"Betty" Quotes from Famous Books
... and is, emphatically, a north-country college. Not the least important factor in maintaining this tradition has been the great benefaction of Lady Elizabeth Hastings, fondly and familiarly known to all Queen's men as "Lady Betty." Steele wrote of her when young, that to "love her was a liberal education"; this may have been flattery, but her bounty, at any rate, has given a "liberal education" to hundreds of north-country men, who come up from the twelve schools of her foundation to her college ... — The Charm of Oxford • J. Wells
... as well as the evidence of the mother of some possessed children, who declared that her daughter had walked up a wall nine feet high four or five times backwards and forwards, her face and the fore part of her body parallel to the ceiling, saying that Betty Horner carried her up. In closing the narrative the archdeacon wrote without comment: "My Lord Chief Justice by his questions and manner of hemming up the evidence seem'd to me to believe nothing of witchery at all, and to disbelieve the fact of walking up the ... — A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 1718 • Wallace Notestein
... night such mischief did, Betty was every morning chid. They undermined whole sides of bacon, Her cheese was sapped, her tarts were taken. Her pasties, fenced with thickest paste, Were all demolished, and laid waste. She cursed the cat for ... — The Poetical Works of Addison; Gay's Fables; and Somerville's Chase • Joseph Addison, John Gay, William Sommerville
... Fiery Death—Iroquois Theater Romance, Wesley A. Stanger Cousin Betty, Balzac Crime and Punishment, Dostoieffsky Herrmann the Great. The Famous Magicians Tricks. Illustrated, Burlingame Her Sisters Rival, Albert Delpit A Man of Honor, Feuillet The Story of Three Girls, Fawcett Sappho, Daudet The Woman of Fire, Adolphe Belot Sell Not ... — The Colossus - A Novel • Opie Read
... begging to be sold together, while kneeling at the master's feet, they were only answered by a kick and the lash. Now they met again. In the front yard the wife came running to him crying out, "O Ben Dodson, is dis you? I am your own Betty." And she clasped him closely. "Glory! glory! hallalujah! Dis is my Betty, shuah," he said, pushing her away to look at her face. "I foun' you at las'. I's hunted an' hunted till I track you up here. I's boun' to hunt till I fin' you if you's alive." And they both wept tears of joy. "Ah, Betty, ... — A Woman's Life-Work - Labors and Experiences • Laura S. Haviland
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