Do we say dire or dyer

dire 1059 occurrences

Here the party met with dire misfortune.

Without Mr. Smithson her first season would have resulted in dire failure.

Montesma, Hartfield, Maulevrier, all followed her, heedless of everything except the dire necessity of arresting her flight.

' He had much less cause for fear than Lord Hartfield, who knew of deep and secret reasons why Steadman's death should be a calamity of dire import for his mistress.

While there was the smallest appearance of success no difficulties, of whatever magnitude, could entirely extinguish hope; but when the dire conviction that he had been actually aiding, instead of diminishing the danger, pressed upon Sigismund, he abandoned his efforts.

For when plague first invaded India in 1896, the writer was one of those sent to Bombay to work at the problem of its causation from the scientific side, thereby becoming interested in the life history of rats, which were shown to be intimately connected with the spread of this dire disease.

Dire was the tossing, deep the Groans.

This necessity, this act of dire necessity, the Federal papers cry up as evincing a most forbearing spirit towards us, and really astonish the English themselves who never dreamt that it could be twisted in that way.

The Comte Raymond de Chelles, straight, slim and gravely smiling, came toward him with frequent pauses of salutation at the crowded tables; saying, as he seated himself and turned his pleasant eyes on the scene: "Il n'y a pas à dire, my dear Bowen, it's charming and sympathetic and originalwe owe America a debt of gratitude for inventing it!" Bowen felt a last touch of satisfaction: they were the very words to complete his thought.

Burdened with a dire debt of filial love, the priest had let her depart from Domrémy; his influence followed her as an oppression and a care,a degradation also.

Who from peril dire as this Openeth us escape? 'Tis thou, O Lord, alone!

This pleased him best:In earth's red primal morning, When Nature's forces wrought with youthful heat, A mighty continent outspread, adorning Our planet's face, where now the surges beat: A land of wondrous growths, of strange creations, Of ferns like oaks, of saurians huge and dire, Of marshes vast, their dreary habitations, Of mountains flaming with primeval fire.

when to a race, To whom a god consign'd thee, thou dost prove A fountain of perpetual happiness, And from this dire inhospitable coast, Dost to the stranger grant a safe return?

That they through thee have early done so much. ORESTES When they ordain a man to noble deeds, To shield from dire calamity his friends, Extend his empire, or protect its bounds, Or put to flight its ancient enemies, Let him be grateful!

In their murky dens They stir themselves, and from the corners creep Their comrades, dire Remorse and pallid Fear; Before them fumes a mist of Acheron; Perplexingly around the murderer's brow

When the Powers on high decree For a feeble child of earth Dire perplexity and woe, And his spirit doom to pass With tumult wild from joy to grief, And back again from grief to joy, In fearful alternation; They in mercy then provide, In the precincts of his home, Or upon the distant shore, That to him may never fail Ready help in hours of need, A tranquil, faithful friend.

But soon rose again that great problem of old,that problem ever rising to meet a new Autocrat, and, at each appearance, more dire than before,the serf-question.

But although such exalted ideas of Osiris and his position among the gods obtained generally in Egypt during the XVIIIth dynasty (about B.C. 1600) there is evidence that some believed that in spite of every precaution the body might decay, and that it was necessary to make a special appeal unto Osiris if this dire result was to be avoided.

We also suffered considerably from the want of fresh water, for that we had brought with us in bags became so hot, that nothing but the most dire necessity could have compelled us to make use of it; fortunately we now and then met with fields full of fine water-melons, of a most exquisite flavour: we sought them with the greatest avidity, and obtained relief from the excessive thirst with which we were oppressed.

If a man fell down in the street, struck with some dire disease that shrunk his muscles, unstrung his nerves, made his heart tremble, and his skin shrivel up, would you look upon him and then pass him by without thinking?" "No," cried Fred in an emphatic tone, "I would not!

All he had ever suffered before was mild in comparison with this dire paroxysm.

the while, the queen no longer near, Home to his chamber hied with heavy cheer: Much did he dread his luckless boast might prove The eternal forfeit of his lady's love; And, all impatient his dark doom to try, And end the pangs of dire uncertainty, His humble prayer he tremblingly preferr'd, Wo worth the while!

O that the dire root of sin were as effectually taken away, never more to disturb my happiness; and that pure perennial peace might succeed,I have been visiting the sick:

" A long and gloomy silence followed, during which Raoul turned his face aft, and stood looking at the movements of the men as they washed the decks, while Ithuel seated himself on a knight-head, and his chin resting on his hand, he sat ruminating, in bitterness of spirit, like Milton's devil, in some of his dire cogitations, on the atrocious wrong of which he had really been the subject.

Time and again, while a captive on board the English ship in which he had been immured for years, had he meditated the desperate expedient of blowing up the vessel; and had not the means been wanting, mercenary and selfish as he ordinarily seemed, he was every way equal to executing so dire a scheme, in order to put an end to the lives of those who were the agents in wronging him, and his own sufferings, together.

dyer 495 occurrences

He coolly walked over to Dyer's hotel, and retired for the night.

Well, it is something to be credited with having decent men about you; perhaps if The Sun would try the experiment it would be found more purifying than even the sermons of O. DYER.

It had a Dyer's tub attached to it, which was filled with bilge-water.

We do not suppose that the person referred to by you as a Dyer and Scourer is in any way related to OLIVER DYER, although the latter person scoured Water Street some time since, and very effectually, in pursuit of a "sensation."

We do not suppose that the person referred to by you as a Dyer and Scourer is in any way related to OLIVER DYER, although the latter person scoured Water Street some time since, and very effectually, in pursuit of a "sensation."

The festive laugh of its editors especially that of the roystering Lothario OLIVER DYER,is but seldom heard, now, in the famed restaurant of MOUQUIN.

To George Dyer CV.

To Dyer CVI.

Lamb and Dyer had been schoolfellows at Christ's Hospital.

It follows therefore that it would be sin for me to serve General Dyer and co-operate with him to shoot innocent men.

I see everywhere rascality, and fraud, and lies; and because there is danger of becoming the color of the stuff I work in, 'like the dyer's hand.'

Dyer, in his poem called The Fleece, expresses his sorrow on account of this barbarous trade, and looks forward to a day of retributive justice on account of the introduction of such an evil.

Epigrams by J. D. "Leaving old Plowden, Dyer and Brooke alone, To see old Harry Hankes and Sacarson.

" DYER: Fleece, B. iv, l. 658.

" JOHN DYER: Johnson's British Poets, Vol.

(In Dec.) DYER'S LIFE OF JOHN CALVIN; from authentic Sources, and particularly his Correspondence.

DYER, FRANK LEWIS.

By Frank Lewis Dyer and Thomas Commerford Martin, with the collaboration of William <pb id='206.png' />

SEE Wells, H. G. DYER, GEORGE.

George Dyer (A); 9Jul59; R239603. DYKES, EVA B., joint author.

Louise B. M. Hanson-Dyer & J. B. Hanson (PWH); 12Sep61; R281574. SMITH, ALEXANDER.

It is our Custom at Sir ROGER'S, upon the coming in of the Post, to sit about a Pot of Coffee, and hear the old Knight read Dyer's Letter; which he does with his Spectacles upon his Nose, and in an audible Voice, smiling very often at those little Strokes of Satyr which are so frequent in the Writings of that Author.

Three hundred thousand volunteers were enlisted in Great Britain by the 10th of August 1803; "all the male population of the kingdom from seventeen years of age to fifty-five were divided into classes to be successively armed and exercised" (Dyer).

* POEM BY SIR EDWARD DYER.

containing many of the poems of Sir Edward Dyer, Edward Earl of Oxford, and their cotemporaries, several of which have never been published.

Do we say   dire   or  dyer