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For clearly this marked insistence on the power of the true episcopate is to make us feel more weightily what is to be charged against the false claimants of episcopate; or generally, against false claimants of power and rank in the body of the clergy; they who, "for their bellies' sake, creep, and intrude, and climb into the fold."

I have only heard it from your grandmother: the counsel for the prosecution is scarcely a reliable authority for the facts of a case." "And I have only heard the defense," said Yorke. "Let me now, for the first time, know what was urged upon the other side, and so weightily," the young man gloomily added, "that it made my mother an outcast, and myself a disgraced and penniless lad.

Know the woman?” muttered the Chief Inspector, with his eyes fixed on the table, and a vague notion in his mind of an inquest to be held presently upon a person likely to remain for ever unknown. “Yes. She’s housekeeper to a retired publican, and attends the chapel in Park Place sometimes,” the constable uttered weightily, and paused, with another oblique glance at the table.

Beason just what would you do?" Beason pondered the matter carefully. Mr. Beason applied the scientific method to everything in life, and was not one to commit himself rashly. "I think," he announced, weightily, "that I would tell them to go to a hotel and stay there until they could look up their own house." "But Mr.

Keep clear of the reservation; that's all you've got to do to be as safe as if you was layin' in bed on your ranch up in Jackson's Hole." Chadron winked as he named that refuge of the hunted in the Northwest. Mark appeared to be considering something weightily. "Oh, well, if they're rustlers nobody ain't got no use for a rustler," he said.

And Judge Maynard also crossed his knees, tucked his thumbs into his waistcoat pockets, and winked back with equal joviality. "Well, ye-e-s," he agreed, and the agreement was weightily deliberate. "Ye-e-s, quite a handful was Jeddy." One pudgy hand was uplifted in sudden, deprecatory haste, as though he would not be misunderstood.

And Jolly said: "I saw you and that fellow in the Park." The sight of blood rushing into her cheeks gave him some satisfaction; she ought to be ashamed! "Well?" she said. Jolly was surprised; he had expected more, or less. "Do you know," he said weightily, "that he called me a pro-Boer last term? And I had to fight him." "Who won?"

"My dear boy," said his father weightily, "we talk very much, and very badly; in pulpit, and Parliament, and press, We want the man who has something new to say, and knows how to say it. For my own part, I don't think, when he comes, that he will glorify explosives. I want to hear someone talk about Peace and not from the commercial point of view.

"She struck me as a foolish and inconsiderate little person. But why should you and your wife take to heart so strongly mere folly or even a want of consideration?" "It's the most unscrupulous action," declared Fyne weightily and sighed. "I suppose she is poor," I observed after a short silence. "But after all..." "You don't know who she is." Fyne had regained his average solemnity.

Not at all happy," he declared weightily. "You must have had a charming evening," I said to Fyne, "if I may judge from the way you have kept the memory green." "Delightful," he growled with, positively, a flash of anger at the recollection, but lapsed back into his solemnity at once. After we had been silent for a while I asked whether the man took away the girl next day.