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Dick watched him with strangely-mingled feelings, as he went, swiftly and warily, and ever and again turning a wicked eye upon the lad who had spared him, and whom he still suspected. There was upon one side of where he went a thicket, strongly matted with green ivy, and, even in its winter state, impervious to the eye. Herein, all of a sudden, a bow sounded like a note of music.

The long, low building which faces you is the Bibliotheque Ste. Genevieve. Nothing now remains of the Abbey of Ste. Genevieve except the tall early Gothic tower seen to the right near the end of the Pantheon, and rising above the modern buildings of the Lycee Henri IV. The singularly picturesque and strangely-mingled church across the little square is St.

"It was in the dreariest part of the winter which followed Joseph Wilmot's escape that an incident occurred which gave me a strangely-mingled feeling of pleasure and pain. I was sitting one evening in my mother's breakfast-parlour a little room situated close to the hall-door when I heard the ringing of the bell at the garden-gate.

Instead of receiving that Holy Sacrament in all thankful humility, my grand-uncle thrust away my lord Prior a whitebearded old man, of a venerable and commanding presence with great fury and ungoverned rage, storming at him in strangely-mingled words, which for sure, he meant for others, but in a voice and with a mien which plainly showed that he would have nought of that Messenger of Grace.

Instead of receiving that Holy Sacrament in all thankful humility, my grand-uncle thrust away my lord Prior a whitebearded old man, of a venerable and commanding presence with great fury and ungoverned rage, storming at him in strangely-mingled words, which for sure, he meant for others, but in a voice and with a mien which plainly showed that he would have nought of that Messenger of Grace.

In the strangely-mingled mass of the Spanish monarchy, the one bond which held together its various parts, divided as they were by blood, by tradition, by tongue, was their common faith. Philip was in more than name the "Catholic King." Catholicism alone united the burgher of the Netherlands to the nobles of Castille, or Milanese and Neapolitan to the Aztec of Mexico and Peru.

Instead of receiving that Holy Sacrament in all thankful humility, my grand-uncle thrust away my lord Prior a whitebearded old man, of a venerable and commanding presence with great fury and ungoverned rage, storming at him in strangely-mingled words, which for sure, he meant for others, but in a voice and with a mien which plainly showed that he would have nought of that Messenger of Grace.

Carmina had entered the room in doubt and fear. She left it with strangely-mingled feelings of perplexity and relief. Her sense of a mysterious change in her aunt had strengthened with every word that Mrs. Gallilee had said to her. She had heard of reformatory institutions, and of discreet persons called matrons who managed them. In her imaginary picture of such places, Mrs.

Strangers in England, the three first Plantagenets are at home in the sunny fields along the Mayenne. The history of Anjou, the character of the Counts, their forefathers, are the keys to the subtle policy, to the strangely-mingled temper of Henry and his sons.