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keeping him all night and letting
Such pains would scarce have been taken for the sake of merely keeping him all night and letting him free in the morning.
— from The Finger of Fate: A Romance by Mayne Reid

keep him all night and likewise
The king's harlot, the Duchess of Portsmouth, (for so we may call her) being by the Duke of York's direction to give the king a treat on Sabbath night, and being by him stored with wines, especially Claret, which the king loved; after he was drunk, they bribed his coffee-man to put a dose of poison in his coffee, and then advised the Duchess to keep him all night; and likewise knowing that when he first awaked in the morning, he usually called for his snuff, they hired the Duchess's chambermaid to put poisoned snuff into his box.
— from Biographia Scoticana (Scots Worthies) A Brief Historical Account of the Lives, Characters, and Memorable Transactions of the Most Eminent Scots Worthies by John Howie

keenly hurt and not a little
He had felt for a moment keenly hurt, and not a little angry.
— from Studies in Wives by Marie Belloc Lowndes


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