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Updated: June 1, 2025
Once it was the height of her desire Nina is eight years older than I am I can see now her burning eyes one night on the river in the June of 1914, when she insinuated, not all playfully, that it would be good to wed. "I think you had better take Jim my dear, after all.
But we are living still, my Paul waste we no more time, in dreams." They made haste, and were soon in the gondola on their way to the Piazza. "Paul," she said, with a wave of her hand which included all the beauty around, "I am so glad you only see Venice now, when your eyes can take it in, sweetheart. At first it would have said almost nothing to you," and she smiled playfully.
Octagon, relapsing into prose. "He is Lord Caranby's heir, and will have a title and a fortune some day. But I would not force you to wed against your will, my dear." "I love Cuthbert and Cuthbert loves me," said Juliet quickly, "we quite understand one another. I wonder why he did not come to-day." "Ah," said her mother playfully, "I saw that your thoughts were otherwhere.
Richard could not see how much Arthur was changed, but his quick ear detected the weak, tremulous tones of the voice, which tried to greet him steadily, and so the conversation turned first upon Arthur's recent illness, and then upon Nina, until at last, as Richard rose to leave, he laid his arm across Edith's shoulder and said playfully, "You know of course, that what you predicted, when years ago you asked me to take a certain little girl, is coming true.
Ole warned her again about being careful; she would have to dress properly. Even Tidemand had spoken about these risky boat-rides so early in the season. "And you are going to be the hostess!" he chaffed her. "What a darling little mistress! By the way, what are you reading?" "Oh, that is only Irgens's poems," she answered. "Don't say 'only' Irgens's poems," he chided her playfully.
While thus speaking, the young people were already playfully struggling which should first enter the oak. Two got precedence, and went in and out, one after the other. Gabriel breathed hard. "The blind owlets!" thought he; "and I put the letter where a mole would have seen it!"
And this, considering his superiority in age, sex, and acquirements, was not only absurd but unfair somehow. For did not he, as a rule, get on charmingly well with women, gentle and simple, old and young, alike? Had he not an ingratiating, playfully flirtatious way with them in which he trusted? But flirtatiousness, even of the mildest description, would not do here.
Sanine came nearer and leant with both elbows on the window-sill. His eyes shone, and he smiled. "There was no need for that!" he muttered playfully. Lida looked round. "Without a shawl you looked much nicer," he said in a low voice, impressively. Lida looked at him in amazement, and instinctively drew the shawl tighter round her. Sanine laughed.
"And was I shopping with Mary Cassidy, Feemy? 'deed then I forget it. Oh yes, it was fair-day yesterday, and I saw them all in at Brennan's." "And what did you want at Brennan's, Myles?" said she, playfully shaking his shoulder with her hand; "it's talking to that pretty girl in the shop you're after."
"If you sit down on the haystack you speedily find the needle, M. le Baron," said Montaiglon playfully. "In other words, trust my sensibility to feel the prick of his presence whenever I get into his society. The fact that he may suspect my object here will make him prick all the quicker and all the harder." "Even yet you don't comprehend Argyll's court.
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