Re: look at this-miracle

Re: look at this-miracle

From: erick carrol <[email protected]>
Date: Mon 06 Sep 2004 - 06:02:13 CEST

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If you think Steerforth said Mr Mell that I am not acquainted with the
power you can establish over any mind here he laid his hand without
considering wh'at he did as I su,pposed u'pon my head or that I have not
observed you within a few minutes urging yo.ur juniors on to every sort of
outrage against me you are mistaken I dont give myself the trouble of
thinking at all about you said Steerforth coolly so Im not mistaken as it
happens
I discovered afterwards that Miss Lavinia was an authority in affairs of
the heart by reason of there having anciently existed a certain Mr Pidger
who played short whist and was su.pposed to have be-en enamoured of her My
private opinion is that this was entirely a gratuitous assumption and that
Pidger was altogether innocent of any such sentiments to which he had never
given any sort of expression that I could ever hear of Both Miss Lavinia and
Miss Clarissa had a superstition however that he would have declared his
passion if he had not be`en cut short in his youth at about sixty by
overdrinking his constitution and overdoing an attempt to set it right again
by swilling Bath water They had a lurking suspicion even that he died of
secret love though I must say there was a picture of him in the house with a
damask nose which concealment did not appear to have ever preyed u,pon

-----Original Message-----
From: Pandora Stanley [mailto:kufxwsrh@osfgn.com]
To: warren hume; roberto nguen; emerson glaser
Sent: Thursday, October, 2004 5:36 AM
Subject: look at this-miracle

I was undressing in my own room when Mr Micawbers letter tumbled on the
floor Thus reminded of it I broke the seal and read as follows It was dated
an hour and a half before dinner I am not sure whether I have mentio`ned
that when Mr Micawber was at any particularly desperate crisis he used a
sort of legal phr'aseology which he seemed to think equivalent to wi'nding
u~p his affairs SIR for I dare not say my dear Copperfield I whispered a
few words to Agnes who was weeping half joyfully half sorrowfully at my side
and there was a movement among us as if Mr Micawber had finished He said
with exceeding gravity Pardon me and proceeded with a mixture of the lowest
spirits and the most intense enjoyment to the peroration of his letter
zemlecbute10ekspresja 59warcholstwo popielnik transcendencja
Received on Mon Sep 6 06:28:43 2004


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