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Updated: June 26, 2025
Emma swallowed her sobs as soon as he was gone, and instead of waiting for the tea, set forth for Miss Lang's. On asking for Miss Marshall she was shown into the drawing-room, where, after she had waited a few minutes, nursing her wrath to keep it warm, the small figure appeared, whom she had no hesitation in accosting thus
She found some consolation in the fact that Lang's men no longer rode through her range at will, but skirted it in their trips to and from the Breaks.
He glanced at the chart which hung by his side. Forty-two completely equipped fishing-boats in the water and every one fully manned. He smiled as he thought of Dickie Lang's astonishment at the manner in which the ex-navy men had taken hold of the work. His smile broadened too as he noted the receipts from the fresh fish and the canned product. Fishing had sure been good.
It is said that the natives foresaw the approach of this calamity, and advised the colonists of it, but their warning was not regarded. See Barrington's History of New South Wales, p. 310. For the particulars here related of the floods of the river Hawkesbury, see Lang's New South Wales, vol. i. pp. 98-101; and also Wentworth's Australasia, vol. i. p. 67 and 448-9.
"How long are you going to keep me, then?" "I wadna hae ye bide a meenute langer nor's agreeable to yersel'. But I'm in nae hurry sae lang's ye're afore me. Ye're nae ill to luik at, though ye maun hae been bonnier the day ye wan the hert o' my Grizel." The marquis uttered an oath and left the door. Miss Horn sprang to it, but there was the marquis again.
Lang's climb was stopped through the pressure of air, at the altitude he reached, being insufficient for driving the small propellers on the machine which worked the petrol and oil pumps, or he might have made the height said to have been attained by Major Schroeder on February 27th, 1920, at Dayton, Ohio.
Probably, nearly three times as much is spent in these islands upon spirituous liquors as the whole cost of religious instruction of every kind amounts to! Dr. Lang's opinion here is, however, confirmed by Judge Burton; see p. 7 of his work on Education and Religion in New South Wales. Account of Colony of New South Wales, p. 235.
In the same breath he had dropped his pistol and was at Lang's throat. They went down together. Even Thoreau, a giant in size and strength, would not have been a match for him now. Every animal passion in him was roused to its worst. Lang's jaws shot apart, his eyes protruded, his tongue came out the breath rattled in his throat. Then for a moment Philip's death-grip relaxed.
"Lindy Silver." "He grabbed my hands and jerked me into the cave. Then he struck me," explained Grace, who had opened her eyes and now sat up. "The scoundrel!" exclaimed Hi, jerking the man to his feet. At Hi Lang's suggestion, Hippy and the two girls went up to the camp. It was an hour later when the guide joined them. "The fellow's name is not Silver. He's Steve Carver," Hi informed his hearers.
London is not only Dickens Land and Thackeray Land, but also the "Land" of many other writers. We may still eat in the Old Cheshire Cheese, where Johnson and Goldsmith dined. For this reason, all of the cathedral towns in England have been included in the literary map. Baedeker's London and its Environs. Adcock's Famous Houses and Literary Shrines of London. Lang's Literary London.
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