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_ill_,' iii. 268; 'Everybody loves to have good things furnished to them, without any trouble,' iv. 90; 'I am ready now to call a man a good man upon easier terms than I was formerly,' iv. 239; 'A look that expressed that a good thing was coming,' iii. 425. GRACES. 'Every man of any education would rather be called a rascal than accused of deficiency in the graces,' iii. 54. GRAND. 'Grand nonsense is insupportable,' i. 402. GRATIFIED. 'Not highly _gratified_, yet I do not recollect to have passed many evenings with _fewer objections_,' ii, 130. GRAVE. 'We shall receive no letters in the grave,' iv. 413. GRAZED. 'He is the richest author that ever grazed the common of literature,' i. 418, n. 1. GREAT. 'A man would never undertake great things could he be amused with small,' iii. 242; 'I am the great Twalmley,' iv. 193. GREYHOUND. 'He sprang up to look at his watch like a greyhound bounding at a hare,' ii. 460. GRIEF. 'All unnecessary grief is unwise,' iii. 136; 'Grief has its time,' iv. 121; 'Grief is a species of idleness,' iii. 136, n. 2. GUINEA. 'He values a new guinea more than an old friend,' v. 315; 'There go two and forty sixpences to one guinea,' ii. 201, n. 3. GUINEAS. 'He cannot coin guineas but in proportion as he has gold,' v. 229. H. HANDS. 'A man cutting off his hands for fear he should steal,' ii. 435; 'I would rather trust my money to a man who has no hands, and so a physical impossibility to steal, than to a man of the most honest principles,' iv. 224. HANGED. 'A friend hanged, and a cucumber pickled,' ii. 94; 'Do you think that a man the night before he is to be hanged cares for the succession of a royal family?' iii. 270; 'He is not the less unwilling to be hanged,' iii. 295; 'If he were once fairly hanged I should not suffer,' ii. 94; 'No man is thought the worse of here whose brother was hanged,' ii. 177; 'So does an account of the criminals hanged yesterday entertain us,' iii. 318; 'I will dispute very calmly upon the probability of another man's son being hanged,' iii. 11; 'You may as well ask if I hanged myself to-day,' iv. 173; 'Depend upon it, Sir, when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight it concentrates his mind wonderfully,' iii. 167. HAPPINESS. 'These are only struggles for happiness,' iii. 199. HAPPY. 'It is the business of a wise man to be happy,' iii. 135. HARASSED. 'We have been harassed by invitations,' v.
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