Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: April 30, 2025
One, in particular, was singularly wise and dignified-looking, with an aspect which was either bland or severe, one could scarcely say which. Another resembled strikingly the typical diplomatist of romance, having a manner suave and infinitely deferential, but oh! so under-handed and insidious and diabolical!
In the West, a tall awkward country lawyer, Abraham Lincoln, debating with the suave Stephen A. Douglas, declared with prophetic wisdom, "'A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free.... It will become all one thing or all the other." So Susan believed, and she was doing her best to make it all free.
And this alliance was brought about by the suave diplomacy of Louis, and the discovery of the long-existing attachment between the Lady Anne and her old play-fellow, Edward, the only son of Henry and Margaret, and the hope of the Red Rose. Coincidently with the marriage of Clarence and Isabel on French soil, the young Edward and Isabel's sister were betrothed.
Paul recognised, and was awe-stricken, that this white-haired ascetic man wielded a power almost as great as his own. When finally he passed out from the Cathedral, the impression of the Mass had lost much of its hold upon him, but the haunting cadences of that suave Italian voice followed him eerily.
The glow of his complexion, the expansion of his nostril, the bold curve which disdain gave his well-cut under lip, showed him in a new and striking phase. Yet the rare passion of the constitutionally suave and serene, is not a pleasant spectacle; nor did I like the sort of vindictive thrill which passed through his strong young frame. "Do I frighten you, Lucy?" he asked.
"Ah, Monsieur," he said, and his voice was suave, though there was a mocking light in his eyes, "I see I have made a mistake. I had thought you a past master in the art of skating, now I see that your true role is that of the stage hero. You would become as spoilt a favorite as Garat himself. The ladies all commit a thousand follies for him." "Sir," returned Mr.
When one thinks that in ancient times it was a vast series of villas " "The conditions were very different. We do not live in ancient times," returned Giovanni, drily. "Ah, the conditions!" ejaculated Del Ferice, with a suave sigh. "Surely the conditions depend on man not on nature.
Folliot, in her way, was undoubtedly a power and for reasons of his own Pemberton Bryce, whenever he met her which was fairly often was invariably suave and polite. "Most mysterious thing, this, Dr. Bryce," remarked Mrs.
However, the beautiful Norman felt afraid of appearing timid, and so one day she herself went to the inspector's office and sat down on the second chair, while Muche was having his writing lesson. She proved very suave and complimentary, and Florent was by far the more embarrassed of the two.
There was another feature of the weariness which came from being pushed beyond the amount of work she was momentarily able to do: she became irritable with Jack when tired, and then John interfered. Here again, her only hope lay in Hugh. With Hugh present John was suave, polite, and apt to treat her as a man is supposed to treat his wife.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking