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Updated: May 29, 2025
He went into his house despairing. Unto this last hour a little hope had shone through the darkness. At times the odds had seemed to be against him, at one time Heaven itself had seemed to declare itself his foe. But the remedium had existed, the thing was still possible, the light burned, though distant, feeble, flickering.
Already in his mind's eye he saw Basterga cast to the lions: and why not? The sooner the better if the remedium were really at the door. "There may be news even now," he said, striving to master his emotion, and to speak with the superiority of a few minutes before. "One moment, by your leave! I will see and let you know if it be so, Messer Fabri." "Do by all means," Fabri answered earnestly.
Nec minus apud indigenas quam apud Europaeos, remedium hujusoe morbi speciale: medicamenta sunt mercurialia, majore tamen illis cum periculo, tum propter eorum mores, quum quod plerumque sub dio vivunt, omni absente medicina. Post annum primum aut alterum morbus evanescit, interdum mortem affert. Semper autem aegrotis miseris cruciatus maximus et dolores perpetui inde flunt.
While other men, Baudichon and Petitot for instance, to say nothing of Fabri and Du Pin, reaped where they had not sown. That, by the way; for it had naught to do with the matter in hand the discovery of a scheme which would place the remedium within his grasp. He thought awhile of the young student. He might make a second attempt to coerce him.
Connexis, with some intervening link, such as fences, hedges, and outhouses; cohaerentibus, in immediate contact. Remedium inscitia. It may be as a remedy, etc. or it may be through ignorance, etc. Sive sive expresses an alternative conditionally, or contingently==it may be thus, or it may be thus. Compare it with vel vel, chap. 15, and with aut aut, A 17. See also Ramshorn's Synonyms, 138.
There is a Latin maxim which his Majesty cited at the banquet last night Etiam aconito inest remedium and which may be freely rendered by our homely saying, that 'It is an ill wind that bloweth nobody good luck; and this hath proved true with Sir Jocelyn Mounchensey for the gust that hath wrecked your father hath driven him into port, where he now rides securely in the sunshine of the King's favour.
"The remedium," he said, "my good friend, is in the Grand Duke's Treasury at Turin. It is in a steel box, it is true, but in one with three locks and three keys, sealed with the Grand Duke's private signet and with mine; and laid where the Treasurer himself cannot meddle with it." The Syndic sat up straight, and with his eyes fixed sullenly on the floor fingered his beard.
Therefore I have been experimenting botanically to discover a remedium for the state in question something that will act swiftly upon the blood, and directly dissipate such a clot as is spoken of above." "My dear Professor! I can announce with joy that this remedium is discovered.
Remedium is acc. in app. with the foregoing clause. Inscitia is abl. of cause==per inscitiam. Caementorum. Tegularum. Citra. Properly this side of, hence short of, or without, as used by the later Latin authors. This word is kindred to cis, i.e. is with the demonstrative prefix ce. Cf. Freund sub v. Speciem refers more to the eye, delectationem to the mind.
She must parley with him until she could collect her thoughts; until she could make up her mind whether he was sane or mad and what it behoved her to do. "Comes to have it!" he cried vehemently. "God knows! And what matter? 'Tis the remedium, I tell you, whoever has it!
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