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. 395.
HARE. 'My compliments, and I'll dine with him, hare or rabbit,'
iii. 207.
HATE. 'Men hate more steadily than they love,' iii. 150.
HATER. 'He was a very good hater,' i. 190, n. 2.
HEAD. 'A man must have his head on something, small or great,' ii.
473, n. 1.
HEADACHE. 'At your age I had no headache,' i. 462;
'Nay, Sir, it was not the wine that made your head ache, but the
sense that I put into it,' iii. 381.
HEAP. 'The mighty heap of human calamity,' iii.
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