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Updated: May 19, 2025


Hadn't she! It was burning hot scalding! He must guess from the steaming flavour what it was! Thereupon came the by-play of the Humorist after the fashion of Munden, who, according to Charles Lamb, "understood a leg of mutton in its quiddity." It was thus with the Reader when he syllabled, with watering lips, guess after guess at the half-opened basket. It's it's mellower than polonies.

Yet even the mob you should study in a capital, as Shakespeare did in his 'Julius Caesar' and 'Coriolanus; for only so can you know it in its quiddity. I conjure you, child, to get your sense of men from their capital cities." He had something to tell of almost every great house we passed.

'Where entity and quiddity, 'Like ghosts of defunct bodies fly Where Truth in person does appear Like words congealed in northern air. But none of them seem to find any relish for their studies no pedantic love of this subject or that lights up their eyes science and learning are only means for a livelihood, which they have considerately embraced and which they solemnly pursue.

This, Lamb was ready to allow; as an intellectual quiddity, he recognized pomp in the character of a privileged thing; he was obliged to do so; for take away from great ceremonial festivals, such as the solemn rendering of thanks, the celebration of national anniversaries, the commemoration of public benefactors, &c., the element of pomp, and you take away their very meaning and life; but, whilst allowing a place for it in the rubric of the logician, it is certain that, sensuously, Lamb would not have sympathized with it, nor have felt its justification in any concrete instance.

Omer. There you indeed appreciate the dead-alive city 'in all its quiddity. But a few days in a 'dead-alive' city, were it the most picturesque in the world, would be intolerable. By noon, when the sun has grown oppressively hot, I find myself set down at a sort of rural town, once flourishing, and of some importance Bethune.

A discourse quite admirable in intention, though if "heckling" had been in order on that occasion, a sharp youth might have put Mr Arnold in some difficulty by asking where the canons of "moral adequacy" are written. But The Future of Liberalism, which the Elizabethans would have called a "cooling-card" after the Liberal triumph of 1880, exhibits its author's political quiddity most clearly.

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