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Updated: May 1, 2025


That our blessed Master, even in His state as man, beheld its evil characteristics looming on the future, seems likely not alone from both His human keenness and His divine omniscience, but from here and there a hint dropped in his biography. Why should He, on several occasions, have seemed, I will say with some apparent sharpness, to have rebuked His virgin mother.

For the man who has come to an understanding that his whole life depends on the greater or less degree of sharpness in the knife, for such a man, every whetting of it is weighty, and that man knows that the knife is a knife only when it is sharp, when it cuts that which needs cutting. This is what happened to me, when I began to write my essay.

She keeps citing instances she's seen." Marise broke out with a fierce, blaming sharpness, "I don't see what business she had, writing him that way. I think it was beastly of her. Why couldn't she let him alone!"

But but do you feel like risking the round table? Couldn't we have it on the little table in the corner?" The girl settled the last of her flowers and pushed back her hair with a worried gesture. A pang of mingled irritation and anxiety lent an edge of sharpness to her soft voice. "Auntie dear! I thought you had quite forgotten that fancy. You know it is only a fancy.

"You?" he asked of me in a voice that was of the same coldness and sharpness as that steel, and his beautiful mouth was set into one straight line as he flung into my face that one word. And to that word of challenge I made no answer, but I raised my head and looked into his eyes with a dignity that came to me as my right from suffering.

Phoebe might easily have told him the real state of the case; Nancy was busy at her washing, which would have been reason enough. But the nursemaid had vexed her, and she did not like Philip's sharpness, so she only said, 'It's noane o' my business; it's yo' t' look after yo'r own wife and child; but yo'r but a lad after a'.

Her sad face, with its pathetic expression, suggested a melancholy humour delighting in subdued and tranquil thoughts, inclined naturally to the romantic view, or to what in the eyes of youths of twenty appears to be the romantic view of life. He had suddenly found her answering him with a sharpness which, while it roused his wits, startled his sensibilities. But he was flattered as well.

Aggressively honest, his words rang out with startling sharpness: "Because it was for you that I went against Edmund, and from faithfulness to you that I afterwards destroyed him." Out of the stillness that followed, a voice cried, "Are you mad?" and there was the grating of chairs thrust hastily back.

Her face was quite white, but her eyes were alight, curiously vital, with a glitter that was almost of horror. "To Baronmead!" she said, a queer note of sharpness in her voice. "No, certainly not, most certainly not!" And there she stopped, stopped dead as though struck dumb.

"He's remarkably like the gentleman, saving his presence," said the housekeeper. My friend stood staring. "Clement Searle at sea going to America ?" he broke out. Then with some sharpness to our old woman: "Why the devil did he go to America?" "Why indeed, sir? You may well ask. I believe he had kinsfolk there. It was for them to come to him." Searle broke into a laugh.

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