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Updated: June 4, 2025
This view is corroborated by Tyrrell's Introduction to the History of England; p. 83-84, and by Spence's Origin of the Laws and Political Institutions of Modern Europe, p. 447, and the note on the same page.
And his state the Honourable Dave remarked was in the very forefront of enlightenment in this respect: practically all that she demanded was that ladies in Mrs. Spence's predicament should become, pro tempore, her citizens. Married misery did not exist in the Honourable Dave's state, amongst her own bona fide citizens.
Penny's lover had contrived to communicate with her and to arrange a meeting in Liverpool, where they had been married; by the time the letter arrived at its destination the couple were on the way to Ireland, whither Spence's regiment had been just transferred. The two years that followed were, for the most part, years of happiness for the sergeant and his bride.
When it reached the bluff where the sand mounted into green-capped dunes, patched in their hollows with shadows of violet, it slowed down and came to a stop before Willie Spence's weathered cottage. The old inventor and Bob were seated idly on the workshop steps. No longer did the vibrant hammer and purring plane blend their metallic notes with the music of the surf.
Spence's calling her by her first name. "Honora Leffingwell is the most natural and unspoiled person I know," she said. There is, undoubtedly, a keen pleasure and an ample reward in teaching a pupil as apt and as eager to learn as Honora. And Mr.
The house, it is true, did not lack beauty, for it was well proportioned and gracefully planned, and there was no denying that one found, perhaps, more comfort on its screened and shaded piazzas than was to be enjoyed on Willie Spence's unprotected doorstep.
"I've had an opportunity to observe the ones who come over here, mother." "I won't have a prospective guest discussed," Mrs. Holt declared, with finality. "Joshua, you remember my telling you last spring that Martha Spence's son called on me?" she asked. "He is in business with a man named Dallam, I believe, and making a great deal of money for a young man.
There are within it two piscinae and two aumbries at different levels, indicating, no doubt, an alteration of level in the altar itself during the period that this chantry was in use. An elaborate monument now stands under the eastern wall. In Mr. Spence's "Essay on the Abbey Church of Romsey" , this tomb is described as standing in the south ambulatory.
"You may read your letter." "Yes'm." And he began to paw clumsily among his books, whereupon Miss Spence's glance fired with suspicion. "Have you prepared one?" she demanded. "Yes'm," said Penrod dreamily. "But you're going to find you forgot to bring it, aren't you?" "I got it," said Penrod, discovering the paper in his "Principles of English Composition."
Spence's offer much more favorably than I expected. It was evident he wished me to marry some one. "As you have said, father, I have interests of my own of which you do not know. I have given five hours almost every day during the past year to the study of the principles of this philosophy. I have found my field of usefulness there, it seems to me.
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