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Updated: June 9, 2025


It's a sort of pie that ain't had no sweetenin', I guess. An' my stomach's yearnin' for sugar. That play of yours has got me itching to take a hand. Still, I guess this darn ol' camp needs holding up, an' if you need me here you can count me in to the limit." Kars nodded unsmilingly. He knew Abe, second only to his knowledge of Bill Brudenell. That limit was a big one. It meant all he desired.

"Saints! but there's a dog beyant the bark!" he cried a minute after, as the pup crept over to him and began to be friendly, "I wonder is a mon sinsible to go to trustin' the loight o' any moon that shines full on a pitch-black noight whin 'tis rainin'? Och hone! but me stomach's that empty, gin I don't put on me shoes me lungs'll lake trou the soles o' me fate, and gin I do, me shoes they're that sopped, I'll cough them up o-whurra-r-a! whurra-a! but will I iver see Old Oireland agin, I don't know!"

"Your stomach's pretty empty, ain't it, Johnny?" he inquired, as he laid the sticks crosswise with precise movements, as if he had measured the length of each separate piece of wood. He was lean and rawboned, with a shaggy red moustache and a wart on his left cheek. When he spoke he showed an even row of strong white teeth. Dan looked at him with a kind of exhausted indignation.

It wad be fair sinfu' no' ta tak a drop at sic a time as this. The minister himsel' wad taste, gin an auld schulemate came back after forty year. Sae wad the Apostle Paul the stomach's sake was naethin' compared wi' this. What'll ye hae, Andra?" "Let this be mine, Gavin," answered Andrew, reaching for his pocketbook.

"Sire, I have sometimes drunk a little water for my stomach's sake, but I will not eat it." The King smiled pleasantly. "How wise the English are!" he said. "We may yet learn much of them." Philip turned away from the Ambassador and watched the dance in silence.

"'Which I might have conquered my native reluctance, says Billy, 'so to do, an' I even makes up my mind one night it's after I've got my grub, an' you-alls knows how plumb soft an' forgivin' that a- way a gent is when his stomach's full of grub to go up an' visit 'em a lot.

At the next table a quartette of Texas colonels were absorbing mint juleps through rye straws. The Nazarene nudged the editor and inquired what the beverage consisted of. The latter explained the mystery, and would have placed one before his guest, but the latter insisted that a little wine for the stomach's sake would suffice.

He stripped the outer peel from the onion and bit into it. 'Good, warming eating, he said, 'when your stomach's astir from the sea. 'Young lad, the gatewarden said, 'I'm as fain to swear my mother bore me though God forbid I should swear who my father was, woman being woman as that Thomas Culpepper have not passed this way. For why: I'd have cast my hat on high or spat on the ground.

Anyway, SOMETHING'S got to be done," she sighed. "He's nervous as a witch. He can't keep still a minute. And he isn't a bit well, either. He ate such a lot of rich food and all sorts of stuff on our trip that he got his stomach all out of order; and now he can't eat anything, hardly." "Humph! Well, if his stomach's knocked out I pity him," nodded Mr. Smith. "I've been there." "Oh, have you?

Christians usually emphasize those texts that make for what they hold true, and slur over others. "Look not on the wine when it is red" is preached in every Sunday School, while "Take a little wine for thy stomach's sake" is seldom quoted save by brewers. The Bible, the work of a hundred hands during a span of a thousand years, represents a great variety of views.

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