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Updated: June 27, 2025
Whether beneath, be despair, or hope, or fiery emotions, or one settled and ominous calm, matters not. My last hours shall not belie my life: on the verge of death I will not play the dastard, and tremble at the Dim Unknown. The thirst, the dream, the passion of my youth, yet lives; and burns to learn the sublime and shaded mysteries that are banned Mortality.
Do you seek to deepen the wound which your fatal passion has planted in the heart of my only child? FERDINAND. Strange father, I have come to bring joyful tidings to your daughter. MILLER. Perchance fresh hopes, to add to her despair. Away, away, thou messenger of ill! Thy looks belie thy words. FERDINAND. At length the goal of my hopes appears in view!
Tita, going down the stairs after her interview with Margaret, meets Randal in the hall below. "You look rather down on your luck!" says he. "My looks belie me, then," says she stoutly. "But you what is the matter with you?" "Ruin!" says Mr. Gower tragically. "My looks do not belie me." "Good gracious, Randal!" "Ruin stares me in the face," says he, "look where I will."
"Oh, let me go," said the other: "let me go; this is the first offence, I assure ye the first time I ever thought to do anything wrong." "Hold your tongue," said I, "or I shall be angry with you. If I am not very much mistaken, you once attempted to cheat me." "I never saw you before in all my life," said the fellow, though his countenance seemed to belie his words.
"You are unlikely to be running away from father and friends again." She panted still with the fiery liquid she had gulped: and she wondered that it should belie its reputation in not fortifying her, but rendering her painfully susceptible to his remarks. "Mr. Whitford, I need not seek to know what you think of me." "What I think? I don't think at all; I wish to serve you if I can."
'Oh, let me go, said the other: 'let me go; this is the first offence, I assure ye the first time I ever thought to do anything wrong. 'Hold your tongue, said I, 'or I shall be angry with you. If I am not very much mistaken, you once attempted to cheat me. 'I never saw you before in all my life, said the fellow, though his countenance seemed to belie his words.
The life does not belie the books, nor private conduct stultify public profession.
Steed, however, after the fashion of most Colonial governors, was willing enough to dull his wits to the extent of accepting the English seaman's story, disregarding any evidence that might belie it. He shared the hatred so richly deserved by arrogant, overbearing Spain that was common to men of every other nation from the Bahamas to the Main.
It was the face of a man who might live to a hundred and still look young, nor did the form belie it. Mr. Davies blushed up to his eyes, blushed like a girl beneath Elizabeth's scrutiny. "Naturally I take an interest in a neighbour's fate," he said, in his slow deliberate way. "She is quite safe, then?" "I believe so," answered Elizabeth.
Six feet or more in height, compactly built, without corpulence; erect, vigorous, even athletic; with florid complexion and clear, laughing, light-blue eyes that belie the white hair and whitening beard; the ensemble personifying at once kindliness and virility, simplicity and depth, above all, frank, fearless honesty, without a trace of pose or affectation such is Ernst Haeckel.
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