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Updated: June 27, 2025
"Well, then, I don't want to marry him," continued Sylvia. Harboro ignored her. "What do you say, Runyon?" "In view of her unwillingness, and the fact that she is already married " "Runyon!" The word was pronounced almost like a snarl. Runyon had adopted a facetious tone which had stirred Harboro's fury. Something of the resiliency of Runyon's being vanished at that tone in the other man's voice.
Runyon was all solicitude immediately. "We seem to have outdistanced them completely," he said. They turned their horses about so that they faced the north. "I can't even hear them," he added. Then, with the irrepressible optimism which was his outstanding quality, he added laughingly: "They'll be along in a few minutes. But wasn't it a fine ride?"
The little winds, running ahead as an advance-guard of the tempest, flung themselves upon her and caught at her hair and her riding-habit. They chilled her. "A norther!" she exclaimed, and Runyon called back through the whistle of the winds: "It's coming!" His voice had the quality of a battle-cry, joined to the shouts of the descending storm.
This brought them all out on the front veranda again, where I had to pretend I was sorry, which I was for the centipede. I asked what they were going to do next, and they said, "Get aboard and bathe it with ammoniar"; and I said, "No, I meant about Runyon Rufe"; and Mr.
It had seemed to him that this final clause was the obvious thing for Runyon to say, and he had waited to see if he would say it. He did not suppose that he and Sylvia would see a great deal of Runyon in Eagle Pass, where they were not invited to entertainments of any kind, but there might be occasional excursions into the country, and Runyon seemed to be invited everywhere.
Not alone from fear of losing you, but I knew it would hurt you horribly, and I hoped ... I had made up my mind ... I was truly loyal to you, Harboro, until they tricked me in my father's house." Harboro continued to regard her, a judge unmoved. "And Runyon, Sylvia Runyon?" he asked accusingly.
W. Cleveland Runyon, in commenting bitterly on the release of Heike and Morse on account of their health, pointed out that their health apparently became good when once they themselves became free men, and added: "The commutation of these sentences amounts to a direct interference with the administration of justice by the courts.
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