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These though commonly used, after they were given him, were omitted on this occasion; probably as a tacit reproof of his denial of his Lord, a little before; which had been occasioned by the failure of his courage by the deficiency of his firmness. The manner in which his divine master, here addressed this disciple, seemed to imply a doubt of his love; or of the supremacy of it.

O. J. Lodge warns us, quite rightly, that perhaps, after all, there is no such thing as electricity that electrification and electric energy may be terms to be kept for convenience; but if electricity as a term be held to imply a force, a fluid, an imponderable, or a thing which could be described by some one who knew enough, then it has no degree of probability, for spinning atomic magnets seem capable of developing all the electrical phenomena we meet.

But In fact the case is always found to be otherwise, The empire of Great Britain seems to draw along with it the dominion of the Orkneys, the Hebrides, the isle of Man, and the Isle of Wight; but the authority over those lesser islands does not naturally imply any title to Great Britain.

The laundress and the concierge waited on the pavement, discussing the neighborhood, and giving an eye to Nana, to prevent her from dabbling in the gutter, where she wanted to look for little fishes; and the two women kept glancing up at the roof, smiling and nodding their heads, as though to imply that they were not losing patience.

It was amazing to see her here, opposite the man of whom she had told him that ghastly story, mistress of his house, to all appearance his consort, apparently engrossed in his polished conversation, yet with that subtle withholding of her real self which Francis rather imagined than felt, and which somehow seemed to imply her fierce resentment of her husband's re-entry into the arena of life.

'It seems wickedly deceptive to look at now, but it had a much more natural origin than you think. My sole wish was not to endanger our love. O Harry! that was all my idea. It was not much harm. 'Yes, yes; but independently of the poor miserable creature's remarks, it seems to imply something wrong. 'What remarks? 'Those she wrote me now torn to pieces.

It is apparent, that the inventors of all these fictions intend some exaltation of themselves, and are led off by the pursuit of honour from their attendance upon truth: their narratives always imply some consequence in favour of their courage, their sagacity, or their activity, their familiarity with the learned, or their reception among the great; they are always bribed by the present pleasure of seeing themselves superior to those that surround them, and receiving the homage of silent attention and envious admiration.

The difference does not in the least imply that the servant speaks to the lay white man and his wife in a more familiar manner than he would to his spiritual teacher. No disrespect nor rude familiarity is intended quite the reverse; it is merely an affectionate manner of speaking to the employer, not as an employer, but as the friend of the household generally.

"Do you speak from experience, now, Miss Goodwin?" asked Woodward, rather dryly. "O! no," replied Alice, "I have only his own word for it." "Only his own word. Miss Goodwin! Do you imply by that, that his own word requires corroboration?" Alice blushed again, and felt confused. "I assure you, Mr. Woodward," said O'Connor, "that when my word requires corroboration, I always corroborate it myself."

When he can himself give no account of his motives, and even declares that he cannot assign any cause, I am authorized and required to find motives for him, corrupt motives for a corrupt act. There is no one capital act of his administration that did not strongly imply corruption.