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Updated: June 3, 2025
Suddenly he seemed to become aware that, whereas Hermione and Artois had been considering a subject impersonally, he was introducing the personal element into the conversation. He stopped short, looked quickly from Hermione to Artois, and said: "What I mean is that I imagine it's so, and that I've known fellows in London, you know who've done such odd things that I can only explain it like that.
She was sure quite impersonally that he would make a success of anything he attempted. Pete was not so sure, and he told her so. She joked him for doubting himself. He promptly told her that he didn't doubt himself for a minute, but that he did doubt the willingness of the person whom he hoped to make a partner in the venture. "Not Mr. Forbes?" she queried, glancing quickly at Pete's serious face.
"Which there are some that are that debased they even thrives on wood alcohol, Dave." Silence settled down on them once more. It was broken this time by De Launay, who spoke as impersonally as they. "They had real cow hands hereaways, once." A late and sluggish fly buzzed in the silence. "I reckon the sheep eat 'em outa range and they done moved down to Arizona."
Impersonally, I believe in marriage, or rather accept it, but I purpose to stand apart as a complete individual, and subtly to teach others to drag strength out of the great body of force in which we move, until they realize that in time mankind may feed those creative fires, becoming, who knows, stronger than the great first cause itself." "And I have been called an egoist," murmured Gwynne.
The kind of people she'd like to know treat servants impersonally. Servants are just conveniences to them, like dumb waiters. So of course, even if it was only a Chinaman she didn't like your noticing him and she came out of her shell for just a moment to say so. Do you see now?" Bertram's dark complexion reddened with the rush of his shame. "Oh, that's the idea is it?
Never had she seemed more appealing in her loveliness, never more daintily alluring to the eye of a man; yet, never had she seemed to hold herself so coldly aloof, to be so impersonally remote. He felt a longing to draw her again into the gentle trustfulness of the maiden who had gloried in his love. "What do you want me to do, dear?" he questioned. "I told you that you could help me.
"This is a rather uncommon experience to me, you know, being looked at so impersonally. Now please don't say that I'm being American." "But, good God! I don't look at you impersonally." "Don't you?" Nancy meant her voice to be light, and she was appalled to hear the quaver in it. "You know I don't." He glanced toward a dun-colored curtain evidently concealing shelves and dishes.
That is why Liszt is the test rather of the virtuoso than of the interpreter, why, therefore, it was so infinitely more important that Paderewski should have played the Beethoven sonata as impersonally as he did than that he should have played the Liszt sonata with so much personal abandonment.
He thought to himself, quite impersonally: "She's a real beauty, that youngster. No wonder they ask her to dance and nobody is horrid. Men are likely enough to go quite mad about her as Nina predicts: probably some of 'em have already that chuckle-headed youth who was there Tuesday, gulping up the tea " And, "What was his name?" he asked aloud.
"These won't do at all," he said, decidedly, "but they confirm my impression that this man can write something worth while." He addressed himself to Maxwell now, discussing Harrington as impersonally as if he were absent, but from time to time his keen eyes returned to the Southerner's face. "Here's a man," he began, didactically, "who is hundreds of years behind the times.
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