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"guiltily" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows that you feel ashamed because you have done something that you know is wrong or have not done something that you should have done

118 Sentences With "guiltily"

How to use guiltily in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "guiltily" and check conjugation/comparative form for "guiltily". Mastering all the usages of "guiltily" from sentence examples published by news publications.

My feet danced guiltily for the rest of the night.
I laughed a lot during those three moments, sometimes rather guiltily,
Guiltily, I leaned out over the terrace, staring at those slippers.
He guiltily went to bat for John McCain's increasingly manic 2008 campaign.
Guiltily, I throw in a selection of sweet, syrupy shirinee for me.
Probably as a teenager, after guiltily buying their fourth mocha frappuccino of the week.
Some people in this situation are enjoying the relative peace and quiet, however guiltily.
All of which I rather guiltily snap pictures of later when I sit to eat.
Trump-watching is compulsive—who hasn't waited guiltily for the next tweet with horrified anticipation?
But Tillman cannot offer this, for she herself remains guiltily removed from what she chronicles.
It didn't seem worth mounting a vigil, and once again I fell guiltily, expensively asleep.
They make you think of your family, your friends and, guiltily, your own distracted driving.
And yet, I still kept it, guiltily, in the back of my closet all these years.
I confessed the way I'd been behaving to a friend, guiltily, assuming it was work stress.
It's how many of us might guiltily hear it, and how many Muslims would process it.
In my playthrough, Alexios was helplessly drawn to Thaletas and guiltily lured him away from Kyra.
"She reminds me of my sister-in-law," said one of her listeners in New Hampshire guiltily.
We never had to ask, guiltily, "Sorry, what'd you say?" because we had been only semi-listening.
The part where you arise naked from a time machine, Phoebe thought before guiltily swatting away such thoughts.
I saw people fall asleep during the Imam's Khutbah, then jolt awake to nod, somewhat guiltily, in prayer.
When we met during the worst of Pullman's illness, I wondered, guiltily, if he would ever finish it.
I look guiltily over at the knot of wadded white blankets and sheets on my still-damp bed.
In the video, Youtube user Eldermisanthropy22's dog guiltily emerges amongst a chaos of chewed paper and trash.
When asked not to throw them, they averted their eyes guiltily, the way a busted third grader might.
Guiltily, I dream of that ice-cream shop, its sweet blandness, and that other life we might have had.
Then again, Christians sometimes felt, guiltily, that they ought to endure their suffering without complaint, or even embrace it.
Now, the shelves beside my bed are littered with books I have guiltily abandoned like so many New Year's resolutions.
I'm told to shove a chopstick into the mouth of the character printed onto it and I do so guiltily.
Taking these things together, it is sensible to ask why Mr Trump behaves so guiltily if he has nothing to hide.
"Men — at least the men I knew — were still driven by all manner of unruly sexual impulse, however guiltily," he said.
" At the album's midpoint, she slows down to ballad speed and guiltily craves time for herself in "Self Explained" and "Isolation.
As for villains, I have always been guiltily taken — Catholic girlhood residue — with Satan in "Paradise Lost," complicated, tortured, verbally dazzling.
The camera guiltily looms behind the body, which rests in either repose or defeat, to symbolize photography's ethnographic archiving of it.
I thought guiltily of my colleagues at the press center, having to make do with omelettes and no hooks for their hats.
We started confining Jeffrey to his room when the twins had friends over, albeit guiltily, plying Jeffrey with treats to lessen the sting.
Many of them will be aware, perhaps slightly guiltily, that one of the biggest personal contributions to climate change is all that jet-setting.
They're callbacks to a wilder time in internet culture, one of seedy and extreme violence, built for teenagers but guiltily enjoyed by adults too.
Then I read the bittersweet tale of Timothy the organic turkey and found myself laughing guiltily while I worried about the poor bird's fate.
To spell it out, a Russian internet troll, upon being "busted" by the FBI, demonstrated appropriate alarm and guiltily busied herself with covering her tracks.
For celebrity losses going forward, I dipped my toes into the world's collective grief almost guiltily, because I recognized I hadn't lost anyone I knew personally.
" You could also argue, as another former executive guiltily put it, that working for Renaissance "helped provide Mercer with the resources to put Trump in office.
Did his harassed characters and dark narratives make me want to listen in the way that one glances, guiltily, at a couple arguing on the sidewalk?
Then one husband guiltily asks the single member of the group to swap phones with him so he'll be the recipient of an expected racy text.
When Letterman asked him if Bil Gee was the basic building block of Wing Chun, Downey somewhat guiltily admitted that there was more to it than that.
This trend continues on every track, with the repetition, catchy beats and Pump's intense delivery combining to make songs that you will inevitably end up guiltily enjoying.
He is singing about overload and over-consumption, about how possessions take over living space and information drives out imagination — and how guiltily cushy it can feel.
Music writers spend their days guiltily staring down literally dozens of unheard new recordings that pile up as the year goes on, with more coming in each day.
Willie waits for the main event feeling guiltily responsible for the death of his lover, who took her own life when their relationship was discovered by her father.
Quinn is a film critic turned novelist, and a cinematic luster silvers his fiction, which is briskly plotted, fluent in visual and verbal cliché and highly, guiltily satisfying.
It didn't take long for Viall to guiltily shine the light when Cohen asked if he'd ever had a contestant sneak into his room without the cameras catching it.
It was a bit chunky for my liking (probably because I guiltily blended for the briefest period of time possible), but otherwise not a bad recipe to have on hand.
He gives me some gruff bullshit about getting in earlier in future, about how I should turn up ready to go in my overalls, while guiltily avoiding making eye contact.
I did this guiltily at first while searching for a real teacher but soon became absorbed by the wealth of instruction on every style of jazz that I found online.
And so we guiltily joined the masses at night in John Lennon Park (not to be confused with Lenin Park outside the city), huddled around the glow of our smartphones.
When a single worker takes vacation in the summer while everyone else is working, their discomfort from deviating from that norm can drive them to guiltily check email and stay connected.
And this year, the Girl Scouts have two new treats to be guiltily scarfed down alongside our beloved Thin Mints, Samoas and Do-si-dos — a duo of delightful S'mores cookies.
I guiltily check them before I go to the gym in the morning, at stoplights, in line at the grocery store, even in the bathroom (I know, gross) — too often, basically.
Anyway, it looks much better in person than in this photo and everyone including my friend who owns the real thing thinks it's Céline, until I guiltily tell them it's from Amazon.
But after I ditched my biphasic sleep cycle (less than a month later, after realising I'd basically become a well-rested urban hermit), I kept guiltily browsing the success stories of others online.
Only the elderly remain robust — none more guiltily than Yoshiro, who is raising his great-grandson, the impossibly, almost unbearably sweet Mumei, who grows kinder and more tolerant as his body wastes away.
Most parents know where this leads: Kids all hopped up on Pirate's Booty, parents guiltily sipping wine while re-heating leftovers, full of self-recriminations and promises that next week, things will be different.
She has the added burden of overcompensating for the part of her that isn't black, and overcompensating for the part of her that's dating—sometimes guiltily—a white man (John Patrick Amedori), whose viewpoint is also explored.
And this will not be the creepy propulsion of the countdown that draws you guiltily into a "White Collar" marathon, but the intimate, happy propulsion that keeps you talking well into the night with a visiting friend.
She brought in my form, and soon, while I was talking very quickly and guiltily about a time in college I accidentally went to a strip club in Miami—she asked how many times had I smoked pot.
For the amount of times we've heard — and guiltily said and written — that exact statement... While we may still be stretching out the wear of our matching silk sets, the slip dress is ready to dump its pajama moniker.
The program that Saturday evening, which followed another all-Tchaikovsky concert two weeks before, featured favorites like the "Rococo" Variations for cello and orchestra and the "1812" Overture, in an unusual (and slightly guiltily pleasurable) version featuring full chorus.
Those of us who have been guiltily spending our Monday evenings watching a 36-year-old man woo women with wrestling matches and dog shows on the Bachelor will recognize Bekah M., a contestant who's quickly become a fan favorite.
In my humble opinion, the stocking is the best bit of Christmas: the toys and gifts you get to guiltily indulge in before Christmas Proper, cozy and joyful in your bed, no tearing wrapping paper and any of that shit.
Inspired by a poem about a woman walking with the man she loves in a cold, moonlit forest, guiltily confessing that she is pregnant with another man's child, the composition surges and crests, pushing late-Romantic musical language toward a breaking point.
It takes different forms at different times, but right now, since the 60s, white Americans have been guilty and again, as I say, it&aposs not that they feel guilt, it is that they feel this pressure, this threat, and so they behave guiltily.
When he finds out on Facebook that his ex-wife is now the happy mother of a six-month-old baby boy, he fishtails into a night of guiltily watching old home videos and composing a verbose email to her about his lingering regrets.
The relationship between the self and the rest of the world is a particularly anxious one for these characters: They might ask how they can live with themselves, but they know, guiltily, that the more important question is how we live with other people.
The 1971 Hal Ashby movie "Harold and Maude" got some sniffy reviews, not least from Vincent Canby in The New York Times, but it went on to make money and acquire a rabid cult following; it is now beloved by many, sometimes guiltily so.
Pepys, who was born to quarrelsome and barely literate parents and rose to become a principal officer of the navy, could be radical in religion and politics, exuberant in friendship, restlessly bibulous, guiltily devoted to music and theatre, congenitally lascivious, prone to bouts of violent jealousy, and often generous to friends and family.
Guiltily I eyed — then ignored — the generous desk allotted for work, choosing instead to lounge in a terry-lined robe and play thumb war with the baffling remote control to a 32-inch LCD TV. Toilet and bathing area were separated into two flatteringly lit rooms for extra privacy — even from oneself.
I'm honestly not entirely sure, and I don't want to suggest I'm some sort of expert on black romantic comedies — I'll guiltily admit that I haven't seen most of the films I just mentioned, though I am quite aware of how they are often misperceived by the industry, and of how my ignorance of them contributes to those misperceptions.
The closing montage shows Barbara getting bumped in prison; Larry guiltily shoving away a slice of pie; Sandra raging over her defanged exposé, tucked deep into the paper; Bobby sliding into an affair with a prostitute; C.C. and Lori snorting cocaine; and Vinnie in bed with Abby, looking regretful about his deepening commitment to mob business.
Alejandra Jane Dubois I guiltily calm my fears every day by reciting my privilege (I'm white and educated, in a conventional marriage, with a healthy savings account, etc), and so likely to survive this presidency relatively unscathed; and then I reassure myself again, that as a dual national, I can always flee to Europe if things get bad enough.
While he took his agent and personal trainer to the top with him and did it in the clothes he wears to practice, I will let this instance of taking the office with you slide because I get the feeling Kyle Kuzma would find an excuse to slip "fitness" in on any vacation, and I'd rather he did it here than in a beach-adjacent infinity pool while the rest of us looked on, chugging guiltily from our piña coladas.
Educate them early by talking openly, but not smuttily or guiltily, about the pleasures of the flesh.
Louise and Calvin end their relationship, and Warren supports her. After sleeping together, Louise guiltily reunites with Calvin. Justin Burton (Chris Fountain) later resides with Warren. Warren is arrested for Sean's murder after Clare alerts the police.
She leaves David to be with a despairing Gerri. Sharing Gerri's grief encourages Lilly to ask her mother to forgive her father. Gerri confides in Lilly that she can't stop thinking about David. Guiltily, Lilly rejects David's attempts to meet again.
Ultimately, though, he concluded, "for all its flaws, From Here to Infirmary remains nothing more than simply what it is: tuneful, consumable, and guiltily satisfying." NME listed the album as one of "20 Pop Punk Albums Which Will Make You Nostalgic".
The leader of the Ephraimites, Ammon, is a captive in Jephtha's palace. He refuses the urging of his follower, Abner, to escape because he has fallen in love with Jephtha's daughter, Iphise. Iphise guiltily confesses to her mother that she is in love with Ammon too. News arrives of Jephté's victory in battle.
Alex MacPherson of Stylus Magazine dismissed the sincerity of the lyrics classifying "Cater 2 U" as a "queasy" song. Neil McCormick from The Daily Telegraph panned it as "cringe inducing, with lots of sensuous moaning". Barbara Ellen of The Observer wrote, "I thought this was the kind of song bands recorded by mistake then hid guiltily in the attic".
" Time review Alexandra Jacobs of Entertainment Weekly graded the novel B, adding it "doesn't so much turn the case inside out . . . as furnish the hateful thing with a fancy chintz slipcover . . . Dunne bobs and weaves so skillfully from Veronica Hearst to Heidi Fleiss that his fiction (or is it journalism?) is something like delicate needlework. Guiltily mouthwatering stuff.
In the final scene, as they are camping on their way to Thailand, Madhumita sees her name tattooed on Siddarth's forearm and she guiltily says that it's not her name, only to get deceived as Siddarth rubs the ink off saying "You think I don't know you?" Varsha reveals herself as Thenmozhi and 'Madhumita' asks Sid to guess her name, and all four of them squabble on.
Linda, taken aback by his comment, embraces Erik, explaining that he was the happiest thing in Dexter's difficult life. Upon arrival at home, they are confronted by a furious Gail. When Gail starts to hit Erik, Linda quickly intervenes, angrily and tearfully informs her of Dexter's death, and demands that she allow Erik to attend the funeral and never hit him again. Realizing everything, Gail guiltily complies.
Yungo spits out the village and is pulled back into his own dimension. Nikki ponders what happened to their third wish, and Fargus guiltily admits that out of desire to share his joy with the world, he wished that everyone back home could be just like him, inadvertently turning everyone in the village into Fargus clones. Nikki and Fargus resign themselves to another trip to the Wishing Engine.
Ruddy's performance was widely praised with The Irish Times stating "Ruddy's characterisations – particularly his inner-city Concepta and, at times, his Pádraig Pearse – are so funny that they divert us guiltily from the weight of the lesson." Irish culture magazine Vulgo described Ruddy and his co-star Nick O'Connell as "exciting new talent" and "say that you saw the electric O'Connell and Ruddy here first" in their review of the show.
The bout leaves Justin in financial and professional ruin while Sangha declares their partnership is over. Afterwards, Xian reveals to David that the main reason he is helping him is because Tong Po had also murdered his niece Mylee along with his brothers. He guiltily admits that part of him wants revenge for her death, and is willing to sacrifice David to get it. Insisting that the fight is his own, David accepts Po's challenge.
12 days later, Varun and Deepti are hastily summoned by Anand's wife, Dr. Sandhya Joshi. Here, the two run into another homonymous couple, Honey Batra and Monika Batra , a couple from Chandigarh, who have taken up IVF as well. Anand guiltily reveals that a sperm mix-up has occurred: Varun's sperm have been mixed with Monika's eggs, and Honey's sperm with Deepti's eggs. Shocked beyond belief, both couples attack the two doctors.
Leary calls his cell, and Marge answers, apologizing for her son's behavior. Leary, still angry with Bart's tricks, suggests Marge activate the GPS and web filter on the phone and return it to Bart, allowing her to track down Bart's every move and block certain websites. He says that this is how he tracked rival actors who "stole" film roles he wanted. Somewhat guiltily, Marge activates the GPS and returns the phone to Bart.
He focuses on the woman in the white dress and says "Maria?" to which Berry counters "Who the heck are you?" while 'Maria' bites her lip and looks on guiltily. When the man in the suit states "That's my wife!" Berry gets to his feet and the man promptly punches him in the face. We then cut to shots of Berry running through the same woodland as 'Maria' earlier in the video.
The next morning, they find Velma unconscious on the beach. Shaggy begins to tell her that he was very worried, but stops when he notices warts on her hand. Velma looks surprised, but guiltily assures them that it's nothing. After they fill her in on the latest monster attack; Daphne says that she saw purple paint on the figure's cloak and suggests they check out a boat that they saw on the way to Erie Point.
After bursting from Cordelia's womb in a flash of blue-green light, the godly woman materializes and covers herself with a blanket. She appreciates the world around her and thanks Cordelia for giving her life. Guiltily, Angel offers the woman his sword to punish him for his earlier intentions of killing her. Fred cleans up around the office while she worries and rants to Lorne about what happened with Cordelia and whether Angel could have really killed her.
When Amy applies for a teaching job, Lee sees her talking to an older man and getting the wrong impression, and angrily confronts him. Lee also becomes jealous when she befriends Dodger Savage (Danny Mac). When Dodger gives her driving lessons and a false driver's licence, Lee reports him to the police but Amy is arrested and fined. After falling out with Lee over this, Amy has a one-night stand with Dodger, but guiltily confesses to Lee later.
She asks Andy to play instead, but he is hit by a car while driving his new motorcycle home to retrieve his guitar, breaking his right arm. Just as the concert begins, Freddy Spaghetti surprisingly arrives, having been paid by Ben to perform at Leslie's concert. Ben explains he is not a bad person, but the budget still has to be slashed. Visiting Andy in the hospital, Ann suddenly kisses him, but immediately stops and guiltily walks out.
With all available hands needed in the capital, only Martha can be spared to go to the northern islands to treat the outbreak there. Because the governor and her brother are worried that the spread of disease might encourage a native rebellion they are hesitant to let her go. Ultimately they agree, provided she takes Ted with her. At first he refuses to help her when he is approached, but later guiltily agrees to join her.
Jenny guiltily sees a pair of shoes that Alison had been intending to purchase for her. During a luncheon at the Waldorf apartment, CeCe introduces Carter Baizen (Sebastian Stan) to Serena as her escort. The aura of wealth and affluence eventually makes Dan uncomfortable at the party and CeCe toys with his exclusion from Serena's wealthy world. Her intention is to turn Dan against Serena but instead he tells Serena that he will be her escort.
The central character and narrator, Wilmet Forsyth, is the thirty-three-year-old wife of a Civil Servant with a comfortable though routine life. She does not need to work and enjoys a life of leisure. When not lunching or shopping she occupies her time, somewhat guiltily, with occasional "good works", particularly at the instigation of Sybil, her slightly eccentric do-gooder mother-in-law. She becomes drawn into the social life of her church, St. Luke's, and there makes a change for the good in the lives of two other characters.
She talks guiltily of the happy times they had had walking in the countryside, with Derek gradually opening up and becoming happier, as if emerging from a prison. Susan fearfully tells Ellen of the ‘wicked wish’ she had made one day when they had visited the holed stone together, that Derek and Ellen should never marry: a wish that came true. But instead of angrily rejecting Susan, as she had expected, Ellen tells her that she is happy to hear that Derek did not remain shut up in himself, even for a short while.
Sighing, he expresses a look of realization that he may never have the connection with Veronica that Logan has as she guiltily looks down. In the Veronica Mars film, it is revealed that Piz and Veronica broke up after she transferred to Stanford after her freshman year, but they reconnect when she moves to New York for law school. They are dating at the beginning of the film, but he breaks up with her when her hesitancy to leave Neptune (and Logan) and return to New York make him doubt her feelings for him.
Carmen Roberts first appeared in a guest stint in mid-1993 before returning several months later as a core character. Carmen arrived as a new nurse but when her addiction to prescription pills came to light, she was fired. She returned months later completely rehabilitated but director of nursing - Paul Churchill (Simon Prast) revealed she was formerly a prostitute and was at odds with the clinics staff. When Carmen innocently claimed a dead patients lottery ticket, she discovered she had won thousands of dollars and guiltily spent a lot of it before she started to date Guy Warner (Craig Parker).
Marge reveals that Kang is Maggie's real father and explains how it happened. Kang and Kodos demand that the Simpsons give Maggie to them, but Homer refuses which start a big fight between Kang and Homer until Bart suggests that they appear on The Jerry Springer Show to resolve their issues. When an audience member criticizes Kang, he vaporizes her, as well as the rest of the audience and the film crew. Everyone looks guiltily as host Jerry Springer does a monologue encouraging them to put their differences aside and do what is best for Maggie.
Her 2005 essay "Motherlove" was first published in the anthology Because I Said So: 33 Mothers Write About Children, Sex, Men, Aging, Faith, Race and Themselves, where she thought it would have only a small readership. However, it was reprinted in the Modern Love section of the New York Times in March 2005 under the headline "Truly, Madly, Guiltily." It can be read online here. Waldman's essay led to extensive and vitriolic debate,Roberts, Alison, "Ambivalent about motherhood", Chicago Tribune, February 15, 2006 on television shows like The View,Discussed in Luscombe, Belinda, "Ayelet Waldman: Bad Mother", Time, May 8, 2009.
Film critic David Shipman writes that Mavis at first comes across as someone who women guiltily admire and men want to own, but later becomes more sympathetic after having a moral epiphany and becoming a nurse. Jacobs described Women Love Diamonds as perhaps the strangest experiment in dramatizing the gold digger genre; she describes it as resembling the work of German director Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Matthew Kennedy, in his biography of Goulding, describes the film as "a sorry exercise all around". Hal Erickson, writing for Rovi, suggests that Garbo's refusal to do the film did not hurt her career at all.
Donkey's death, which was originally ruled a suicide, was the event that reunited the members of Kenji's group and what kicks off the beginning of the story. ; : Kenji's childhood friend, whose nickname comes from the Japanese word for the sound a frog makes due to his frog-like features. Terrified by the events his friends have become embroiled in, he refuses the call to action and chooses to escape as far as possible from Japan. He has been guiltily hiding out in America when he discovers that Kanna's mother has gone there to try to manufacture the vaccine for the outbreak of 2015.
"La Couchette" was well received by television critics, and was awarded four out of five stars by Gabriel Tate (The Daily Telegraph) and Andrew Billen (The Times). It was described as "beautifully, beautifully dark, and guiltily funny" by Euan Ferguson, writing in The Guardian, as "a delight" by Billen and as "a tightly worked farce" by Gerard Gilbert of The Independent. For Paddy Shennan of the Liverpool Echo, the episode was "typically inventive and inspired". Boyd felt that the episode was "a really clever opening to the series, and a solid start to another run of surprises from Inside No. 9".
Stoick tells Hiccup that if Toothless does one more thing like this, he will banish him, and goes off to find the book. Toothless guiltily reveals that he also burned the copy of "How To Train Your Dragon". Camicazi suggests that they can go to the Meathead Library, and supposedly there might be another copy of the book, and get back home "in time for tea". Hiccup, Camicazi and Fishlegs go to the Island of Forget Me on a Stealth Dragon Big-Boobied Bertha had stolen from Madguts the Murderous, the Chief of the Murderous Tribe, for the bet with Stoick, to visit the Meathead Public Library.
Embarrassed and in erratic egress from the situation, Linda storms off, gets into a minor car collision, and ends up at in hospital where she's attended to by none other than Dr. Tom Sherwood. When she is moved by his gracious manner after having been mean to him on a previous occasion, she guiltily admits to having had sex with his son. With surprise news of successful advance-ticket sales of beyond $18,000 for Jason's atypical play, the headmaster is reluctant to miss out on the much-needed cash injection. He backtracks and persuades Linda to return and resume directing duties so the play may go on.
Anne Haverty later described Banville's critique of Saturday as "devastatingly effective". Sutherland sent a letter (signed with the title "Lord Northcliffe Professor Emeritus") in response to Banville's review, a letter in which he took Banville to task over his misreading of a game of squash in the novel. Banville issued a written reply with the opening line: "Summoned, one shuffles guiltily into the Department of Trivia", before begging Sutherland's pardon for his "sluggish comprehension" after managing to make his way through "all seventeen pages" of the game. Banville later admitted that, upon reading Sutherland's letter, he had thought: "[W]ell, I can kiss the Booker goodbye".
He is eventually found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. The judge tells the witnesses to tell someone next time they see a friend being abused instead of standing by and doing nothing, implying how it could have saved Stacy from getting killed. Later, a distraught Nicki cleans out Stacy's locker and cries as she looks at the pictures of them, remembering their friendship and guiltily wishing that she had acted sooner to have saved her. The film ends with Nicki and Tony leaving a bouquet of roses on the sand at the lake in memory of Stacy.
He just comes over as a strangely charmless, somewhat priggish gay young man." Michael Billington in The Guardian had few good things to say about the production as a whole, but highly praised New's performance: :One idea that does pay off is the casting of a young male actor, Chris New, as Viola. Since the character spends much of the play in masculine attire as Cesario, our attention is constantly drawn to Viola's preoccupation with the sinfulness of disguise and the pathos of her situation. New, clad in an Edwardian cream-coloured suit, has an especially good moment when, in response to Olivia's enquiries about his origins, he pauses guiltily before announcing: "I am a gentleman.
Megan is refreshingly down to earth, and Andy is interviewing to join the police force and become a member of the Stepford Men's Association, headed by refined but vaguely hostile Dale "Diz" Coba (Hill). Kaye needs a research assistant, and after being turned off by the seemingly plastic and subservient women of Stepford, she jumps at the chance to hire Megan. Kaye is shaken when Barbara Parkinson (Lindley) "accidentally" nearly runs her down with her car, then exhibits strange, repetitive behavior at the accident site, yet has no recollection of the incident the next day. Disillusioned hotel manager Wally (Adams) seems guiltily on the verge of divulging something important to Kaye about his wife's inability to change, when another attempt is made on Kaye's life.
In both branches of naval service, the Germans first manage to hold their own but the Allies increasingly get the upper hand, and in both cases Teichmann's involvement ends with a traumatic ship wreak and the horrors which scavenging gulls can inflict on helpless sailors adrift on the sea. In between scenes on the sea are the protagonist's complicated relations with the two women in his life - Dora, the Hamburg prostitute (later brothel owner) who loves him, and Edith, his captain's wife, with whom he is deeply and very guiltily in love. Teichmann's attitude to the Nazi regime is complicated and ambivalent. On the one hand, he considers Goebbels' propaganda as stupid nonsense and feels nothing but contempt for fanatic Nazis which he meets.
It has been claimed that the appearance of girls' boarding school stories was a response to a parallel development of the equivalent for boys in the same period, and there are certainly elements of boys' stories, such as Tom Brown's Schooldays by Thomas Hughes, and the Greyfriars tales by Frank Richards, appear to have been borrowed by writers of girls' stories, including Brazil. However, this may accord an undue influence to this literature, as there had been a gradual development from the 18th century toward fiction which was more specifically focused on gender, and many of the tropes in Brazil's books derive from the real-life schools attended by early 20th-century girls. There were also male readers of Brazil's works, although they tended to consume these books secretly and guiltily. These including a number of prominent figures, who confessed to liking the stories in childhood, later in life.
The narrative later reunites Hob and Dream in issue #59 of The Kindly Ones. Having lost his most recent significant other in a car accident, Hob is devastated and asks Dream to resurrect her, remarking that "it never gets easier, people you love not being there any more." Dream states that such an act is impossible, but offers Hob the comfort of making her killer aware, while dreaming, of that which he has destroyed. As they leave Hob warns Dream that he has the stench of death upon him, which Dream responds with an ambiguous smile and thanks. Hob’s final three appearances occur in issues #70 ("Chapter One, Which Occurs in the Wake of What Has Gone Before"), #72 ("Chapter Three, In Which We Wake"), and #73 (An Epilogue, Sunday Mourning) of The Wake. In “Sunday Mourning”, Hob attends a Renaissance festival with his African-American girlfriend Guenevere and reminisces guiltily about the slave trade.

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