United States or Réunion ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


Eighthly, As for Ointments, and Plasters, they are sold by some at so low a price, viz. 3 d. per l. for Ointments, as I have been informed, that 'tis not possible to make them at, and yet such however falsifyed maintain a trade amongst Country, and low-priced City-Apothecaries, and the Chirurgeons profess they cannot effect their Cures with the Shop-Medicines, and that this is the reason why they make their own Oyls, Oyntments, &c. as the Apothecaries Charter allows them to do; and why may not Physicians think this to be the cause why they sometimes fail in their Cures, as well as Chirurgeons? and also make their own Medicines as well as they, especially since the Apothecary may as easily falsify, and to greater profit in the one, then in the other?

To lean too much unto, and to depend too much upon the ordinances, or instruments, as if all, or any thing, could come from them. Eighthly. There should be a right improving of any measure of knowledge we get to his glory, and to the edification of others, with humility and thankfulness, and so a putting of that talent in use, to gain more to his glory.

Infractions of this law should be punishable with death. And eighthly, and last, I would retain ZUG and SCHLAG, with their pendants, and discard the rest of the vocabulary. This would simplify the language. I have now named what I regard as the most necessary and important changes.

All at once my attention was drawn to a spider on the wall, who was laying a net for a fly, and in watching his maneuvers I forgot the lapse of time, until Father S had passed his sixthly and seventhly, and was driving furiously away at the eighthly.

For first of women she must buy her husband, pay for him with all she has secondly, when she has bought him, she has bought a master, one to lord it over her very person thirdly, the danger of buying a bad one fourthly, that divorce is not creditable fifthly, that she ought to be a prophetess, and is not to know what sort of a man he is to whose house she is to go, where all is strange to her sixthly, that if she does not like her home, she must not leave it, nor look out for sympathising friends seventhly, that she must have the pains and troubles of bearing children eighthly, she gives up country, home, parents, friends, for one husband and perhaps a bad one.

Eighthly, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? Then this shews the true cause why Satan makes such head as he doth against him. The Father and the Holy Spirit are well spoken of by all deluders and deceived persons; Christ only is the rock of offence. "Behold I lay in Zion a stumbling-stone and a rock of offence;" Rom. ix. 33.

Eighthly, that matter, arranged, modified, and combined in a certain mode, produces in some beings what we call intelligence, which is one of its modes of being, not one of its essential properties, Ninthly, that matter is not a free agent, since it cannot act otherwise than it does, in virtue of the laws of its nature, or of its existence; that consequently, heavy bodies must necessarily fall; light bodies by the same necessity rise; fire must burn; man must experience good and evil, according to the quality of the beings whose action he experiences.

O'Connell's eulogy on The O'Conor Don for "accepting an office, which would enable him to serve his country." Eighthly: Mr. O'Connell's assertion, in his speech at Conciliation Hall: "I did not begin this quarrel; in my absence in London, an attack was made on the Whig ministry." And, finally: The boasted acceptance by Mr.

Sixthly it adheres. But here the interpreter goes astray under the preoccupation of the times: 'heret significat hereticum et infidelem; hence "It is not good to take the children's bread and cast it unto dogs, that is to heretics and infidels." Seventhly it is a star; hence are named the dog days, in which that star has dominion. Eighthly it swims in the sea; the dog fish.

"Quite so," nodded the Duchess, "highly filial and very pious, oh, indeed, most righteous and laudable, but there remains an eighthly, Barnabas." "And pray, madam, what may that be?" "What of Cleone?" Now when the Duchess said this, Barnabas turned away to the window and leaning his head in his hands, was silent awhile. "Cleone!" he sighed at last, "ah, yes Cleone!" "You love her, I suppose?"