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Updated: June 23, 2025


I have seen him, I say, at a party like this, drinking a health to the microscope as the giver of all the good things on the table he, the great Thénard, with an income of fifteen to twenty thousand pounds a year, and a reputation solid as the four massive text-books that stood to his name. "Duthil," said Thénard, "I have secured, I believe, a man for our friend Berselius."

The one is Madame SUIN, who certainly justifies the character she bears of a woman of judgment; for she has the most just delivery of all the performers belonging to the Theatre Francais; but she is advanced in years, and the public often treat her with rudeness. The other confidante is Mademoiselle THENARD, who has played the parts of princesses at this theatre with a partial success.

According to Stahl, the ferment is somebody who knocks the table, and shakes the card-house down; according to Fabroni, the ferment takes out some cards, but puts others in their places; according to Thénard, the ferment simply takes a card out of the bottom story, the result of which is that all the others fall.

"In fact," said Adams, "he is a villain, this Captain Berselius?" "Oh, no," said Thénard, "not in the least. Be quiet, Duthil, you do not know the man as I do. I have studied him; he is a Primitive " "An Apache," said Duthil. "Come, dear master, confess that from the moment you heard that this Berselius was intent on another expedition, you determined to throw a foreigner into the breach.

In the characters which she first represented she was very successful, but is no longer so at the present day. Characters of Confidantes. Mesdames SUIN and THENARD. There are two only who are deserving of notice.

This he explained whilst offering cigarettes. Thénard, like many another French professor, unofficially was quite one with the students. He would snatch a moment from his work to smoke a cigarette with them; he would sometimes look in at their little parties.

It is also known that some of these acids, which were called long ago by Thenard azohumic, are enabled to dissolve colloid silica in proportion to the nitrogen which they contain. In the formation of these latter acids worms probably afford some aid, for Dr. H. Johnson informs me that by Nessler's test he found 0.018 per cent. of ammonia in their castings.

'No more French doctors, if possible, said you. Is not that so?" Thénard laughed the laugh of cynical confession, buttoning his overcoat at the same time and preparing to go. "Well, there may be something in what you say, Duthil. However, there the offer is a sound one financially. Yes. I must say I dread that two thousand francs a month will prove a fatal attraction, and, if Mr.

Thénard was a smallish man in a rather shabby frock-coat; his beard was scant, pointed, and gray-tinged; he had a depressed expression, the general air of a second-rate tradesman on the verge of bankruptcy; and as he entered and crossed to the estrade where the lecture table stood and the glass of water, he shouted some words vehemently and harshly to Alphonse, the theatre attendant, who, it seemed, had forgotten to place the box of coloured chalks on the table the sacred chalks which the lecturer used for colouring his diagrams on the blackboard.

This is decomposed by distillation, and gives rise to alcohol. Next, in 1803, Thénard propounded a hypothesis which partakes somewhat of the nature of both Stahl's and Fabroni's views. "I do not believe with Lavoisier," he says, "that all the carbonic acid formed proceeds from the sugar. How, in that case, could we conceive the action of the ferment on it?

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