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Updated: June 27, 2025


The political problems were grappled with one by one, and were trenchantly solved. Union was won by Bismarck's diplomacy and Prussia's sword; and when the longed-for goal was reached in seven momentous years, the same qualities were brought to bear on the difficult task of consolidating that union.

There was a kind of frail, worldly charm about her clothes the sort of charm you never find in the clothes of a thoroughly good and virtuous woman, as Lady Susan trenchantly observed one day. Ann herself was acutely conscious of that faintly languorous, mysterious atmosphere of charm with which Mrs.

Absent-mindedly, one by one, Edgarton handed the articles to her, and then sank down on the foot of her bed with his thin-lipped mouth contorted into a rather mirthless grin. "Don't care much for your old father, do you?" he asked trenchantly.

Being so trenchantly opposed to all she knew, loved, or understood, he may well have seemed to her the extreme, if scarcely the ideal, of his sex. And besides, he was an ill man to refuse. A little over forty at the period of his marriage, he looked already older, and to the force of manhood added the senatorial dignity of years; it was, perhaps, with an unreverend awe, but he was awful.

After his first visit, he availed himself eagerly of Rainham's invitation to make his property the point of view from which he could most conveniently transfer to canvas his impressions; and he worked hard for months, with an industry that came upon his friend as a surprise, at the uneven outlines of the Thames warehouses, and the sharp-pointed masts that rose so trenchantly above them.

"I shall see you again soon," he said, pressing her hand, and was gone. In the evening, Lady Eynesford trenchantly condemned the ventilation of the Houses of Parliament. "The wretched place has given Alicia a headache. I found the poor child crying with pain. I wonder you let her stay, Eleanor." "I didn't notice that it was close or hot."

You must give me a power of attorney ere you start to-night, and then be done with me trenchantly until better days. I believe I offered some objection. 'Think a little for once of me! said Romaine. 'I must not have seen you before to-night.

You must give me a power of attorney ere you start to-night, and then be done with me trenchantly until better days." I believe I offered some objection. "Think a little for once of me!" said Romaine. "I must not have seen you before to-night.

Shrunken Bruntsea clung about the oldest of its churches, while the four others fell to rack and ruin, and settled into cow-yards and barns, and places where old men might sit and sigh. But Bruntsea distinctly and trenchantly kept the old town's division into east and west. East Bruntsea was wholly in the Major's manor, which had a special charter; and most of the houses belonged to him.

Then he hurries back to Fontainebleau, covering the distance from Turin in eighty-five hours; and, after a brief sojourn at St. Cloud, he reaches Boulogne. There, on August the 22nd, he hears that Austria is continuing to arm: a few hours later comes the news that Villeneuve has turned back to Cadiz. Fiercely and trenchantly he resolves this fateful problem.

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