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Updated: May 11, 2025
The four made bullets fast, melting the lead in a ladle that Jim carried, pouring it into the molds, and then dropping the shining and deadly pellets one by one into their pouches. Three of them talked as they worked, but Silent Tom did not speak for a full hour. Then he said: "We'll have five hundred apiece." Shif'less Sol looked at him reprovingly.
"I'm sure Tucker might have married several times had he cared about it," replied Mrs. Blake reprovingly. "Miss Matoaca Bolling always had a sentiment for him, I am certain, and even after his misfortune she went so far as to present him with a most elaborate slipper of red velvet ornamented with steel beads.
"Why, Richard," says my lady, "you will be wanting no end of pretty things to take back to Maryland when you go. You shall come with me to-morrow to Mr. Josiah Wedgwood's, to choose some of them." "Dorothy!" says her mother, reprovingly. "And he must have the Chippendale table I saw yesterday at the exhibition, and chairs to match.
She did not look quite happy, did not always meet a smile with a smile, looked almost reprovingly upon the frolics of the little brother-imps, and though kindness itself when any real hurt or grief befell them, had reverted to her old, somewhat dictatorial manner, of which I have already spoken as interrupted by Connie's accident.
"Oh, brother Cal!" remarked the hostess as she softly dropped her eyelids and smiled reprovingly; "this irreverence comes of visiting Miss Agnes Wilt too often. I must take you in charge." Duff Salter gave a furious sneeze: "Jericho! Oh! oh! Jericho!"
And isn't it so that yourself it was talked her round!" The Young Doctor waved a hand reprovingly, but Patsy continued: "Now, lookin' back on it, don't ye think it was clever enough what you said till her? 'Do justice to yourself and to others, little lady, sez you.
"Oh, Bobbie, you shouldn't say that!" cried Jerry, reprovingly; "it's very impolite. Aunt Lucy would be quite horrified!" "Well, I don't mean anything rude," said Bobbie. "I do like them, and I can't help it. I can't see why it's any more rude than if I said I liked guinea-pigs."
Everybody goes, everybody but a 'Percy dear," replied the younger of the Sophomores with an air of superiority. Joe's face flushed and he faced the speaker, but the other Sophomore spoke before Joe's indignant thoughts could find utterance. "That's all you know about it, Rex," he said reprovingly. "Why, lots of splendid fellows never play billiards and they aren't mollycoddles by any means.
"No, I haven't got you this time, thank Heaven, and I don't want you; but I'd rather marry you than live with you, as I said. Isn't it the custom for really nice-minded people to marry to get rid of each other for five years, or for ever and ever and ever?" "What a girl you are, Kitty Tynan!" he said reprovingly. He saw that she meant Crozier and his wife.
I saw the affair from the hill, through my telescope," said young d'Avranche, smiling. "My little daughter must have better manners," responded the lady, looking down at her child reprovingly yet lovingly. "Or the Bailly must eh, Madame?" replied d'Avranche, and, stooping, he offered his hand to the child. Glancing up inquiringly at her mother, she took it. He held hers in a clasp of good nature.
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