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" I "m afraid I 'm not in the humor just now to give it my best suffrages. You 've seen, I doubt not, something of the treatment I have met with from the Press for the last few weeks ; not very generous usage, — not very just. Well ! what will you say... "
Conversations and amusing tales [by H. English]. - Page 22
by Harriet English - 1799 - 385 pages
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Pleasant memories: a woman's thoughts and life-work

John Baillie - Women - 1878 - 462 pages
...their anxiety and all their care.' A new call to ' redeem the time ' came to her in this wise : — ' What will you say when I tell you that I have been very near you, and that we meditated a flying visit, but were much disappointed when we found it could...
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The Life and Letters of Edward A. Freeman, D.C.L., LL. D.

William Richard Wood Stephens - Historians - 1895 - 476 pages
...removed from Oxford as soon as possible to the Protestant atmosphere of a wife and a drawing-room. What will you say when I tell you that I have been thinking whether I could not manage to combine both ? I really do not know how I could leave Oxford...
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The Novels of Charles Lever, Volume 3

Charles James Lever - 1895 - 342 pages
...met with from the Press for the last few weeks ; not very generous usage, — not very just. Well ! what will you say when I tell you that I have been refused an inquiry into my conduct at Manchester ; that the Government is of opinion that such an investigation...
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The Novels of Charles Lever: Barrington

Charles Lever - Exiles - 1898 - 604 pages
...have met with from the Press for the last few weeks; not very generous usage — not very just. Well ! what will you say when I tell you that I have been refused an inquiry into my conduct at Manchester ; that the Government is of opinion that such an investigation...
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The Handsome Brandons

Katharine Tynan - 1900 - 416 pages
...something else." "What! more boarding-houses?" I cried. " Oh, no ! I am done with boarding-houses. But what will you say when I tell you that I have been lady's-maid to Lady A." " A real lady's-maid! Not a sort of lady lady's-maid?" I exclaimed, rather...
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Barrington: Tales of the Trains

Charles James Lever - 1907 - 648 pages
...met with from the Press for the last few weeks ; not very generous usage, — not very just. Well ! what will you say when I tell you that I have been refused an inquiry into my conduct at Manchester ; that the Government is of opinion that such an investigation...
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