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Saturday the eleuenth of August the people shewed themselues againe, and called vnto vs from the side of a hil ouer against vs. And thus they continued vpon the hill tops vntill night, when hearing a piece of our great Ordinance, which thundred in the hollownesse of the high hilles, it made vnto them so fearefull a noise, that they had no great will to tarie long after.

This hil was from vs 14. miles, but by the great hight thereof it seemed to bee within foure or fiue miles off vs, but in the daie time when the sun shined wee could not see it.

Crt. and Hel. &c. Crt. Matt. xxv. 41. Tert. Cypr. Hil. Hipp. and Origen in the Latin translation. Luke xii. 48. Luke xx. 24. On the other hand, he appears to have with them and other authorities, including Syr. Crt., the Agony in the Garden as given in Luke xxii, 43,44, which verses are omitted in MSS. of the best Alexandrine type.

She looked up, and came running towards the window, looking bright and happy, and there was an eager light in her eyes. "Why, Hil!" she cried. "I did not think you would be there now. Papa said he thought you would soon be at liberty, and that perhaps you would stay with us a little while before you went away." "And should you like me to stay with you?" he said, gazing down.

The yong man perceiuing they caried him, being at the first dismaied, began then greatly to feare, and cried out piteously: likewise did the Indians which did accompany him, going about to cheere him and to giue him courage, and then setting him on the ground at the foote of a litle hil against the sunne, they began to behold him with great admiration, marueiling at the whitenesse of his flesh: And putting off his clothes, they made him warme at a great fire, not without our great feare which remayned in the boate, that they would haue rosted him at that fire, and haue eaten him.

He put his hand on the woodwork, as if it might have been the shoulder of a friend, and looked up understandingly in its face. "Well, here we be," said he. "You'd ha' hil' out till mornin', though."

It will be observed that the prefix Hil marks the vocative case. It is always retained in addressing another, except in the most intimate domestic relations; its omission would be considered rude: just as in our of forms of speech in addressing a king it would have been deemed disrespectful to say "King," and reverential to say "O King."

"How useful a bit of line always is!" he muttered as he climbed back to the window-sill, held on with one arm through the bars, and took another tremendous bite from the bread, nodding pleasantly the while at his old friend. "Why, Hil, how hungry you must have been!" she said. "Let me run and get some butter." "How hungry I am, you mean," he said.

In fact, as they have no titles of honour, the vocative adjuration supplies the place of a title, and is given impartially to all. The prefix Hil enters into the composition of words that imply distant communications, as Hil-ya, to travel.

I've been begging papa not to have you caught, and he says he could not help it." "Then he ought to help it," replied Hilary warmly. "But he says he's bound to keep faith with his friends; and that if you would only give your word not to escape and betray our hiding-place you might come and live with us; and oh, Hil dear, it would be like old times, and we could have such walks together.