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Updated: May 6, 2025
No; if belief of what thou sawest remained with thee thou wouldest eat fire and brimstone first. I will propound again.
"Always ready for duty, Colonel. I guess you military men know that we doctors are in a sort of class with yourselves when it comes to that." "You're right. Now I won't be much more than a minute, and what I want to ask you, I can propound right here as well as anywhere. You know I'm working to save Darcy?" "So I've heard." "Well, you examined Mrs. Darcy soon after she was found dead.
To the mechanical industries of the country, in their multifold forms, our new responsibilities propound the questions, not merely of naval and military protection, but of material development, which, first beneficent to the inhabitants and to the land, gives also, and thereby, those firm foundations of a numerous and contented population, and of ample local resources, upon which alone military power can securely rest.
Buffon may have been actuated, both here and in his other famous hypothesis of reproduction, by a desire, less to propound a true and durable explanation, than to arrest by a bold and comprehensive generalisation that attention, which is only imperfectly touched by mere collections of particular facts.
There were really some delightful hours among the four. Lester liked to take the little seven-year-old school-girl between his knees and tease her. He liked to invert the so-called facts of life, to propound its paradoxes, and watch how the child's budding mind took them.
P'ing Erh nodded her head and smiled. "According to my views, success is not so certain," she observed. "She and I have often secretly talked this matter over, and the arguments I heard her propound don't make it the least probable that she'll consent. But all we can say now is: 'We'll see!" "Madame Hsing," lady Feng remarked, "is sure to come over here to consult with me.
In his time heat engines were not yet very common, and no one had reflected much on their theory. He was doubtless the first to propound to himself certain questions, and certainly the first to solve them.
He was, therefore, always severe upon his violent associates, and was always in friendly relation with his moderate opponents." It is obviously impossible to discuss all these questions in a volume, still less to propound in detail the steps to be taken in dealing with them.
The French emigrants believed that they had only to threaten with a similar fate men like Kellermann and Hoche to make them flee without a blow. What chiefly concerned the nobles, therefore, was not to evolve a masterly campaign, but to propound the fundamental principles of monarchy, and to denounce an awful retribution on insurgents.
"But can we keep away from them that long?" asked Dol Kenor, pointedly; and his fellow Venerian also had a question to propound: "Would it not be preferable to lead them in a wide circle, back to a rendezvous with the Space Fleet, which will probably be ready by the time of meeting?" "I am afraid that that would be useless," Westfall frowned in thought.
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