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I dod’t say dothin’ to flatter do wud; lots of fellers ad gals cub here ad I tell theb all jest what I see; if I see bad luck I tell theb so; but yours is all good luck, ad I see lots of it for you. You have had bad luck lately, but you will get over your bad luck for you are a pretty sbardt chap, ad have got a good deal of abbitiod, ad you go ahead pretty well.

So a, b, Iren., Vigil., Ambr., Jer. John vi. 39. Non perdam ex eo quicquam. Crt. John vi. 51. Et panis quem ego dedero pro salute mundi, caro mea est. Crt., Theb., Aeth., Orig., Cypr. John xii. 30. The instances that have been here given are all, or nearly all, false readings on the part of Tertullian. It is, of course, only as such that they are in point for the present enquiry.

We may note detached similes like that of the light reflected in water, Aen. viii. 15, imitated in Theb. vi. 578; that of the horse from Homer, Aen. xi. 491, which Statius has not dared to imitate; and others not referable to any of the above groups may easily be found. It is clear that Virgil and Statius attached more importance to this ornament than Lucan.

Virgil, who reserves nearly all his similes for the last six books, occasionally strikes an original key. The lion, as may be supposed, furnishes many. We subjoin a further list which may be useful to the reader. Phars. i. 206. Theb. ii. 675; iv. 494; v. 598; vii. 670; viii. 124; ix. 739, and perhaps v. 231. The Serpent, dragon, &c. Aen. xi, 751; v. 273. Theb. v. 599; xi. 310.

Blyth writes to me from Calcutta that there are some doubts about this bird. Ovid introduces it in his Fasti, L. vi. l. 139; and Tibullus in his Elegies, L. i. El. 5. Statius says Nocturnæque gemunt striges, et feralla bubo Damna canens. Theb. iii. l. 511. But Pliny, l. xi. c. 93, doubts as to what bird produced the sound; and the details of Ovid's description do not apply to an owl. Mr.

Mythological Phars. ii. 715; iv. 549; vii. 144. Theb. ii. 81; iv. 140; xii. 224, 270. Theb. i. 370; iii. 255; vi. 777; vii. 864. The Winds Aen. x. 856. Phars. i. 498. Theb. i. 194; iii. 432; v. 704. The Boar Aen. x. 707. Theb. viii. 533. Trees Aen. ix. 675. Phars. i. 136. Theb. viii. 545. Birds Aen. v. 213; xii. 473; xi. 721; vii. 699. Theb. ix. 858; xii. 15.

The famous paragraph which describes the moving of the waters of the pool of Bethesda was found in Tertullian's MS. It is also found in the mass of MSS., in the Old Latin and Vulgate, in Syrr. Pst. and Jer., and in some MSS. of Memph. Crt., Theb., Memph. Tertullian gives the name of the pool as Bethsaida with B, Vulg., c, Syr. Hcl., Memph. John v. 43. Recepistis, perf. for pres.

"I dod't wadt eddy cold shots," she repeated stubbornly. "But why not? Just one little needle, you'd hardly feel it." "But I dod't like deedles!" she cried, bursting into tears. "Why dod't you leave be alode? Go take your dasty old deedles ad stick theb id people that wadt theb." "Aw, Ellie " "I dod't care, I dod't like deedles!" she wailed, burying her face in his shirt.

All the more surprising is it that it receives no mention from Vasari, who merely states that the master worked at Castelfranco. Statius: Theb. iv. 730 ff. See p. 135. Aen. viii. 306-348. Fry: Giovanni Bellini, p. 39. ii. 214.

Didn't the Iddiads wear theb? Tish is very sensitive to lack of sympathy and she shut up like a clam. She was coldly polite to us for the remainder of our visit, but she did not again refer to the Indians, which in itself was suspicious. Fortunately for us, or unfortunately, Tish's new scheme was one she could not very well carry out alone.