Do we say she or shea

she 462816 occurrences

Do, sir, be so good as to release me from" As she spoke, she raised her veil, and showed what no woman wishes to hide, least of all when seeking the good-will of one of the opposite sex.

She had a handsome facestrikingly so.

She was a brilliant brunette, dark-skinned; but her complexion was of a clear, pale olive, and as soft, as lustrous as pure ivory.

She had rich red lips, the only colour in her face, and these, habitually slightly apart, showed pearly-white glistening teeth.

"She has not yet recovered.

Thus muttering to herself, she shambled across the room to a corner, where she stowed the money safely away.

Thus muttering to herself, she shambled across the room to a corner, where she stowed the money safely away.

Then she came back, showed the bit of lace, and pressed it into the Countess's hands.

I was told to look for it, to search for it on you;" and with a quick gesture she lifted the edge of the Countess's skirt, dropping it next moment with a low, chuckling laugh.

What had she done?

She must write to Fanny.'

'She is engaged, Robert.'

But, nevertheless the story had interested her so that she had been enticed into taking some part in the conversation.

'The poor young lady can't help it if her feet are big,' said Hester, who was quite alive to the grace of a well-made pair of boots, although she had been taught to eschew braided hair and pearls and gold.

Mrs. Babington, however, pushed her remonstrances so far that she boldly declared that the man was engaged to her daughter, and wrote to him more than once declaring that it was so.

She wrote, indeed, very often, sometimes abusing him for his perfidy, and then, again, imploring him to return to them, and not to defile the true old English blood of the Caldigates with the suds of a washerwoman and the swept-up refuse of a porter's shovel.

She became quite eloquent in her denunciation, but always saying that if he would only come back to Babington all would be forgiven him.

So it has been done,' said Mrs. Bolton, sitting in a comfortless little chair, which she was accustomed to use when secluded, with her Bible, from all the household.

She spoke in a voice that might have been fit had a son of hers been just executed on the gallows.

That would have been Hester's reply could she have spoken her mind; but she could not speak it, and therefore she stood silent.

That would have been Hester's reply could she have spoken her mind; but she could not speak it, and therefore she stood silent.

'What is it?' asked the wife, as soon as she saw the long official envelope.

'It has to do with that wretched man in prison,' she said.

The eloquence here was no doubt better than the argument, as Caldigate must have felt when he remembered how fond he had once been of that 'bedangled woman.' Hester, who, though she knew the whole story, did not at this moment join two and two together, thought that Mr. Holt put the case uncommonly well.

She followed him without a word; but her pale face, her fixed look, and all her movements, testified her unutterable astonishment.

shea 169 occurrences

That bayonet charge was within sight of the Corps Commander, who was with General Shea at his look-out on Kustul, and when he saw the flash of steel driven home with unerring certainty by his magnificent men, General Chetwode may well have felt thankful that he had been given such troops with which to deliver Jerusalem from the Turks.

The Mayor was accompanied by the Chief of Police and two of the gendarmerie, and while communications were passing between General Shea, General Chetwode and General Headquarters, General Watson rode as far as the Jaffa Gate of the Holy City to learn what was happening in the town.

General Shea was deputed by the Commander-in-Chief to enter Jerusalem in order to accept the surrender of the City.

At half-past twelve General Shea, with his aide-de-camp and a guard of honour furnished by the 2/17th Londons, met the Mayor, who formally surrendered the City.

To the Chief of Police General Shea gave instructions for the maintenance of order, and guards were placed over the public buildings.

The relief of the people of Jerusalem, as well as their confidence that we were there to stay, manifested itself when General Shea drove into the City.

Shea, Major-General H. Sheikh Muannis.

Shea Miss Van Rolsenwas seeking a paragon, not a person.

Shea, did you ever see this oil can before?"

"If one watchman ain't enough I'll get threehalf a dozen if necessary," declared Colonel Josiah, as he glared at the offending Shea and pounded on the turf with his heavy cane.

Shea promised to remain awake the balance of the night.

Such writers as Franklin, Jefferson, Calhoun, Webster, Wirt, Irving, Cooper, Hawthorne, Channing, Beecher, Prescott, Motley, Shea, Bryant, Poe, Emerson, and Lowell, have been much more adequately exhibited.

Yes, it was shea little older and graver and thinner, yes.

SEE SHEA, NAUNEARLE BRINTON.

By Mabel C. Hermans & Marjorie Nichols Shea.

By James T. Shea.

James T. Shea (A); 29Jan76; R624962. R624970.

COWAN, HAROLD E. Commercial law by cases, by Harold E. Cowan, Margaret F. Shea, and George A. Morin.

Margaret F. Shea (A); 5Dec55; R160843. COWLES, FLORENCE A., comp.

SEE Shea, James T. Working with numbers.

Brackley Shaw (C); 17Feb72; R523532. SHEA, JOHN GERALD.

Woodworking for everybody, by John Gerald Shea & Paul Nolt Wanger.

John Gerald Shea (A); 17Apr72; R528384.

SEE SHEA, JOHN GERALD.

The first time she remembered seeing him at dinner, shea very little girlhad watched his throat with gloomy fascination.

Do we say   she   or  shea