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Updated: May 6, 2025
Shadrach and Meshach, in that, at least, there is nothing that can occasion any person sorrow. On Saturday next, or as soon as the particulars of their loss can be satisfactorily ascertained, my friend Mr. Titmarsh will pay to them across the counter a sum of forty, fifty, eighty, one hundred thousand pounds according to the amount of their loss.
But a mother's eyes are clear, ma'am; and I had just such another angel, my dear little Antony, that was born before Jemima, and would have been twenty-three now were he in this wicked world, ma'am. However, I won't speak of him, ma'am, but of what took place. "You must know, ma'am, that Mrs. Titmarsh remained downstairs while Mr. Samuel was talking with his friend Mr.
"Nineteen hundred pounds, and a thousand pounds in shares. Bravo, Roundhand bravo, gentlemen! Remember, every share you bring in brings you five per cent. down on the nail! Look to your friends stick to your desks be regular I hope none of you forget church. Who takes Mr. Swinney's place?" "Mr. Samuel Titmarsh, sir." "Mr. Titmarsh, I congratulate you.
It seems to me you had much better have obeyed my aunt's instructions at once, or go to her at Fulham, and consult with her on this subject." "'Sdeath, Mr. Titmarsh! don't you see that if she makes a sale of her property, she will hand over the money to Brough; and if Brough gets the money he " "Will give her seven per cent. for it instead of three, there's no harm in that."
I have known my Paris now twice as long as Thackeray knew his Paris, and my Paris has been as interesting as his Paris, for it includes the Empire, the Siege and the Republic. I knew and sat for months at table with Comtesse Walewska, widow of the bastard son of Napoleon Bonaparte. The Duke de Morny was rather a person in his way and Gambetta was no slouch, as Titmarsh would himself agree.
Turner had lighted on "The Fallacies" and could see like other people! An Exhibition Gossip, by Michael Angelo Titmarsh, Ainsworth's Magazine,1843. The Almanack of the Month, 1846 in which see also a comical drawing, by Mr.
Lavender, sitting down to listen, for there was something about the gentleman which impressed him at once. He had very large red ears, and hardly a hair on his head, while his full, bearded face and prominent eyes were full of force and genius. "It won't do a little bit, Titmarsh," he was saying, "to allow the politicians to meddle in this racket.
"P.S. I took a viper into my bosom, and it stung me." I confess that, on the first reading of this letter, I was in such a fury that I forgot almost the painful situation in which it plunged me, and the ruin hanging over me. "What a fool you were, Titmarsh, to write that letter!" said Mr. Smithers.
Whereupon my Lady Fanny, clapping together her little hands, declared and vowed that the venison should not go to Preston, but should be sent to a gentleman about whose adventures on the day previous we had just been talking to Mr. Titmarsh, in fact; whom Preston, as Fanny vowed, had used most cruelly, and to whom, she said, a reparation was due. "Nonsense!" says Lady Fanny.
Among the company assembled under the dome of that edifice, the casual observer would not perhaps have remarked a gentleman of the name of Michael Angelo Titmarsh, who nevertheless was there.
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