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The essential distinctions of the two great orders he will find explained in §§ XXXV. and XXXVI. of Chap. XXVII., and in the passages there referred to; but I should rather desire that these passages might be read in the order in which they occur.

XXVII. Marcius was called before the assembly, and having addressed the people, was thought by them to know how to speak as well as how to fight, and was considered to be a man of great ability and courage. He, together with Tullus, was nominated general with unlimited powers.

XXVII. Proceeding onward, we find that in this aristocracy, are preserved the seeds of liberty and the germe of republicanism. These conquerors, like our feudal barons, being sharers of the profit of the conquest and the glory of the enterprise, by no means allow undivided and absolute authority to their chiefs.

XXVII. To look back upon things of former ages, as upon the manifold changes and conversions of several monarchies and commonwealths. We may also foresee things future, for they shall all be of the same kind; neither is it possible that they should leave the tune, or break the concert that is now begun, as it were, by these things that are now done and brought to pass in the world.

This sea is said to have a brim like the brim of a cup. To invite us as well to drink of its grace, as to wash in its water. This brim was wrought with lilies, or was like a lily flower; to show how they should grow and flourish, and with what beautiful robes they should be adorned, who were washed, and did drink of this holy water. XXVII. Upon what the molten sea stood in the Temple.

No reconciliation is possible here; either Luke or Matthew and Mark must have misplaced these events. So in Matthew xxvii. 9, certain words are said to have been spoken by Jeremiah the prophet. These words are not in Jeremiah; they are in Zechariah xi. 13. It is simply a slip of the Evangelist's memory. So in the record of the inscription on the cross when Jesus was crucified.

At this Agesilaus smiled, and said, "You see, my men, how many more soldiers we send out than you do." XXVII. On his return from his campaign against the Thebans, Agesilaus, while passing through Megara, was seized with violent pain in his sound leg, just as he was entering the town-hall in the Acropolis of that city.

What has so far been secured by them it must now be our task to extricate from more doubtful surroundings and place in due order before our readers. Naturf. Frederick Chambers. See also Phil. Phil. Phil. Phil. Trans., vol. cxxvi., p. 453. Phil. Phil. Jour. Chem. Mag., vol. xxvii. Mag., vol. xix. Mag., vol. ix.

XXVII. And on this point of the subject we must consider with whom, and against whom, and at what time, and in what place we are to do such and such a thing, also what means of arms, money, allies, or those other things which relate to the doing of any particular thing we have it in our power to employ.

Passing over chapter xxvii., in which Mr Mill refutes Sir W. Hamilton's opinion that the study of mathematics is worthless, or nearly so, as an intellectual discipline we shall now call attention to the concluding remarks which sum up the results of the volume.