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Updated: June 17, 2025
"You can't be named 'Bull, Jimmy," reproved Lina, "it isn't genteel to say 'bull' before people." "Yes, I am too," he contended. "Setting Bull's the biggest chief they is and I'm going to be name' him." "Well, I am not going to play then," said Lina primly, "my mother wants me to be genteel, and 'bull' is not genteel." "I tell you what, Jimmy," proposed Frances, "you be name' 'Setting Cow.
All unconscious of the amused glances of her fellow passengers, Felicia Day, in her absurd bonnet and antiquated traveling coat sat primly in the Pullman section that the doctor's thoughtfulness had provided for her and counted her "five" just before her train reached New York. She smiled as she counted, a whimsical smile Item one. A letter!
Haydon," she said primly, to the great gratification of Judith, who had previously arranged this incident. Elinor followed with Mr. Grantly, and Miss Jinny came next with Mr. Spicer, who was very ceremonial and splendid in new clothes of the latest pattern. Patricia thought he looked particularly radiant, and wondered how he could be so glad to say good-bye.
He watched the five sober little faces as they sat upon their red-painted stools with their paws folded primly in their laps. Then he winked slyly at Mother Graymouse. "Oh, well, if you are going to feel as bad as all that, perhaps I might manage to tell you one more story," he chuckled. "But I think Silver Ears will hardly call it exciting.
The Indians have just broken up their camp, and retired in dudgeon, because the young officers were for ever drinking with the squaws and and hum ha." Here Mr. Harry pauses, as not caring to proceed with the narrative, in the presence of little Fanny, very likely, who sits primly in her chair by her mother's side, working her little sampler.
He would get into his coat again and go out into the bleak November wind-swept street to Bauer's restaurant. Cora was always home when Raymond got there at six. She prided herself on this. She would say, primly, to her friends, "I make a point of being there when Ray gets home. Even if I have to cut a round of bridge.
Tillie smiled as she took it from him. "Thank you, Absalom. I don't care if it's LITTLE, so long as it's interesting and instructive," she spoke primly. "The Bible's such a big book, I thought the bigger the book was, the nearer it was like the Bible," said Absalom. "But there's the dictionary, Absalom. It's as big as the Bible." "Don't the size make nothin'?" Absalom asked.
"I have called to enter a protest," Arthur began primly, "against the serving of the papers in the coming Endicott divorce case on your humble servant." "As the papers are to be served only on Horace Endicott, I fail to see how you have any right or reason to protest," was the suave answer. "I know all about the matter, sir, for very good reasons.
Already the bride was stepping daintily down the gangway, her ladies following primly, one by one; a few minutes more and we should all be aboard, the hawsers would splash in the water, the sails would fill and strain.
He is a small, sturdy man, with a big head, of a uniform, dull tint, as if it were carved out of a not very successfully boiled chicken. He is bald, and wears spectacles. He was rather primly dressed, and everything about him gave a sense of careful and virtuous economy, from the uncompromising hardness of his heavy grey suit to the emphatic solidity of his great boots.
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