," by Hon. Roswell G. Horr. "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," by Rev. Robert Nourse, D.D. "Backbone," by Rev. Thomas Dixon.
In this the recent discoveries will be laid down, and we shall see Mr Galton's route of 1600 miles from Walfish Bay to Odonga, near a large river named the Nourse, and to the country of the Ovampo, described as an intelligent tribe of natives.
The Goodwin children soon got well: in other words, they were tired of their atrocious foolery; and the death of their victim gave them a pretense for a return to decent behavior.... Martha Corey and Rebecca Nourse were cried out against. Both were church-members of excellent character; the latter seventy years of age.
She could just imagine him doing it, the surly, ungracious tone of his voice, the very worst side of the man shown up. Joe often now looked troubled when Ethel talked of his partner. But toward the end of the summer in one such talk he gave her a shock. It was after Nourse had again refused an invitation to come to the seashore. "He's queer," said Joe, "and he can be ugly.
Try her yourself, Mr Nourse," continued the captain, "I'm sick of her;" and with a heightened colour he handed the speaking-trumpet over to the first-lieutenant. "York, you're wanted," observed the lieutenant abaft to the marine-officer, dropping down the corners of his mouth. "York, you're wanted," tittered the midshipmen, in whispers, as they passed each other.
Tall, gaunt and angular, somewhat stooped, Nourse stood looking down at her; and as, perplexed and excited, Ethel scanned his visage, so heavy in spite of its narrow lines, she saw an expression in which contempt was tempered by a sort of regret and weariness. And of course he was awkward, too. She said to herself, "Be careful now." "Won't you sit down?" she asked him. "Thank you."
She had told Nourse to hint he was lonely. When Nourse came to dinner that Saturday night, Joe was surprised and delighted at the way his partner seemed to get on now with his wife. The visit indeed was such a success that it was not long before Joe proposed bringing home "an old pal of mine fellow named Dwight."
"Silence there, fore and aft every man to his station," cried the first-lieutenant, through his speaking trumpet. "All ready, sir," reported the first-lieutenant to the captain, who had followed him on deck. "Shall we put the helm down?" "If you please, Mr Nourse." "Down with the helm." When the master reported it down, "The helm's a-lee," roared the first-lieutenant.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking