Lizzie grew very fond of me, and ere she had lived with us many months told me her whole history.
We all liked him; and her whole troop of brothers, who were present at the ceremony, greeted him with hearty words of friendship.
Keen darts of light are shot from every leaf, And the whole landscape droops in sultriness.
During the whole time which had elapsed between Jack's revealing her true character, and the moment of which we are now writing, Spike had not once spoken to his wife.
In we went and found the organ piping like a northeast snow squall, and the whole assembly on their knees.
I have been watching her the whole evening, and seeing every one offering her their tribute, I have gotten quite into the spirit of it myself.
This bird, the marvel of the whole Pigeon race, is beautiful in its colors, graceful in its form, and far more a child of wild nature than any other of the pigeons.
The next day the whole city resounded with the fame of the so-called assassination.
She talked without ceasing, and her motto was to speak "the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
When your father was but a small boy, the whole family spent the winter in Havana, to recruit your grandmother's health, while your grandfather collected some debts which were due him.
For this reason, he passed a whole week in Washington, though it was a season of the year that the place is not in much request.
While a free-born Scot is careful to exercise his political suffrage, he takes an even keener interest in his ecclesiastical vote, and the whole congregation now constitutes itself into a constituency.
It was like the emancipation of the slaves, and the whole of Scotch cantankerousness came to a height.
They knew nothing either, and were not able even to imagine anything; but they also, having seen Rochally and caught a faint glimpse of his face, would fain have burned the nomination papers, and cancelled the whole election.
Before we retired to rest I had approached the question of his expenses, although I had an instinct that our scholar would be difficult to handle, and he had waived the whole matter as unworthy of attention.
As a matter of course, no person did leave, for that would have been giving in, and the consequence was that the whole congregation was knit together by the iron bonds of rebellion.
It was held on the Monday following the second Sunday, and was attended by almost the whole congregation.
My experience of chairmen is wide and varied, and I have lectured under the Presidency of some very distinguished and able men, but on the whole I would rather be without a chairman.
The mourners will turn a set of somersaults with extraordinary rapidity, the murderer and his victim will give a gymnastic exhibition, and then the whole company, having raised an enthusiastic hip, hip, hurrah!
They did not know where they would get their dinner, and they had not had much breakfast, their whole stock of clothes would not have been worth 1s.
According to Marjorie indeed her whole life had been arranged on the principle of Drumsheugh's giving: instead of iron she had received brass, yea, much fine gold, and all things had worked together for her good.
The most melancholy part of the whole narrative is the atrocious vengeance of the Republicans on gaining possession.
In manner he was very mild and quiet, exceedingly silent, and would sometimes passwhole days without opening his lips, save to answer to his name at roll-call.
A shot would break up their whole machinery, and leave them at the mercy of the first frigate that brought its broadside to bear upon them in their helpless condition.
Their loss was formidable; the whole tract, between Acre and Gaza, was strewed with the bodies of those who died either of fatigue or wounds.
But the retribution had not yet wrought its whole work.
The expense of collection below a certain limit would entirely swallow up the profit; and besides, it is clearly beyond the power of human ingenuity to ascertain, with any thing like accuracy, the means of the whole population.
It may naturally be presumed that the whole progress of the siege had interested the fleet and army of England in the highest degree.
And now you know my whole history, sir, word for word, as it happened, except some of the names, which it was as well to alter.
This is a real compliment," I said to myself, for the whole party cut me dead.
They belong to the most dingy quarter of the whole of London--South Lambeth.
The fire was out, the chairs were hard, and the whole thing was uncomfortable.
Our friendship embraced the whole period of his sudden, extraordinary success.
The nurture of a wholesome vegetable occupied neither the whole of his ambitions nor even the greater part of them.
And if you do it all right I can get you the whole of the holiday work on the column.
The moon has come out from behind a cloud, and the whole bay is one vast sheet of silver.
I am like a general who has planned out a brilliant attack, and realises that he must fail for want of sufficient troops to carry a position, on the taking of which the whole success of the assault depends.
I said, putting the wholeboiling on the sitting-room table.
You, of course, have your own uses for the money, I need mine for those humanitarian objects for which mywhole life is lived," from the Reverend.
Not only Walter Greenway, but the wholeclub explained to Alf that the swing was a bad swing, an awful violation of style, practically a crime.
Then came a journey on the top of the antediluvian horse-tram, a sort of diligence on rails; and then a whole summer's afternoon among the prawns.
I supposed that, at any rate, you had taken the whole house.
The electron explains the whole subject from its own point of view.
The whole regiment of electrons along the line made a forward move.
Our swiftness of communication depends upon the simple fact that man provides a whole connecting regiment of us between the two distant places.
You must have realised also that without us the whole universe would be in darkness.
Now was the chance of escape, so the whole excited crowd made one wild rush to earth by way of the experimenter's body.
The secret is that there is a whole regiment of us along the wire, and before one of us moves on to a neighbouring atom, another electron must move off that atom and on to its neighbour, and so on.
The whole universe is moving in this great aether ocean.
Of course the whole length of our orbit is inconceivably small, and the speed of our revolutions is inconceivably great.
A general view of the whole field will be given either for those who are teaching, those who intend to teach, or those who desire the general not technical information.
Nevertheless, the whole thing seemed unjust to me, and I felt very sorry for Demetrios Contos.
I argued my proficiency so well that he did not refer to the matter again till Saturday, when he suggested removing one whole cloth from the after leech.
Before they could seat themselves on a bunk, another skiff came alongside, and another, and another, till the whole fleet was represented by the gathering in the cabin.
And to cap it all, Coal Tar Maggie was printed in great white letters the whole length of either side.
But he had anticipated Charley's move, and his own sail peaked higher than ever, while a whole extra cloth had been added to the after leech.
With a light favoring wind at our back we went through the Carquinez Straits, crossed Suisun Bay, passed the Ship Island Light, and came upon the whole fleet at work.
I said that it was impossible, and Charley agreed; yet there was a whole fleet, manned by men who knew us only too well, and who took no more notice of us than if we were a hay scow or a pleasure yacht.
The whole bow of the boat must have been crushed in, for in a few seconds the boat was half full.
In this way there is opportunity to give each building a rest once in a while, and this should be done in the case of the individual runs and pens, if not for the whole building.
A single motor at sixty or seventy miles an hour on the turnpike is harder for a dog to dodge than the whole flood of traffic that streams up and down the city thoroughfares.
He had stepped out on to the front veranda for a mild cigar after the mulberry just as she brought her scythe round with an admirable sweep and decapitated a whole army of yellow-helmeted dandelions.
I've the whole morning to spare, and it's time I saw to your morals a little.
Then one huge black creature, with a bellow that seemed to shake the plain, made a wild rush to the gate, the whole herd at his heels.
She knew there was a stormy scene, in which Esther and the whole family came in for an immense amount of vituperation.
He had bought the tickets--two whole ones for Esther and Meg, and four halves for the others.
And Bunty, with a defiant, shamed look in his eyes, stuffed the whole of the sweets into his mouth at once, as if to preclude the possibility of a sudden repentance.
He had a Heine in one pocket against the long, unusual day, a bulging Tennyson in the other, and a sheaf of English papers under his arm as he climbed on the trolly, where the whole seven were already seated.
Six whole tickets wasted--thirty beautiful shillings--just because we have a father!
Mr. Gillet gave a glance almost of dismay when he found the whole number was to be present, without the subtraction of the mischievously disposed ones, or the addition of anyone but himself weighted with authority.
I'd rather have you with me than the whole of the band.
He said to himself, "This time, in troth, I will go the whole way with the river.
When you bring the whole of the Tale to me I shall clear your sword.
Since ever I knew of it," said she, "the whole of my trouble has been that I was the cause of your losing your human form and the companionship of our father who is now called the Lonely King.
Once he had been King of the Cats of Ireland and Britain, of Norway and Denmark, and the whole Northern and Western World.
So the whole company went and left the brown bear in the supper-room seated 'in the Queen's chair.
And when they were baked she said to Baun and Deelish: "Will you each take the half of the cake and my blessing, or the whole of the cake without my blessing?
For the Roup; a filthy swelling on the Rump, and very contagious to the whole body, the staring and turning back of the Feathers is it Symptome.
The whole Hunt is the Treble, and lieth as before in the Nightingale: When the Treble moves out of the 3d.
The Treble is the whole Hunt, as in the former, and leads four times, and lyeth behind as many, and twice in every other place; the two Bells in the 3d.
So that in the whole we may suppose him to be the Inventor, or first Finder out of the Bow, as a Weapon of an infallible Execution and mortal Efficacy on that account.
It hath been the Method of this whole Treatise, to divide the several distinct Heads of each Recreation into three Parts, to render the Observations and Rules the more plain and easy, for the prosecuting the Recreation we treat of.
Colonel Mowbray expects you to remain here, but on the whole I think you'd better come with me," Kenwyne was saying.
Since his talk with Beatrice he had felt a curious antagonism to the whole Allenwood settlement.
The whole world has placed this famous Religious-Historical Romance on a height of pre-eminence which no other novel of its time has reached.
But there is another condition (for, when one is begging, one may as well go the whole length), I wish not to have them till they are at least four months old.
No: these would have been the remainder of his argument, and would have enabled a jury not only to understand its whole drift and tenour, but to pronounce the writer a truly wise and patriotic man.
The meeting at Winchester was very large, and consisted of almost thewhole of the people of considerable property.
In six letters, addressed to the working people of the whole kingdom.
There does not appear any time, in his whole political life, when he had not more or less distrusted them.
This occurrence was a subject of rejoicing to the whole tribe of scribblers,--at least, of those who were not subsidized; and the failure of the prosecution correspondingly inflamed the minds of the administration.
And, now that he was gone for ever, the whole fraternity acknowledged his genius and his talents; and confessed that a good, and great, and honest heart had departed from among them.
A life, that needs no Apologist: but presenting a consistent story; worthy of all that has given us renown, and enabled us to dictate the principles of freedom to the whole world.
Intellectually the existence of a whole depends upon a concern or interest; it is qualitative, the completeness of appeal made by a situation.
It furnishes each with a single meaning according to its service in carrying on thewhole enterprise.
So far as they are concerned, the whole thing is a trick and a kind of miracle.
Uniformities were emphasized, not diversities; the ideal was supposed to be the discovery of a single mathematical formula applying to the whole universe at once from which all the seeming variety of phenomena could be derived.
Some of Hegel's followers sought to reconcile the claims of the Whole and of individuality by the conception of society as an organic whole, or organism.
If it suffices to direct activity successfully, nothing more is required, since its wholefunction is to set a mark in advance; and at times a mere hint may suffice.
But the whole cycle of self-activity demands an opportunity for investigation and experimentation, for trying out one's ideas upon things, discovering what can be done with materials and appliances.
According to Froebel, the mystic symbolic value of certain objects and acts (largely mathematical) stand for the Absolute Whole which is in process of unfolding.
Morals concern nothing less than the whole character, and the whole character is identical with the man in all his concrete make-up and manifestations.
We are never interested in changing the whole environment; there is much that we take for granted and accept just as it already is.
Some implicit whole is regarded as given ready-made and the significance of growth is merely transitory; it is not an end in itself, but simply a means of making explicit what is already implicit.
One of then told me there were not now above twelve of them in the whole isle; but he remembered when they abounded, so as at one time he was one of five that usually met at St. Andrews.
Agreed," said Taffril; and the whole affair was arranged.
Upon my honour, no; there is nothing but what, in a very short time, I trust I may publish to the whole world.
At this observation Lovel again blushed so deeply as to attract the attention of the whole company, while, a scornful laugh seemed to indicate Captain M'Intyre's triumph.
Out of the parlour door flounced the incensed Sir Arthur, as if the spirit of the whole Round Table inflamed his single bosom, and traversed with long strides the labyrinth of passages which conducted to the drawing-room.
Then they went back, and went through the whole opera.
Did you think Gail intended to go without one kind word the whole evening?
I'm going to marry you, if you were engaged to the whole College of Surgeons.
Just think of what you're giving me--a whole month of being just as happy as I like!
For a minute she only wanted to cling to his hands and tell him how glad--how glad she was to see him, and how nothing else in the whole beautiful world mattered at all.
All her gowns were lovely loose or draped or girdled things: you could have costumed the whole cast of two Maeterlinck plays from just those hangers.
The whole thing seemed to Joy like something out of a pageant.
You shall have the whole thrilling tale in the train.
But she was struggling for the only piece of happiness that had ever come her way in the whole of her placid, tranced little life.
On the west of the city and running two miles along the sea-beach is the faubourg of St Pietro d'Arena, which presents a front of well built houses the whole way; these houses are principally used as magazines and store houses.
The whole road from Le Maschere to Florence is very beautiful and diversified.
This is the only part of Herculaneum that has been excavated; for if any further excavations were attempted, the whole town of Resina, which is built over it, would fall in.
In fact, the whole country hereabouts is volcanic, which is plainly seen from the immense masses of calcined stones, the exhalations of sulphur and the dreary wild appearance of the country, where scarce a tree is to be seen.
Rows of lamps are suspended the whole length of the columns and pilasters and all over the cupola, so that, when illuminated, the style of the architecture is perceptible.
Works erected on this height would enfilade the whole road either way and totally obstruct the approach of an enemy.
But in the neighbourhood stands the Chartreuse, situated on an eminence commanding a fine view of the whole Thalweg.
The Adige runs close to the road and parallel to it, nearly the whole way to Bolsano or Botzen, where Italian ceases to be spoken and German is the national tongue.
A taste for litterature is indeed general throughout the whole nation; and this city is considered as the Athens of Germany.
Villas, gardens and vineyards line the whole of this route and nothing can be more beautiful.
I remained two whole hours on this height to contemplate the beauties of the expanse below.
The whole field of battle is an extensive plain, with but few trees, and to use Campbell's lines: every turf beneath the feet Marks out a soldier's sepulchre.
Then the whole family set to work to tidy up the room.
Illustration] A whole week elapsed, in which Mrs. MacDougall received no tidings of the children.
But I was just going to leave out the best part of the whole story.
The harmony of the whole will depend greatly on the tint chosen for the background.
One day, towards the middle of December, Mr. Murray came bustling in, his whole face full of importance.
The present month undoubtedly presents fewer floral attractions than any other in thewhole year.
It was only by degrees that Mrs. MacDougall heard the whole history of the children's wanderings, or Elsie fully understood the terrible dangers to which she had, by her own act, willingly exposed herself and Duncan.
Half an hour afterwards the doors were thrown open, the candles lighted, and the whole family entered.
When the missing letters have been supplied, the whole will form a verse from one of Cowper's poems.
He believed he could make Foxy take that for his whole debt, though he was sure he owed him more.
As the fateful day drew near the whole section was stirred with an intense interest and excitement, in which even the grave and solemn elders shared, and to a greater degree, the minister and his wife.
That would certainly clear off his whole indebtedness and make him a free man.
Bunches of wild flowers stood on the table, on the dresser, and up beside the clock, and the whole room breathed of sweet scents of fields and flowers, and "the name of the chamber was peace.
He tried whistling to keep up his courage, but the sound seemed to fill the whole woods about him, and he soon gave it up.
The whole scene is before me now, I suppose always will be.
Hughie, his passion sweeping his whole being like a tempest.
With a simultaneous yell the whole ten men came roaring down the ice, waving their clubs and flinging aside their lightweight opponents.
The attention of the whole school, even to Jimmie Cameron, as well as that of the visitors, was now concentrated upon the event.
Let them have it," said Johnnie Big Duncan, whose whole family ever since the revival had taken a total abstinence pledge, although this was looked upon as a very extreme position indeed, by almost all the community.
Hearing this Brutus marveled; and he no longer hid anything from her but felt strengthened himself and related to her the whole story.
Or who could number the mass of men that have been lost, not only of ordinary persons (that is beyond computation) but of knights and senators, each one of whom was able in foreign wars to preserve the wholecity by his life and death?
Still on the whole quite all the foremost men who were outside the plot were irritated.
There is a small shrine and in it a golden eagle, which is found in all the legions that are on the register, and it never moves from the winter-quarters except the whole army goes forth on some errand.
After that Lepidus, evidently with the intention of following in their footsteps, instituted a kind of sedition of his own and stirred nearly the whole of Italy.
The latter declared the whole conflict over, and said there was no further need of an expedition and that for this reason also the men sent by the senate for the administration of the districts had arrived.
They then formed a plan to cut down the trees and lay bare the whole place so that they might approach the town with boldness and safety.
Internetworking well means mastering a wholehost of skills--connecting two computers together using the Internet is just the beginning.
The Internet will be handed by the government over to AT&T and the other "telecoms", who will charge so much to access it that the whole scheme will collapse.
We dislike the wholesystem of false disparagement.
Opposite to us was the great Conservative party, with a majority exceeding our whole representation, united, flushed, led by the craftiest of living statesmen, and the ablest of living generals.
The peaceful people of Kerry, the whole province of Connaught, many counties of Leinster are under a harsher yoke than the men of North Munster: yet they do not seek relief in butchery.
How else, but by the instant action of the Association on the whole mass of the People, through the Repeal Press and the Repeal Wardens, could our huge meetings have been assembled or been brought together?
Uncoloured, the index map, representing a whole county, is sold for 2s.
These are the very words of Captain Rous, the Tory member for Westminster, and the whole House assented to the fact.
In order to enable you to find any sheet so as to know the bearings of its ground on any other, there is printed for each county an index map, representing the whole county on one sheet.
Tracts, periodicals, and the whole horde of Benthamy rushed in.
Strong passions, daring invention, vivid sympathy for great acts--these are the result of one's whole life and nature.
Each grand jury was then to appoint an Appeal Committee for each barony, and a Committee of Revision for the whole county.
Of course the whole plan will be laughed at as fanciful and improbable; we think it easy, and we think it will be done.
On this sensual error, for I must call it so, has the false system of female manners been reared, which robs the whole sex of its dignity, and classes the brown and fair with the smiling flowers that only adorn the land.
They who pass their whole lives in working for their daily bread, have no ideas beyond their business or their interest, and all their understanding seems to lie in their fingers' ends.
But till these monuments of folly are levelled by virtue, similar follies will leaven the whole mass.
Weak, artificial beings raised above the common wants and affections of their race, in a premature unnatural manner, undermine the very foundation of virtue, and spread corruption through the whole mass of society!
To this compliment Uncle Tobe replied, in his quiet and drawling mode of speech, that he had studied the whole thing out in advance.
I'm sure he's as nice a boy as there is in this whole town; seems to me he deserves all the more credit for working his way up among the old families the way he has.
I never done no playin' round in my whole life--not till here jest recently, anyway.
Then I'll start at the beginning and tell you in as few words as possible the whole thing.
From both sides I am catching the brunt of the whole thing.
There was several of 'em told me at the time they hadn't never seen a circus--not in their whole lives!
For this would be more than a feather in the Cassidy cap; it would be a whole war bonnet.
Why not slip me the whole tale now, and get it off your chest?
I haven't told you the name of the head devil of the whole intrigue yet, have I?
We now learn that the entire story was untrue, being, not to mince words, a lie manufactured out of the whole cloth.
But he must have changed his whole course of life, reformed his household, learned that twenty-one franc pieces made a napoleon.
The keen emotions of the evening had brought her whole soul into her face, and her lovely eyes supplicated, her breast heaved, her mouth was held out as if for a kiss, and her new-born passion for Sauvresy burst out into delirium.
Yes, I've already told you that by a will of which I myself have a copy, Sauvresy has left me his whole fortune.
Madame even said to Monsieur that she should not shut her eyes the whole night, with this immense sum in the house.
These hypotheses, easily admitted, suffice to explain the wholeseries of otherwise inconsistent circumstances.
Months, a whole year must pass, and thus he would gain time; then some day he would declare his will.
And she was not joking, either; for her purse was full of bank notes, and she paid me the whole of my bill.
The whole of one side of the wall was taken up with a long rack, where hung the strangest and most incongruous suits of clothes.
Plantat hid his face in his hands; his heart bled at the recollection of that night of anguish, the whole of which he had passed in waiting for a man in order to kill him.