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Each animal was attended by a swarthy native of the country whence it came. "Marry nature's gifts the one with the other, amalgamate sympathetic electricities in their due proportions, and give increased beauty to loveliness, even as ye give increased strength to iron and marble, by welding their particles into one imperishable mass."

We see how utterly the Parthian system failed to blend together or amalgamate the conquered peoples; and not only so, but how impotent it was even to effect the first object of a government, the securing of peace and tranquillity within its borders.

"The white race must of necessity, by reason of its superiority, govern the negro, wherever the two live together. "The two races can never amalgamate, and form a new species of man, but must remain forever distinct, though mulattoes and other grades always exist, because constantly renewed. "Each race has a tendency to occupy exclusively that portion of the country suited to its nature."

What name are we to give to this initial phase of the Cigale a phase so strange, so unforeseen, and hitherto unsuspected? Must I amalgamate some more or less appropriate words of Greek and fabricate a portentous nomenclature? No, for I feel sure that barbarous alien phrases are only a hindrance to science.

But it does seem to me, indeed it does, with all the reverence and partiality I have for everything European," the word European was an offence to him, and he shewed that it was so by his countenance, "that the idiosyncrasies of you and of us are so radically different, that we cannot be made to amalgamate and sympathise with each other thoroughly."

But Trevanion could not amalgamate with others, nor subscribe to the discipline of a cabinet in which he was not the chief, especially in a policy which must have been thoroughly abhorrent to such a nature, a policy that, of late years, has distinguished not one faction alone, but has seemed so forced upon the more eminent political leaders on either side that they who take the more charitable view of things may perhaps hold it to arise from the necessity of the age, fostered by the temper of the public: I mean the policy of Expediency.

I have had no experience with the aluminium bronze screen. I presume, however, that it is used only for mills where mercury is not put in the mortars, otherwise, it would surely become amalgamated. The same remark applies to brass wire cloth and tinned plate. Unless the metal of which they are composed will not readily amalgamate with mercury, I should be chary of using new screen devices.

Lady Martindale had been kept so far apart from her daughter, that now it seemed as if they could not amalgamate, and when Theodora no longer was ill, the old habit of reserve returned. Assiduously did Theodora wait on her, read to her, and go out with her in the carriage; but still without becoming familiar, or being able to cheer her spirits.

The old regime could not amalgamate with the new, for that would mean absorption by its more vigorous neighbour, and the Jewish spirit is exclusive in essence and separatist perforce.

It can doubtless be done, to the profit of both parties. Why not go a step further? Why not amalgamate our respective civilizations?" "A pleasant dream, my friend, with which I have occasionally beguiled myself! Our contribution to human happiness, and that of America are they not irreconcilable? What is yours?