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Sept. 29, 1763. The prince's letters are given in the Streckeisen collection, vol. ii. Streckeisen, ii. 202. Possibly Wilkes also; Corr., iv. 200. Streckeisen, i. 89. June 1, 1763. Corr., iii. 202. June 4, 1763. Memoirs of my Life, p. 55, n. Curchod ultimately married, was an eager admirer of Rousseau.

Imp. de St. Pétersbourg, t. vi., col. 77. Von Dr. Nach., No. 3,267; Observatory, vol. xviii., p. 64; F. H. Seares, Astr. Corr., vol. xxv., pp. 3-22. Reprinted by Zöllner. See Bull. R. A. S., vol. x., p. 376. Rosenberger calculated no more, though he lived until 1890. Month. Report. Brit. Imp. de St. Stars seen through the tail, October 18, lost much of their lustre.

Again, his attempt to simplify the many varieties of musical time by reducing them all to the two modes of double and triple time, though laudable enough, yet implies an imperfect recognition of the full meaning of time, by omitting all reference to the distribution of accent and to the average time value of the tones in a particular movement. Conf., viii. 197. Grimm, Corr. Lit., i. 27.

Corr., ii. 110, 128. For a sympathetic account of the Abbé de Saint Pierre's life and speculations, see M. Léonce de Lavergne's Economistes français du 18ième siècle (Paris: 1870). Also Comte's Lettres

That Patrick Henry did not attend the great convention, everybody knows; but the whole meaning of his refusal to do so, everybody may now understand somewhat more clearly, perhaps, than before. Hening, xi. 525-526. Sparks, Corr. Rev. iv. 93-96. See, also, Washington's letter to Henry, for Nov. 30, 1785, in Writings of W. xii. 277-278. Jour. Va. House Del. for Nov. 25, 1786.

For the journey, see Corr., iv. 307; Burton, ii. 304. Letter to a Member of the National Assembly. The same passage contains some strong criticism on Rousseau's style. Burton, 304, 309, 310. Ib. ii. 309, n. Mr. Howitt has given an account of Rousseau's quarters at Wootton, in his Visits to Remarkable Places. One or two aged peasants had some confused memory of "old Ross-hall."

George Tucker's sneer implies, such a body of men, in such a crisis of public danger, would have twice and thrice elected him to the highest executive office in the State, and that, too, without one dissenting vote? To say so, indeed, is to fix a far more damning censure upon them than upon him. Jour. Va. House Del. 30, 36, 66; also Hening, ix. 474-476; 477-478; 530-532; 584-585. Sparks, Corr.

J.J.R. to Davenport, Dec. 22, 1766, and April 30, 1767. Corr., v. 66, 152. Burton, 369, 375. Corr., v. 153. Before leaving England, Rousseau had received more than one long and rambling letter from a man who was as unlike the rest of mankind as he was unlike them himself.

Here there were peculiar reasons, as we shall see. Corr., ii. 356. Ib., ii. 358, 369, etc.

Corr., 1865, Part III; also H. Ex. Doc. No. 93, Thirty-ninth Cong., First Sess. H. Ex. Doc. No. 93, p. 42, Thirty-ninth Cong., First Sess. Ibid. Wharton's Digest, Sec. 58, Vol. I, p. 328. Dipl. Corr., 1866, Part I, p. 387. H. Ex. Doc. No. 30, Fortieth Cong., First Sess. Dipl. Corr., 1866, Part III. Dipl. Corr., 1866, Part III. Sen. Ex. Doc. No. 20, Fortieth Cong., First Sess.