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Updated: May 18, 2025


But in his SIECLE DE LOUIS XV. he drops, with proud modesty, a little foot-note upon it: "The Author was with the King of Prussia at that time; and can affirm that Cardinal de Fleury was totally astray in regard to the Prince he had now to do with."

Sub-section A ought to be in a foot-note, family B is doubtful; and so the corrections grow and run over the margin in a thin treble hand, till they approach the bulk of the original book a good profit for the printer; and so after about forty years the monograph is published the work of a life is accomplished.

Doctor Beard in his previously mentioned treatise refers, on page 27, to the views of others who have repeated Edison's experiments and observed the phenomena, and in a foot-note says: "Professor Houston, of Philadelphia, among others, has repeated some of these physical experiments, has adopted in full and after but a partial study of the subject, the hypothesis of rapidly reversed electricity as suggested in my letter to the Tribune of December 8th, and further claims priority of discovery, because he observed the spark of this when experimenting with a Ruhmkorff coil four years ago.

She swept them all, critics as well as the immense audience, clean off their feet. Also, by way of a foot-note, the managerial announcement that Madame Carresford had volunteered for the part at six o'clock, to rescue them from the necessity of closing the park and was to sing it absolutely without rehearsal, exploded for all time the notion that there was anything of the amateur about her.

Then followed Hugh Mainwaring's signature. At the bottom of the page, however, was a foot-note of much later date, which put a different complexion on the foregoing, and which read as follows: "It has now been ascertained for a certainty that the beneficiary mentioned in the accompanying will is no longer living.

In my book on Eugenics there is merely the briefest allusion in a foot-note to this subject, and I confess myself now ashamed of having dealt with it in that utterly inadequate fashion.

Lovel would graciously expound a page or two of a Greek play, or dilate on the subtilty of some learned foot-note, for his daughter's benefit, but rather with the air of one gentleman at his club inviting the sympathy of another gentleman than with the tone of a father instructing his child. Sometimes, but very rarely, they had company. Mr.

Hegel is dealing, in a sense, with both. I have indicated, in a foot-note, that Nietzsche ought to be read in the original. He is a marvellous artist. Perhaps I should add that Nietzsche will be read with most pleasure by those who do not attempt to find in his works a system of ethics. I need only say that many moralists have commented upon the negative aspect of the moral law.

A. 102, c; G. 291, Rem.; H. 450, 1. n. and foot-note 4. DELIRATIO: 'dotage'; a rare word, used by Cic. only here and in Div. 2, 90. ROBUSTOS: 'sturdy'; implying that the sons were grown up. TANTAM: sc. quantam habuit; only a little more emphatic than magnam would have been; see n. on 52. APPIUS: see n. on 16.

In a foot-note in her "Journal," she paid a grateful tribute to his "attention, care and faithfulness" to his rare devotion to her, especially during a period of physical weakness and nervous prostration, when such service as his was invaluable.

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