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"Must we then, forgetting our own interest, as it were go out of ourselves, and love God for His own sake?" No more forget your own interest, no more go out of yourselves, than when you prefer one place, one prospect, the conversation of one man to that of another. Does not every affection necessarily imply that the object of it be itself loved? If it be not it is not the object of the affection.

At this juncture our lounger discerned at one of the tables about the last person in the world he could have wished to encounter there. It was Dare, whom he had supposed to be a thousand miles off, hanging about the purlieus of Markton. Dare was seated beside a table in an attitude of application which seemed to imply that he had come early and engaged in this pursuit in a systematic manner.

"Five minutes will do. I shall be eternally grateful." Longueville was amused at himself as he said this. He cared infinitely less for his sketch than the words appeared to imply; but, somehow, he cared greatly that this graceful stranger should do what he had proposed. The graceful stranger dropped an eye on the sketch again. "Is your picture so good as that?" she asked.

It was not easy to pass any censure on him which should not imply a still more severe censure on two generations of Granvilles, on two generations of Hydes, and on two generations of Finches. At last some ingenious Tory thought of a device by which it might be possible to strike the enemy without wounding friends.

"You haven't been at either of Mrs Willoughby's `At Homes." "No; but I've seen a good deal of them all the same. They have been so kind." "Don't you care for the `At Homes'? I asked Mrs Willoughby about you, and she seemed to imply that you preferred not to go." "Oh, no! Oh, no! That was quite wrong. I did enjoy that evening.

Well, Miss Fairfield, I'm a blunt Westerner, and I don't know how to say these things subtly, but when you imply that Daisy has any special interest in me, you do me undeserved honour. I've known her for years, and we're good chums, but she'd have no right to comment if I walked down to the sea, or into it, or across it. NOW, will you be good?"

But it does imply that whether in the education of the professional man or of the industrial worker all instruction either directly or indirectly must have as its final result the efficiency of the individual as a worker.

But he who sings the praise of it may be the most inconstant of mankind, and may know that he is deceiving his hearers as to his own opinions at any rate, as to his own practice. The virtue should come first, and then the speech respecting it. Cicero seems to imply that, if the speech be there, the virtue may be assumed.

I. What does God's calling a man by his name imply? Intimate knowledge. Adam naming the creatures. Christ naming His disciples. Loving friendship. Moses, 'I know thee by name, and thou hast found grace in my sight. Designation and adaptation to work. Bezaleel Exodus xxxi. 2; Cyrus ISAIAH xlv. 3; Servant of the Lord ISAIAH xlix. 1. II. What does God's calling a man by His name imply?

"No reflection upon the Baron's character was intended, I assure you. The Prince merely meant to imply that he represented the social rather than the business side of the embassy. And both are equally necessary, I assure you equally essential, Baroness, believe me."