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Updated: June 26, 2025


Certain enough, Peace with Friedrich is now on the way; and cannot well linger: what prospect has Austria otherwise? Its very supplies from England will be stopped. Hyndford redoubles his diligence; Britannic Majesty reiterates at Vienna: "Did not I tell you, Madam; there is no hope or possibility till these Prussians are off our hands!"

Their homes represent the dull concession to a state rule; and their lives take tone from the grey, smoke-grimed repetition of one endlessly repeated design. The same foolish ornamentation on every house reiterates the same suggestion.

The object with which it was formed is best shown by its first notice, viz.: 'Notice is hereby given that this Committee adheres to the National Union Manifesto, and reiterates its desire to maintain the independence of the Republic.

Think what we owe to Goethe and Lessing, to Spinoza and Kant, to Heine and Mozart and Wagner and Beethoven, reiterates the Englishman; think what we owe to Shakespeare and Milton, to Byron and Shelley and Scott, to Lister and Newton, answers the German!

Mallet protests, but Napoleon reiterates the command, more peremptorily this time, and Mallet must obey. Then at the head of his old chasseurs, thus practically disarmed, the Emperor and he is every inch an Emperor now walks straight up to Delessart's opposing troops. Hot-headed St. Genis cries: "Here he is! Fire, in Heaven's name!"

Battles must be fought, but also those people had a right to such a sense of participation as only their press could give them; it was their issue; their attitude toward it was the foundation of their nation's morale. Foch has neither time nor taste for talk about himself, but he is no war autocrat; he is, as he constantly reiterates, a son of France, defending human liberties.

The Epistle to the Hebrews over and over again reiterates that thought that we have a Priest who has 'passed into the heavens, there to 'appear in the presence of God for us. And the Apostle Paul, in that great linked climax in the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, has it, 'Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us. There are deep mysteries connected with that thought of the intercession of Christ.

Only a slight noise it was, but one in that place of peculiar significance, being the hoof-stroke of a horse. "Good!" he ejaculates in a whisper, "it must be his." Hearkening a little longer, he hears the sound again, apparently further off, and as his practised ear tells him, the distance increasing. "It must be his horse," he reiterates, still continuing to listen.

From this time toothache, usually followed by the extraction of the guilty member, became almost of yearly recurrence, and his diary reiterates, with verbal variations, "indisposed with an aching tooth, and swelled and inflamed gum," while his ledger contains many items typified by "To Dr. Watson drawing a tooth 5/." By 1789 he was using false teeth, and he lost his last tooth in 1795.

He reiterates his conviction of Jesus' innocence, and then, after all this flourish about his own carefulness to bring judicial impartiality to bear on the case, he makes the lame and impotent conclusion of offering to 'chastise Him. What for? The only course for a judge convinced of a prisoner's innocence is to set him free.

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