Abide with Me.A bide bide v. bid·ed or bode , bid·ed, bid·ing, bides v.intr. 1. To remain in a condition or state. 2. a. To wait; tarry. b. with Me (Anchor Books, 2000)is E. Lynn Harris's last book of his Invisible Life Trilogy, and I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. where the heck I've been. I read it while on a packed, delayed small jet out of Syracuse to LaGuardia, and no one was behaving well. The lone flight attendant, jostled around in turbulence, had had enough of everybody's attitude and tossed a bottlette of Delta Airlines water at me and continued to the back of the plane. On her return, she spotted Abide with Me
"Abide With Me" is a Christian hymn composed by Henry Francis Lyte in 1847, though the lyrics are usually sung to William Henry Monk's melody face down on my lap as I struggled to open the water, and everything changed. She stopped all service and raved about the characters in the series: "You watch that Yancey, she is not to be trusted. Dexter is demented. I love Raymond. He's good people," and started to give away the ending when I begged her to stop. She did and gave me an extra bag of Delta trail mix. Everyone was jealous. The book stands on its own, and I can't wait to read the first two. Kate Clinton is a humorist hu·mor·ist n. 1. A person with a good sense of humor. 2. A performer or writer of humorous material. humorist Noun a person who speaks or writes in a humorous way . |
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