Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: May 17, 2025
The fourth volume of M. de Wit's Letters and Negotiations concludes with the correspondence of Peter Grotius with the Grand Pensionary during his embassy at Stockholm. The Dutch Minister discovers in it great knowledge of mankind.
Bertha's Road, Bayswater," replied Jorce; and when the barrister, for his private information, had made a note of the address, he continued: "It then appeared that Clear was married. The wife told Ferruci that she was afraid of her husband, who, in his fits of drink for he drank likewise often threatened to kill her. They had lost their money, and the poor woman was at her wit's end what to do.
"Get away from here, I tell you!" cried Alec. "You line up along the fence and we'll show you how this thing should be done!" Realizing the fairness of his demand, the men retired from the field. The long shadows of the evening were falling across the field. The boys were both showing weariness at every step they took. Alec was at his wit's end.
Which do you mean? Hilda laughed a little. 'Whichever you like best, answered Greif, who was at his wit's end. 'Whichever I like? she looked at him long, and then her face softened wonderfully. 'Let it be neither, dear, she said. 'Let us not try to understand, but only love, love, love for ever!
But progress in art, though beneficial to Lois, was of no use to the Senior class. Polly was at her wit's end. Lois had called a class meeting the day before and forgotten to come to it. School had been running smoothly for over a month by now, and all the strangeness of the first few weeks had worn off. With Thanksgiving in sight, the girls felt that they were well into the year.
Lagardere's voice was as cheerful as if there were no such thing in the world as exile. "Well, there I was at my wit's end, and my nimble wits found work for me.
Tom was almost at his wit's end what to say between the two, and had already made a gesture as if he would call Mr Pecksniff's attention to the gentleman who had last addressed him, when Martin saved him further trouble, by doing so himself.
I was at my wit's ends what to do, whether to be silent, or to tell her of the terrible position in which her lover was placed; but, even as I hesitated, she, with the quick intuition of a woman, read the doubts which were in my mind. 'You know something of him, she cried. 'I understood that he had gone to Paris. For God's sake tell me what you know about him! 'His name is Lesage? 'Yes, yes.
Crowned by prose and verse, and wielding with wit's bauble learning's rod, He at least believes in soul and is very sure of God. No one more so; yet as a thinker he professed himself unable to demonstrate these high truths. In that sense Kant's famous Critique of the Pure Reason may be described as the forerunner of the systematic agnosticism which is set forth in the First Principles of Mr.
"I ask pardon, ma'am," cried he, "if I intrude; but I made free to call upon the account of two ladies that are acquaintances of yours, that are quite, as one may say, at their wit's ends." "What is the matter with them, Sir?"
Word Of The Day
Others Looking