I dare say she would not; but she would be introduced into the society of this country under such very favourable circumstances as, in all human probability, would get her a
creditable establishment.
"Damn it all," I said, more violently because I had an inkling my motive was none too
creditable, "I don't want to know you."
The action was praised by the critics and reviewers as a highly
creditable effort of the imagination.
It was
creditable to have a sister married, and she might flatter herself with having been greatly instrumental to the connexion, by keeping Anne with her in the autumn; and as her own sister must be better than her husband's sisters, it was very agreeable that Captain Wentworth should be a richer man than either Captain Benwick or Charles Hayter.
But in Carthage, which is a democracy, money-getting is
creditable, and yet their form of government remains unaltered.
He had come to purchase a wedding gift for his daughter, Janet, and an outfit for himself in which he might make a
creditable appearance at her marriage.
Now and then, as happens at all receptions everywhere, a more than ordinary friendly soul blocked the procession and kept it waiting while he inquired how the brothers liked the village, and how long they were going to stay, and if their family was well, and dragged in the weather, and hoped it would get cooler soon, and all that sort of thing, so as to be able to say, when he got home, "I had quite a long talk with them"; but nobody did or said anything of a regrettable kind, and so the great affair went through to the end in a
creditable and satisfactory fashion.
He was now, I gathered, living partly on his pension, and spoke of this daughter married, this daughter in service here, and that daughter in service there, one son settled in London and another in the States, with something of a patriarchal pride, with the independent air too of a man who could honestly say to himself that, with few advantages from fortune, having had, so to say, to work his passage, every foot and hour of it, across those twenty-two thousand miles and those sixty-seven years, he had made a thoroughly
creditable job of his life.
His psychology, taking it all round, was really very
creditable for an average sailor.
When they had forced a goblet of the fiery liquid upon him, Peter of Colfax regained his lost nerve enough so that he could raise his sword arm and defend himself; and as the fumes circulated through him, and the primal instinct of self-preservation asserted itself, he put up a more and more
creditable fight, until those who watched thought that he might indeed have a chance to vanquish the Outlaw of Torn.
Wilson soon arrived, and, indisposed for business as I was at that moment, and little as I cared for the field or its owner, I forced my attention to the matter in hand, with very
creditable determination, and quickly concluded the bargain - perhaps more to the thrifty farmer's satisfaction than he cared to acknowledge.
All that is original in us, and therefore fairly
creditable or dis-
creditable to us, can be covered up and hidden by the point of a cambric needle, all the rest being atoms contributed by, and inherited from, a procession of ancestors that stretches back a billion years to the Adam-clam or grasshopper or monkey from whom our race has been so tediously and ostentatiously and un- profitably developed.