Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: May 5, 2025


"That's so: that's what I say mysel'," the other assented cheerfully, as if glad to find their wits jumping together. "Man!" William rounded on him fiercely. "What's kept 'ee, all these years? Aw, man, man! do 'ee know what you've done?" "I'd a sun-stroke," said the wanderer, tapping his head and still wearing his deprecatory smile; "a very bad sun-stroke. I sailed in the John S. Hancock.

"No; though I thought I had seen him before," replied Donald, as they walked along in the rear of the party. "He is the man who was beaten within an inch of his life over to Lincolnville, a while ago." "Hasbrook?" "Yes, his name is Jacob Hasbrook." "He was with us in the library of Captain Patterdale the day we were there, when the man had a sun-stroke." "Was he? Well, I don't remember that.

It seemed to Lionel, in his sane moments, in the intervals of his delirium, that it would be far happier to die, than to wake up again to renewed life, to bear about within him that ever-present sorrow. Whether the fever it was not brain fever, though bordering closely upon it was the result of this state of mind, more than of the sun-stroke, might be a question.

Pillars support the roof, which defends you from a sun-stroke, while the air and prospect are let in between them on the right hand as you go. The left side is closed up by a wall, adorned from time to time with fresco paintings, representing the birth and most distinguished passages in the life of the blessed Virgin.

Herse devoted herself to the sick and wounded, for a few who had ventured forth too boldly to aid in barricading the entrance, had been hurt by arrows and lances flung by the idle soldiery; and a still greater number were suffering from sun-stroke in consequence of toiling on the top of the building.

Whether it was a sun-stroke, or whether it was but the commencement of a fever, which had suddenly struck him down that day, certain it was, that a violent sickness attacked him, and he lay for many, many days days and weeks as old Frost had called it between life and death. Fever and delirium struggled with life, which should get the mastery.

Carter tore a sham with his toothpick. 'N', added to all that, Amelia 's furious 'cause she read in a book 't teaches how to stay married 't a husband's first night out is the first rift in the lute, 'n' she was down town buyin' a dictionary so 's to be sure what a lute is afore she accuses young Dr. Brown. 'N' there's a man over in Meadville down with a sun-stroke, 'n' they want Dr.

"The sunshine just now is enough to give one a sun-stroke." It was a little after three o'clock when the three lads prepared to walk along the back trail, on the lookout for the old miner. But just as they started Dave put up his hand. "Listen!" All did so, and from a distance heard the clatter of horses' hoofs on the rocky trail. Then came a cheery call. "It's Mr.

One evening, when I and my black crew returned home from fishing, I found Dick lying in our hut scarcely able to speak. He had been out the whole day in the fields, scantily supplied with food, and had received a sun-stroke. He was in a high fever. I ran to the chief and entreated him to give me a supply of cocoa-nut milk, which I hoped, at all events, might alleviate his sufferings.

The extraordinary hallucination caused by the sun-stroke lasted with him for over a week, but at the end of that time his mind cleared and he saw things in the same light as reasonable folk. Venia was the first to congratulate him upon his recovery; but his extraordinary behaviour in proposing to Miss Sippet the very day on which she herself became Mrs.

Word Of The Day

potsdamsche

Others Looking