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Updated: May 4, 2025
"I don't know," he said, bluntly. "Well! I like that!" cried Agnes, with some vexation. "I don't know you and you don't know me," said the boy. "Everybody that I meet doesn't tell me the truth. So now!" "Do you always tell the truth?" demanded Agnes, shrewdly. Again the boy flushed, but there was roguishness in his brown eyes. "I don't dare tell it sometimes," he said.
"To my way of thinking that was not so difficult as climbing into my room and almost killing me, or stealing the powder from Capt. Boggs' room." "The last, at least, gave me a chance to help," said Betty, with a touch of her odd roguishness. "That was the grandest thing a woman ever did," said Alfred, in a low tone. "Oh, no, I only ran fast."
'You're a real sport, Miss Durwent. 'Ah, monsieur' she smiled with a roguishness that completely unsettled him for the remainder of the day 'have you no sympathy for my headache? Monsieur Anton Beauchamp was the proprietor of the Café Rouge in London. Monsieur Anton Beauchamp was once proprietor of the Café Bleu in Paris. For many years he had cast envious eyes on London.
What are you talking about?" asked Raphael, his breath coming painfully. "Your maiden," said Pinchas, surveying him with affectionate roguishness. "The maiden that came to see you here. She was reading; I walk by and see it is about America." "At the British Museum?" gasped Raphael. A thousand hammers beat "Fool!" upon his brain. Why had he not thought of so likely a place for a littérateur?
Lawrence's to a subdued good-fellow roguishness, and he felt himself invited to chat with her on the walk for a reposeful ten minutes in Aminta's drawing-room. Mrs.
He was a quaint boy, this urchin, with a face as broad as an American Indian's, eyes as bright as a squirrel's, and all the mischief in life lurking about him, till you could see roguishness in the very folds of his hooded Indian winter coat of blue and scarlet.
"Nay, they need not," and I caught the sudden glitter of tears on her lashes; "for I am Elsa Matherson." "You? you?" and I crushed her soft hand within my fingers, as I peered forward at the quickly lowered face. "Why, you are French, Mademoiselle, and of a different name!" She glanced up now into my puzzled face, a bit shyly, yet with some of the old roguishness visible in her eyes.
He turned upon his heel hastily; she stood before him smiling, her eyes overflowing with roguishness and affection. She offered him her hand; he took it doubtfully, fearing some perfidy. She continued calmly: "What has become of you? One never sees you!" Not having regained his self-possession, he murmured: "I have had a great deal to do, Madame, a great deal to do.
This something frequently covers a good deal of ground, for with one or two of the boys it means pranks or roguishness of some sort, which really enlivens the whole household and keeps our risibles from growing rusty by disuse. Wednesday, October thirty-one: I find no difficulty in running the sewing machine here, which is a new and good one, and I like to use it very well.
Her merry face was peering over the smooth white stone, with four pink finger-tips on each side clinging for greater security. Behind her a cherry-tree was dropping its snowy blossoms, and two or three had fallen unheeded upon her wavy brown hair, making a charming frame for the young eyes and tender lips whose smiling harmony seemed to sing with arrant roguishness.
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