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Updated: May 13, 2025
'Read the book, said Herr Tiefenbach earnestly, as he shook hands. 'It is a deep book. 'Do not forget me! cried Stromboli sentimentally, and he kissed Margaret's gloves several times. 'Good-bye, said Fraeulein Ottilie. 'Every one is sorry when you go! Margaret was not a gushing person, but she stooped and kissed the cheerful little woman, and pressed her small hand affectionately.
"Merely that he and the young man are and always have been hand and glove," explained Hunt-Goring smoothly. "Nick is a very charming person no doubt, but " "Be careful!" warned Daisy. He made her a smiling bow. "But," he repeated with emphasis, "he is not sentimentally particular in a matter of ethics. He looks to the end rather than the means. Also you must remember he is a man and not a woman.
Loving him not at all she grew sorry for him and kissed him sentimentally one night because he was so charming, a relic of a vanishing generation which lived a priggish and graceful illusion and was being replaced by less gallant fools.
There was nothing sentimentally Negrophil about the attitude of the Californians; indeed, they proclaimed an exceedingly sensible policy in the simple formula: "No Niggers, Slave or Free!" But as regards Slavery their decision was emphatic and apparently irreversible. The Southerners were at once angry and full of anxiety.
He rose from the bench, and dusted the seat of his blue overalls, while he gazed sentimentally over the blossoming orchard. "'Tis the seventeenth of April, so we may git ahead with plantin'," he remarked.
In the dusk of an October evening, a sensible looking woman of forty came out through an oaken door to a broad landing on the first floor of an old English country-house. A braid of her hair had fallen forward as if she had been stooping over book or pen; and she stood for a moment to smooth it, and to gaze contemplatively not in the least sentimentally through the tall, narrow window.
Sentimentally she did not much care to see him his delays had wearied her, but it was necessary; and with a sigh she arranged herself picturesquely in the chair; first this way, then that; next so that the light fell over her head. Next she flung herself on the couch in the cyma-recta curve which so became her, and with her arm over her brow looked towards the door.
"What a child you are still, Miranda," said her mother, sentimentally, as she fondled the high cheek-bone. "You are quite companions," said Lady Esmondet. "We are bosom friends; more than sisters since the departure of my dear husband." "Mr. Marchmont has been dead some time, I believe."
But as bad luck would have it, Captain Anthony has no mother living, not a blessed soul belonging to him as far as I know. Oh, ay, I fancy he said once something to me of a sister. But she's married. She don't need him. Yes. In the old days he used to talk to me as if we had been brothers," exaggerated the mate sentimentally.
Surely no woman ever was associated sentimentally with three figures more diverse a disqualified sovereign, an Italian dramatist, and a bad French painter. Stendhal, in his "Mémoires d'un Touriste," says that this work of art represents her as a cook who has pretty hands.
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