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Horatius did not miss the opportunity, and, also without mentioning the dead, or the murdered native girl, or the assaults, answered him in his Pirotecnia: "After such great charity and such great humanity, Fray Ibañez I mean, Ben-Zayb brings himself to pray for the Philippines. But he is understood. Because he is not Catholic, and the sentiment of charity is most prevalent," etc.

Not condescendingly but very companionably she accompanied Milt in the exploration of their camp for the night the big dining tent, the city of individual bedroom tents, canvas-sided and wooden-floored, each with a tiny stove for the cold mornings of these high altitudes. She was awed that evening by hearing her waitress discussing the novels of Ibanez.

The commencement of the eighteenth century was remarkable in Chili by three events: The deposition of the governor Don Francisco Ibanez, the rebellion of the inhabitants of Chiloé, and the establishment of trade with the French.

He'd played with a girl named Ellen, once when he was eleven and she was nine. She'd had bright copper hair, and her name had been what had it been? Not Ibañez. Bennett, that was it. Ellen Bennett. He must have said it aloud. She chuckled. "Of course, Will. Though I never thought you'd be the same Will Hawkes.

The present vogue of Señor Blasco Ibáñez is more sentimental than justified, but in "Luxury" he has written an admirable story, and the other five stories have a certain distinction of coloring. I have called attention to previous volumes in this edition of Chekhov from time to time.

When the world has been slaking its literary thirst at sources such as H. G. Wells, Galsworthy, Ibanez only to mention a few should we be astonished that public opinion is drifting to paganism? If theories of "Free Love" and Divorce are rampant in our society, the responsibility to a great extent lies with our modern novel.

It would be difficult to find two men who, dealing with the same ideas, bring to them more antagonistic attitudes of mind than Baroja and Blasco Ibanez. For all his appearance of modernism, Blasco really belongs to the generation before 1898.

The friar-journalist, in spite of his respect for the cowled gentry, was always at loggerheads with Padre Camorra, whom he regarded as a silly half-friar, thus giving himself the appearance of being independent and refuting the accusations of those who called him Fray Ibañez.

"Ibañez, then," she casually agreed, "if you prefer calling him by his mother's name." And, not knowing upon what hazy path this would lead me, I laughingly admitted: "Well, I've only tackled one of his things, and haven't even finished that yet." Adding, with perhaps a slightly malicious desire to bring her superior knowledge to bay: "You read him in the original, I suppose?"

Addressed, it is believed, to her confessor, F. Pedro Ibanez. See Life, ch. xxvii. See Life, ch. xxxi. section 15. The Saint is supposed to refer to the troubles she endured during the foundation of the monastery of St. Joseph. Gal. ii. 20: "Vivo autem, jam non ego; vivit vero in me Christus." Relation III. Of Various Graces Granted to the Saint from the Year 1568 to Inclusive.