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Unless he could stand justified in her sight and in that of all men, he had no right to seek to wring out tenderness from her regret and from her pity. Yet all his heart went out to her in one irrepressible entreaty. "Forgive me, for pity's sake! After to-night I shall never look upon your face again." "I do forgive," she said gently, while her voice grew very sweet.

The water's coming in," cried an old woman who felt herself already getting wet. There now arose a small tumult; some screamed, while others thought of jumping into the water. "Press hard on the plugs there!" repeated Albino, pointing toward the place where the girls were. "Where, where? Diós! We don't know how! For pity's sake come here, for we don't know how!" begged the frightened women.

Hepburn all through the ships, as soon as ever he could; but he could hear nothing of him, either alive or dead. Don't go so white, for pity's sake! said she, suddenly startled by Sylvia's blanching colour.

The thief gave a cry of dismay and shook himself clear of the turnkeys. "Anything but that," cried he with trembling voice. "Oh! you have found your tongue, have you?" "Any punishment but that," almost shrieked the despairing man. "Leave me my reason. You have robbed me of everything else. For pity's sake leave me my reason!"

"But two goals to nothing is a halter-long lead," said Kittiwynk, prancing. "How long does it take to get a goal?" The Maltese Cat answered. "For pity's sake, don't run away with a notion that the game is half-won just because we happen to be in luck now! They'll ride you into the grand stand, if they can; you must not give 'em a chance. Follow the ball." "Football, as usual?" said Polaris.

Miss Minnitt that's the one who used to teach us she said I never paid any attention at all. There was one day she was questioning me about grammar. `Pixie O'Shaughnessy, she says, `you've been over this one page until it's worn transparent. For pity's sake, she says, `be done with it, and get on to something fresh. Let me see if you can remember to-day what I taught you yesterday afternoon.

"Agnes," said I, "will you put back your hood and tell me what it all means?" The hood dropped noiselessly and I was face to face with my dead and buried mistress. She was wearing the dress in which I had last seen her alive: carried the same tiny handkerchief in her right hand; and the same card-case in her left. "Agnes," I repeated, "for pity's sake tell me what it all means." Mrs.

Why don't you tell me?" and she trembled so violently and looked so deadly pale that Mrs Shuckleford began to get alarmed. "There, there," said she soothingly; "I'll tell you another time. You're not equal to it now. I'll come in to-morrow, or the next day, when you've had a good night's rest, poor dear." "For pity's sake tell me all now!" gasped Mrs Cruden; "unless you want to kill me."

He tried to avoid it, to change his direction; he tried to escape, but that immense, wide-open mouth came towards him with the velocity of an arrow. "Be quick, Pinocchio, for pity's sake!" cried the beautiful little goat, bleating. And Pinocchio swam desperately with his arms, his chest, his legs, and his feet. "Quick, Pinocchio, the monster is close upon you!"

Young Perch is killed and his mother's dead. Now for goodness' sake, for pity's sake, let it alone. I couldn't send and there's the end of it." He went out of the room. He thought, "There you are! Now I've done it!" He went back. "I say, I'm sorry for bursting out like that; but I've had rather a night of it. It's terrible, isn't it, both of them like that?