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It may be you are easy to be pleased; you are good-humoured yourself, and cannot put their patience to any trial. Cit. Indeed, Madam, just the contrary; I believe I made them tumble two or three hundred pounds' worth of goods one day, and bought nothing; and yet it was all one; they used me as well as if I had laid out twenty pounds. Lady. Why, so they ought. Cit.

Therefore, beseech you, I may be consul. Fourth Cit. We hope to find you our friend; and therefore give you our voices heartily. Third Cit. You have received many wounds for your country. Cor. I will not seal your knowledge with showing them. I will make much of your voices, and so trouble you no further. Both Cit. Cor. Most sweet voices!

Rengger, Naturgeschichte der Säugelliere von Paraguay, p. 11, cited by Westermarck, op. cit., p. 158. J. M. Wheeler, “Primitive Marriage,” an article in Progress, 1885, p. 128. McGee, “The Beginning of Marriage,” American Anthropologist, Vol. Haddon, “Western Tribes of the Torres States,” Journal of the Anthropological Society, Vol. XIX, Feb. 1890. Cited by Havelock Ellis, Psychology of Sex, Vol.

This resolution, however, she did not feel courage to carry into effect; and two or three months rolled rapidly away without any diminution of their reciprocal flame, when one fine Sunday evening Moireau, whose time hung heavily on his hands, took it into his head to visit the opera. This species of amusement constitutes the ne plus ultra of the delights of a French cit.

Ah, name not a Don, the very sound from the Mouth of a little Cit is disagreeable Bargain and Sale, Bills, Money, Traffick, Trade, are words become you better. Jac. Well said, use him scurvily that Mrs. Ant. The best of those you think I should not name, dare hardly tell me this. Isa.

Indeed, not only for the higher, but also for the lower manifestation of the sexual impulse, it would usually be more correct to use instead the qualification "human." Loc. cit., Archives d'Anthropologie Criminelle, Jan., 1907. It has, however, become colored and suspect from an early period in the history of Christianity. St. Hinton well illustrates this feeling.

Hartmann, op. cit., vol. I, part 2, chapter IX. It is quite generally recognized that imagination is indispensable in all sciences; that without it we could only copy, repeat, imitate; that it is a stimulus driving us onward and launching us into the unknown.

The proverb is manifestly of an age when iron was almost universally used for weapons, and thus was, as in Thucydides, synonymous with all warlike gear; but throughout the poems no single article of warlike gear is of iron except one eccentric mace and one arrow-head of primitive type. Cf. Helbig, op. cit., p. 331.

This statement leaves the reader under the impression that the process was in successful use. In this connection, it should be noted that in the report on the Suwanee Iron Works, included in The iron manufacturer's guide, it is stated that "It is at this furnace that Mr. Kelly's process for refining iron in the hearth has been most fully experimented upon." J. P. Lesley, op. cit.

It was about five o'clock in the afternoon, the next day, when the carriage stopped at a cast-iron gate, on which was inscribed this epigraph, "Hobbs' lodge Ring the Bell." "A snug place enough," said Lord Vargrave, as they were waiting the arrival of the footman to unbar the gate. "Yes," said Mr. Howard. "If a retired Cit could be transformed into a house, such is the house he would be."