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"I wish this thing all settled amic ic amelcabilly." Bartley broke into a helpless laugh at Morrison's final failure on a word difficult to sober tongues, and the latter went on: "No 'casion for bad feeling on either side. All I want know is what you mean."

Quæst. i. 27; de Div. ii. 72; pro Milon. 31; de Legg. ii. 7. Fragm. de Rep. 3; Tusc. Quæst. i. 29. Tusc. Quæst. i. passim; de Senect. 21, 22; Somn. Scip. 8. De Div. i. 32, 49; Fragm. de Consolat. Tusc. Quæst. i. 30; Som. Scip. 9; de Legg. ii. 11. De Amic. 4; de Off. iii. 28; pro Cluent. 61; de Legg. ii. 17: Tusc. Quæst. i. 11; pro Sext. 21; de Nat. Deor. i. 17. De Senect. 23.

It is frequently quoted by Maynial; there is a careful study of it which appeared in Mercure de France, June, 1905, by Louis Thomas. And there is that charming volume, Amitié amoureuse, in which Guy is said to figure as the Philippe, by Henri Amic and Madame Lecomte du Nouy.

Besides these, indeed, there are a few tales, as Amlyn and Amic, Sir Bevis of Hamtoun, the Seven Wise Masters, and the story of Charlemagne, so obviously of foreign extraction, and of late introduction into Wales, not presenting even a Welsh name, or allusion, and of such very slender intrinsic merit, that although comprised in the Llyvr Coch, they have not a shadow of claim to form part of the Canon of Welsh Romance.