y son was born, my wife began to shun me altogether, and would often wilfully misunderstand me. She devoted all her affection and care to h design fonts free k. I have never yet met with an instance of a lucky or an unlucky man in which I could not trace the effect to the cause. We were lucky, be .
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who divided among themselves the patrimony of the Caesars were essentially different from those entertained and embodied by Greece and Rom .
He was wet from head to foot, and covered with mud to his waist; but he did not mind that at all, and was as hilarious as a boy just let ou .
ch rested upon her knee. "Eleanor, I am very thankful you came to Plassy." The girl rose up and kneeling beside her hid her face in Mrs. Ca .
and profess by a public act of worship that they were heathens no longer. They all gathered round me there under the mat awnings, and sat o .
As the attacking party entered, however, the Lowes let down the stairs leading to the story above a heavy broad cart-wheel, and as it bound .
man. "He is a Dutchman, I judge, by the way he pronounced both German and French, though he spoke them well." "How are you so well able to .
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esult. Things were now, indeed, looking very serious, and I could not see by what possible means we should escape. Still, there was so much .
s arm did not tremble; but a pinched blueness spread about her nostrils and eye sockets, and dinted sudden hollows in her temples. Dr. Dunl .
spiteful lamentation. Where are the united heart and crown, the loyal emblem, that used to hallow the sheet on which it was impressed, in .
er life long she had cared, perhaps to a faulty degree, for "what folks would say." Above all, she cared now for what they had said and wha .
othing there but pain and snapping." "Poor Eleanor!" said her little sister, standing by the bedside like a powerless guardian angel. "Mr. .
so leer, and ogle me, and whisper, and ask questions, and laugh, and are in ecstacies. I might grow rich, meseems, were I to let myself be .
shareholders in the stock of eternal life. But doubtless, only faith can take it out." Eleanor sat silent, chewing bitter thoughts. "O thi .
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ooks useless! all the labor thrown away! all his self-confidence come to naught! Up rose the great sun; from around the kneeling boy drifte .
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eenness." "I like them better so, aunty. They are beautiful enough by themselves; but if you put a rose there, you cannot help looking at i .
her deep gladness at finding herself under the roof where she was. Her aunt then took a candle and lighted her through the tiled passages, .
d. She was nervous and uneasy; Eleanor had only too much sympathy with both moods, nevertheless she acted the part of a kind and delicate n .