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Updated: May 29, 2025


But catching the sight of the face of her aunt, she cried remorsefully: "Oh, I have been so rude to you, Aunt Jessica! Forgive me!" There was something of the new sense of womanhood in her voice and of the sisterhood in suffering which womanhood alone can bring. But Mrs. Falconer had not heard Amy's last exclamation. "What do you mean?" she asked with quick tremulous eagerness.

DEAR SIR EVERARD, Please, please, please forgive me! Oh, I am so sorry I laughed and made you angry! But indeed I thought you only meant it as a joke. Two days is such a little while to be acquainted before proposing, you know. Won't you come to see us again? Papa has asked for you several times. Pray pardon me. You would if you knew how penitent I am. Yours remorsefully, HARRIE HUNSDEN.

"I don't deserve it; but oh, Christine, do believe that there's never been anyone like you in my life; that I've never cared for anyone as I do for you all that that other " "I know I know," she was thinking remorsefully of the days when Kettering had seemed to come before Jimmy in her heart; of the days when she had been unhappy because he stayed away.

She turned and putting up a little white arm, which shook as though palsied, began to extinguish the lights. Isabel watched her a moment remorsefully: "Good night, grandmother, and good-by. I am sorry to go away and leave you angry." As she entered her room, gray light was already creeping in through the windows, left open to the summer night. She went mournfully to her trunk.

And my my feet are cold, she added, suddenly and irrelevantly. 'Will you take me home? 'Ah, Mademoiselle, I cried remorsefully, 'I have been a beast! You are barefoot, and I have kept you here. 'It is nothing, she said in a voice which thrilled me. 'My heart is warm, Monsieur thanks to you. It is many hours since it has been as warm.

Then he pulled himself together and said, remorsefully, "It was the only lie I've ever told, and " He was drowned out with a chorus of groans and outraged exclamations; and before he could begin again, one of D'Aulon's liveried servants appeared and said we were required at headquarters. We rose, and Noel said: "There what did I tell you? I have a presentiment the spirit of prophecy is upon me.

To avoid saying "damn" was manifestly impossible: the word slipped out perpetually without giving him warning; as soon as he heard it, however, his righteous soul remorsefully followed up the syllable by, "Bress the Lord," in Stentorian tones.

Don't you know enough to hold a picture and not ruin it by moving?" "There was a movement written for that cue," she said, a little tremulously. "The business in the script is, 'Showing that she is touched by Roderick's nobleness, lifts handkerchief impulsive gesture to eyes." "Not," he shouted, "not during the SMILE!" "Oh!" she cried remorsefully. "Have I done that again?"

She wondered remorsefully how she had taken him to be quite "homely-looking" when she first saw him. Why, he was altogether above any one she knew not perhaps jest in looks, but in knowledge and in manners he didn't stand in the corner of the room like the rest and stare till all the girls became uncomfortable. What did looks matter after all? Besides, he wasn't homely, he was handsome; so he was.

"Why did I ever let him go off by himself?" the Philosopher muttered remorsefully. "Why didn't I keep an eye on him?" "It would have made no difference," the Skeptic offered dismally as consolation. "'Whom the gods would destroy they first make mad! You couldn't have prevented his madness."

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