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Updated: May 9, 2025
But she had lately married, to his great amusement, and her husband had taken her on a wedding-tour, which was to be at the same time professional. Luna. I need not reproduce it in extenso; a pale reflexion of it will serve. She reproached him with neglecting her, wanted to know what had become of him, whether he had grown too fashionable for a person who cared only for serious society.
The symptoms described by Dr. Deaver are those of collapse, following perforation, diffuse peritonitis to be followed soon by death, or of narcotism morphine paralysis, soon to be described in extenso when we come to treatment.
Should he reproduce it there fore IN EXTENSO? Such, after mature deliberation and not without certain moral misgivings, he conceived to be his duty towards posterity. Veiled in the obscurity of a learned tongue, the joke was surreptitiously introduced into the company of a thousand chaste footnotes that could dispense with such covering devices.
It frightened my own friends on its first appearance, and, several years afterwards, when younger men began to translate for publication the four volumes in extenso, they were dissuaded from doing so by advice to which from a sense of duty they listened. It was an apparent accident which introduced me to the knowledge of that most wonderful and most attractive monument of the devotion of saints.
The delicately carved rood-loft, or jube, the small sculptures of the choir and nave, and the flamboyant chapels of the fifteenth to seventeenth century, challenge minute attention from those who would study decorative detail in extenso.
Since writing the above, an article on the subject has appeared in the Melbourne Argus which is worth quoting in extenso: 'We have undertaken to consider whether anything can be done to overcome the unwillingness which nearly all Australian girls exhibit to enter domestic service.
The results are related in extenso in the Report of the Royal Society, illustrated by maps and diagrams, and are worthy of careful study by those interested in terrestrial phenomena. A brief summary is all that can be given here, but it will probably suffice to bring home to the reader the magnitude and grandeur of the eruption.
The only possible result could be that the public was, to say the least, confounded, and did not know what to make of it. Indeed, I heard at Dresden that the public became acquainted with the dramatic meaning of the opera only by reading the book in extenso; in other words, they understood the performance by disregarding the visible performance and making additions from their own imagination.
Nothing has been too small to escape him, and you may be sure that if Charles Strickland left a laundry bill unpaid it will be given you <i in extenso>, and if he forebore to return a borrowed half-crown no detail of the transaction will be omitted. When so much has been written about Charles Strickland, it may seem unnecessary that I should write more. A painter's monument is his work.
Before, however, passing to the details of this last month, the following letters are given in extenso as they form the last lengthy sketches of his work drawn by his own hand. 'Tientsin, L.M.S.: April 20, 1891. My dear Mrs. Ar'n't you? If so, thanks. If not I was going to say you ought to be but my courage fails me.
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