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Updated: May 13, 2025


You know I told you I warned mother to have no guests this afternoon." "Yes, you said you wanted to write poetry Ben" the speaker suddenly grasped the driver's coat-sleeve "I never thought of it till this minute, but, Ben Barry" Miss Upton's voice expressed acute dismay "are you in love?" "Why, does it mean so much to you, little one?" responded Ben sentimentally.

There are, by the way, three sorts of created beings who are sentimentally supposed to be able to judge individuals at the first glance: women, children, and dogs. By virtue of a mystic gift with which rumour credits them, they are never mistaken. It is merely not true.

'It is not always May," quoted Emma sentimentally. "I might as well add, right here and now, that I'm glad of it. May is a dubious and disappointing month, dears. It always pours barrels on the first. It's a shame, too, when one stops to consider all the poems that have been composed about that weepy, fickle first day of May. "Oh, radiant May day, This is our play day.

It was thought a little strange that he would not forgive her, but the obscurity of the story of this point and the delight felt in her misfortune helped to intensify and idealise Frank in the popular mind, and when he played Gounod in the still evenings the young ladies would steal from the villas and wander sentimentally through the shadows about the green.

This is why the polo-player does not qualify sentimentally. But what is one man beside two troops which come shortly in two solid chunks, with horses snorting and sending the dry landscape in a dusty pall for a quarter of a mile in the rear? It is good ah! it is worth any one's while; but stop and think, what if we could magnify that?

"'Mother, dear mother, come home with me now," he roared sentimentally, so that Essex Maid lifted her beautiful head and looked out in surprise. "Remember Fanshaw, and put more water in it after this," he added, dropping his arm to his mother's neck and capturing her with a hug. "'Zekiel!" she protested. "'Zekiel!"

It never occurred to Horatio that a healthy young woman of twenty with no prospect of inheritance might find something better worth doing in life than amusing herself while waiting for a husband. Such strenuous ideas were not in the air then. "She'll always have a home so long as I'm alive and can make one for her," he said sentimentally. "But she'll get one for herself, you see!"

Malcourt was interested to see that he could stride now without waddling. "Marvellous, marvellous! the power of love!" he mused sentimentally; "Porty is no longer rotund only majestically portly. See where he hastens lightly to his Alida! "Shepherd fair and maidens all Too-ri-looral! Too-ri-looral!" And, very gracefully, he sketched a step or two in contra-dance to his own shadow on the grass.

Meanwhile Marmaduke and Miss McQuinch were becoming curious about Marian and Conolly. "I say, Nelly," he whispered, "Marian and that young man seem to be getting on uncommonly well together. She looks sentimentally happy, and he seems pleased with himself. Dont you feel jealous?" "Jealous! Why should I be?" "Out of pure cussedness.

Possibly even the drawing-room would have remained untouched both Janet and her elder sister Marian sentimentally preferred it as it was had not Mrs Orgreave been `positively ashamed' of it when her married children, including Marian, came to see her. They were all married now, except Janet and Charlie and Johnnie; and Alicia at any rate had a finer drawing-room than her mother.

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