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Updated: June 7, 2025


So busy is he, indeed, in laying by this king's 'ceremonies' for him, beginning with the first doubtful perception of a most faint neglect, a falling off in the ceremonious affection due to majesty 'as well in the general dependents as in the duke himself and his daughter, so faint that the king dismisses it from his thought, and charges it on his own jealousy till he is reminded of it by another, beginning with that faint beginning, and continuing the process not less delicately, through all its swift dramatic gradations, the direct abatement of the regal dignities, the knightly train diminishing, nay, 'fifty of his followers at a clap' torn from him, his messenger put in the stocks, and 'it is worse than murder, the poor king cries in the anguish of his slaughtered dignity and affection, 'to do upon respect such violent outrage, so bent is the Poet upon this analytic process; so determined that this shaking out of a 'preconception, shall be for once a thorough one, so absorbed with the dignity of the scientific experiment, that he seems bent at one moment on giving a literal finish to this process; but the fool's scruples interfere with the philosophical humour of the king, and the presence of Mad Tom in his blanket, with the king's exposition, suffices to complete the demonstration.

This fancied metamorphosis of the sturdy beef-eaters with their partisans, whose costume has never been altered since the days of Henry VII., into Hindustani peons and chuprassees, seems to show that the enthusiasm of the Khan must have been considerably excited and after this cruel disappointment he dismisses the remainder of the procession in a few words.

At Troyes, Rousselin, "National civil commissioner," dismisses, for the same reason, and with not less dispatch, all of the gendarmes at one stroke, except four, and "puts under requisition their horses, fully equipped, also their arms, so as to at once mount well known and tried sans-culottes."

He soon returned, a malicious smile playing on his lips. "His excellency regrets that you cannot wait any longer, Mr. Counsellor," he said. "His excellency being so busy that he cannot be disturbed, he requests you to call again to-morrow at the same hour." "So his excellency dismisses me after detaining me here in the anteroom for more than an hour?" asked Gentz, incredulously.

'See that you kneel before him and speak not; see that you raise your eyes not from the floor nor breathe loudly; see that when the King's high and awful majesty dismisses you you go quietly. Throckmorton spoke. 'See that you speak not with nor of your cousin.

So this parable dismisses all ideas of work, duty, service, requirement, and instead gives the emblem of a marriage feast as the picture of the kingdom. It therein unites two familiar prophetic images for the Messianic times those of a festival and of a marriage.

Be comforted, she will be quite as safe with me as she would even be with you." He laughs again, dismisses Roger from his thoughts by an indescribable motion of his hand, and once more concentrates his attention upon the girl near him, who, with lowered eyes and a pale, distressed face, is waiting unwillingly for what he may say next.

Holmes you'll see him read and quoted when and his doings are as dead as Henry the Eighth. has no feeling for finish or polish or delicacy, and doubtless dismisses Pope and Goldsmith with supreme contempt. She never mentions that horrid trial, to my great comfort. Did I tell you that I had been reading Louis Napoleon's most charming three volumes full?

Either he is not aware of their existence at all, or he dismisses them as merely negligible things which are vital to the other person. In a way, he is not clever enough, he is too intense in spots. 'Yes, cried Ursula, 'too much of a preacher. He is really a priest. 'Exactly! He can't hear what anybody else has to say he simply cannot hear. His own voice is so loud. 'Yes. He cries you down.

Here again it is a formal motion, which he may not altogether mean, but which the lawyer often makes as a matter of form. If the judge really believes there is not enough evidence to let the case go to the jury, he ought to say so without the necessity of a motion. Suppose there is not, he dismisses the case "on the merits" and the trial is over.

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