God's PuppetsMacmillan, 1916 - 309 sider |
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Side 6
... father was away ; the little girl who could always bat her father's jokes back to him , was passing in some mysterious way beyond her father's ken . A strange , prim young person was coming into her face . He shook his head and sent her ...
... father was away ; the little girl who could always bat her father's jokes back to him , was passing in some mysterious way beyond her father's ken . A strange , prim young person was coming into her face . He shook his head and sent her ...
Side 13
... father's daughter by marriage , and blood kin to the chained Turk who sits in the back of my head , gnawing his chains and thanking God for the safety and the comfort they bring him . " the The reply of Archimedes is unimportant except ...
... father's daughter by marriage , and blood kin to the chained Turk who sits in the back of my head , gnawing his chains and thanking God for the safety and the comfort they bring him . " the The reply of Archimedes is unimportant except ...
Side 24
... father and a mother washing out by the day and the children growing up in the street . Oh , Elsie , Elsie , I never see one of her kind nor any of the poor girls down in Jimtown that I don't say to myself : ' There you go , Lalla ...
... father and a mother washing out by the day and the children growing up in the street . Oh , Elsie , Elsie , I never see one of her kind nor any of the poor girls down in Jimtown that I don't say to myself : ' There you go , Lalla ...
Side 36
... father was too old to handle it . I said your husband should not see " " " Oh , thank you - thank - " The girl took the sheet from the floor where it had dropped as she went on : " And I thought of Doctor Paul ; but I knew he'd probably ...
... father was too old to handle it . I said your husband should not see " " " Oh , thank you - thank - " The girl took the sheet from the floor where it had dropped as she went on : " And I thought of Doctor Paul ; but I knew he'd probably ...
Side 38
... Father was in the carriage outside when we went there and brought her home again . " " That's all right , we won't discuss that part of it , " interrupted the reporter . " What shall we do about it ? How can I help ? I want to help and ...
... Father was in the carriage outside when we went there and brought her home again . " " That's all right , we won't discuss that part of it , " interrupted the reporter . " What shall we do about it ? How can I help ? I want to help and ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
ain't answered Archimedes asked Astor House bank banker beautiful began Boyce Kilworth Boyceville Cale Caleb Hale called Charley Herrington Club Colonel Longford congressman Constitution Street cried Cripple Creek crowd damn Debbie Deborah desk Dick Hale Doctor dollars door dream editor Elias Elsie eyes face father flowers garden girl Globe office gone Hale's half hand Hayden head heard heart Hiram Larson Jack Beasley Jimmy Joel Ladgett Judge Judge's kind knew Kurtlin Lalla Rookh Lally larkspurs laughed little Dick live Longheath looked man's never night Nixon nodded old party paper paused Pelléas and Mélisande poor Prince Charmin Raynham replied rington rose round shook silence smiled soul spoke stood story strange boy talk tell things Toney Delaney took town turned Ty Cobb Vashti voice walked window woman women words young youth
Populære avsnitt
Side 151 - ... line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little and there a little.
Side 23 - Now is the time for all good men and true to come to the aid of the party.
Side 183 - ... for a day or a week or a month or a year; but from antiquity to posterity fcr many ages." the slaughter, "there were more young men in the country.
Side 246 - The congressman was a pudgy, soft-handed, short-legged, thin-haired, pink-browed, clabberjowled congressman, all swathed about as to his pod-like torso in a white vest, draped in a black frock coat. His name was Joel Ladgett. Joel Ladgett was the famous author of the Ladgett Bill. He sat rolling a dead cigar from one side of his loose, coarse mouth to the other, displaying a set of big, uneven teeth, badly battered by time. His jaw was coming unscrewed and was wabbling — almost visibly.
Side 293 - ... boys. There was talk of a day's walk in the country; of a raft to be made at the river under the scoutmaster's direction; of fishing tackle to be had at the town's stores; where the best rods might be bought; what minnows were worth. Some consideration was given to the various grades of khaki 292 for scouting suits.
Side 293 - ... he had dammed, let the hand with the book drop to his knee as the talk woke in his heart a faint pulse from some underconsciousness that had not been stirred for years. The boys were lying on a lawn beneath the stone veranda railing whereon his old feet rested. From time to time the youngsters...
Side 209 - ... sordid choice in life's great decision between the ways of life was due to the age and its environing shams — for it was a material age and in it youth had few visions.
Side 229 - It is hard to say whether or not this madness is more grotesque than the puppy love of early youth. Perhaps because age is supposed to be more circumspect than youth the capers of the old man and the young woman — for always he is enamoured of youth — are more fantastic than those of the young.
Side 209 - The age had planted its shams; its false valuations; its meaningless architecture, its fortunes founded on fraud; its lies and cheats in religion, and its mawkish sentiment in art. The...