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" I heard on awakening, was a kind of conversation which the two strangers in whose cabin I was, were carrying on together in a low, suppressed tone of voice. I caught one sentence quite distinctly, and that one was of fearfully ominous import to me : it... "
Walks and Wanderings in the World of Literature - Page 52
by James Grant - 1839
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The Monthly Magazine, Or, British Register, Volume 22

British periodicals - 1836 - 650 pages
...import to me. It was nothing else than the alarming question which the one put to the other, namely, " Whether shall we cut his throat or strangle him ?"...the wretched apartment in which I was domiciled out at which I might make my escape, and to have attempted to get out by the door would have been equally...
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Walks and Wanderings in the World of Literature, Volume 1

James Grant - 1839 - 332 pages
...were carrying on together in a low, suppressed tone of voice. I caught one sentence quite distinctly, and that one was of fearfully ominous import to me...fruitless :• for, from the sound of their voices, I knew they were both at the door of my apartment. There seemed no possibility, therefore, of escape...
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Legendary Tales of the Highlands: A Sequel to Highland Rambles, Volume 3

Sir Thomas Dick Lauder - Highlands (Scotland) - 1841 - 348 pages
...lying, and that so the lady must be exposed to certain discovery, and consequently to instant death. What was to be done ? Not a moment was to be lost. Taking advantage of a double which the sow was compelled to make, in consequence of someone having...
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The Children's missionary newspaper [sometimes entitled The ..., Volume 15

Christian Henry Bateman - 1857 - 534 pages
...breaking, and that now only three or four strands of it held him and his darling child from destruction. What was to be done? Not a moment was to be lost ; for manifestly the rope was not strong enough to bring them both to the surface, and therefore either one...
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The Juvenile missionary herald

Baptist missionary society - 1860 - 348 pages
...breaking, and that now only three or four strands of it held him and his darling child from destruction. What was to be done: Not a moment was to be lost; for manifestly the rope was not strong enough to bring them both to the surface, and therefore either one...
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Once a Week

Eneas Sweetland Dallas - General - 1870 - 532 pages
...alight from a firstclass carriage, and look about them anxiously. Luckily, Clementina was in the saloon. What was to be done ? Not a moment was to be lost. Jack was equal to the emergency. Without saying a word to me he jumped on to the landing stage, and,...
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Tales of the Highlands

Sir Thomas Dick Lauder - Folklore - 1881 - 410 pages
...lying, and that so the lady must be exposed to certain discovery, and consequently to instant death. What was to be done? Not a moment was to be lost. Taking advantage of a double which the sow was compelled to make, in consequence of some one having...
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The old 'Dolphin'.

Anne Jane Cupples - 1885 - 136 pages
...as long as day-light lasted, and by night thereport of the lost child was spread in every direction. What was to be done ? Not a moment was to be lost, for now it was the belief of all that the natives had taken her. " Early the next morning, every one who...
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