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It pleased our Lord that he should be as good and favourable to this house as it was necessary he should be on account of the great opposition it met with at the beginning, as I shall show hereafter, and also for the sake of bringing it to the condition it is now in. Blessed be He who has done it all! Amen. Ch. xxi. section 6, ch. xxix. sections 10, 11. Pedro Ibanez. See ch. xxxviii. section 15.

Beruete is real, so Cossio, the author of the El Greco biography; so the realistic novelist Blanco Ibañez; but the best, after those of his, Sorolla's, wife and children, is that of Frantzen, a photographer, in the act of squeezing the bulb. It is a frank characterisation.

Ibanez was accused of having espoused the Austrian party in the succession war, and was banished to Peru; and after him, the government was successively administered until the year 1720, by Don Juan Henriquez, Don Andres Uztariz, and Don Martin Concha.

I suppose our library must have a thousand books, and I've read nearly all of them besides stacks of the modern ones we always brought from our semi-annual cruises 'to the world' as he used to call those trips. Don't you simply adore Blasco?" "I suppose you mean Ibañez," I said, rather pleased at being able to air this familiarity with literary personages.

Miscalled the "Spanish Rome," Gautier's description still holds good: Toledo has the character of a convent, a prison, a fortress with something of a seraglio. The enormous cathedral, which dates back to Visigothic Christianity, is, next to Seville's, the most beautiful in Spain. Such a façade, such stained glass, such ceilings! Blanco Ibañez has written pages about this structure.

I'd put down all about the two young novelists who used to meet every day in City Hall Park to compare notes while they were hunting for jobs, and make wagers as to whose pair of trousers would last longer. But then there are other topics, too, such as the question whether Ibáñez always wears a polo shirt, as the photos lead one to believe.

Baroja may surpass him in variety of external experience, Azorín in delicate art, Ortega y Gasset in philosophical subtlety, Ayala in intellectual elegance, Valle Inclán in rhythmical grace. Even in vitality he may have to yield the first place to that over-whelming athlete of literature, Blasco Ibáñez.

Ellen Ibañez or Bennett was less than five feet from him, and her eyes were fixed firmly on his face. She seemed surprised, but tried to smile. "I thought I left you asleep, Will," she said, in a tone that was meant to be bantering. "'Smatter, the fuse blow?" He accepted the excuse for his presence in the basement. "Yeah, it did. You left the iron on. I wondered what happened to you?" "Nothing.

See vol. ii. p. 376 of Don Vicente's edition. See Ch. xxxix. section 25. He died Oct. 18, 1562. Ch. xxvii. section 21. "El Padre Presentado, Dominico. The father was Fra Pedro Ibanez. See ch. xxxviii. section 15. From the monastery of the Incarnation. These were Ana of St. John, Ana of All the Angels, Maria Isabel, and Isabel of St. Paul. St.

The Life of Christ, by Ludolf of Saxony. F. Pedro Ibanez. See ch. xxxiii. section 5, ch. xxxvi. section 23. St. Joseph, Avila, where St. Teresa was living at this time. See below, section 41. F. Gaspar de Salazar: see ch. xxxiii. section 9, ch. xxxiv. section 2. 2 Cor. xii. 2: "Sive in corpore nescio, sive extra corpus nescio." See ch. xxviii. Job iv. 15: "Inhorruerunt pili carnis meae."