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Updated: May 25, 2025
In a quarter of an hour he reappeared, looking better, and he irresolutely turned again towards the dining-room, smiling suggestively at Vesta. "Not that way," spoke she. "Here is mamma, and we are ready for prayers. Here is the place in the Bible." They all went to the family room, where the dressing-maids of Vesta and her mother were waiting for the usual morning prayers.
I am faithful to him he is loyal to me." He gave a little mocking laugh, and was silent. How she hated him for that laugh! After a pause he said quietly and suggestively: "I am sure you are faithful to him "
His most careful studies are perhaps of the birds on Boston Common and about Boston, but he writes pleasantly and suggestively of those in the White Mountains. One likes to be reminded that there are still bobolinks in the world, for they have deserted many spots which they once favored.
I'll give you just half an hour to pack, and if you are n't done then, off you goes." Protests and pleadings were wholly useless, though Joe yielded so far as to suggestively remark in an aside to the girl, that "there was one way that you know of, for fixing this thing."
Just then the rattle of a carriage with high-stepping horses was heard; it stopped very suggestively at the gate of the Conciergerie on the quay. The door was opened, and the step let down in such haste, that every one supposed that some great personage had arrived. Presently a lady waving a sheet of blue paper came forward to the outer gate of the prison, followed by a footman and a chasseur.
His eyes were suggestively steady; his skin was clear; he looked forceful in an unemphatic manner. The farmer was to some extent prejudiced against the type, but he could make exceptions. He had liked Lansing from the beginning, and he knew that he could work. "No," he said; "I guess you're not that kind of man. But won't you get down and go along to the house?
So I took thought, and invented what I conceived to be the appropriate title of "agnostic." It came into my head as suggestively antithetic to the "gnostic" of Church history, who professed to know so much about the very things of which I was ignorant; and I took the earliest opportunity of parading it at our Society, to show that I, too, had a tail, like the other foxes.
"Times must be getting hard in Germany," said Hal suggestively. Again the German granted. "We don't have any bread, and we don't have any meat," he declared. "I haven't had a good meat for a year, it seems." "It'll be worse before the war's over," said Hal pleasantly. The German grounded his rifle with a thump. "Don't you think I know it?" he demanded with some heat.
Waving his hand to Peterson, who was in the distance, Dick followed the lame man and sat down on a bench in front of the shanty, the odd individual seating himself on a stool opposite. "Want to find Captain Gus Langless, eh?" said the lame man, closing one eye suggestively. "Yes." "I read of the case in the papers. He's a bad un, eh?" "What do you know of the case?" demanded Dick impatiently.
"Jim, and Lance, and Jerry, and Abner?" she asked, almost abstractedly. "Jim's dead shot by a U. S. marshal by mistake for a smuggler," answered Black Andy, suggestively. "Lance is up on the Yukon, busted; Jerry is one of our hands on the place; and Abner is in jail." "Abner in jail!" she exclaimed, in a dazed way. "What did he do? Abner always seemed so straight."
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