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Both branches of the Congress, controlled by Radicals, pronounced his conduct to have been illegal and unjust, and he was driven from the bench with articles of impeachment hanging over him. Nevertheless, the Government evolved from his unjudicial consciousness was upheld by President Grant with Federal bayonets.

The two Canadian, representatives refused to sign the award and denounced it as unjudicial and unwarranted. The decision set Canada aflame. Lord Alverstone was denounced in unmeasured terms. From Atlantic to Pacific the charge was echoed that once more the interests of Canada had been sacrificed by Britain on the altar of Anglo-American friendship. The outburst was not understood abroad.

"To brook controul without the use of anger," and that so Mr. "To brook reproof without the use of anger," and hereupon Dr. Ingleby asks, "Is it not possible that here Mr. Such an objection is worthy of notice only as an example of the carping, unjudicial spirit in which this subject is treated by some of the British critics. Mr.

"My conscience will not permit me to betray a confidence!" she cried angrily. "I direct you to answer!" ordered the judge. "I object to the court's threatening the witness!" interjected Mr. Tutt. "I wish it to appear upon the record that the manner of the court is most unjudicial and damaging to the defendant." "Take your seat, sir!" barked Babson, his features swelling with anger.

The judge did not check the demonstration; on the contrary, he smiled a beaming welcome and was unjudicial enough to nod familiarly from his high bench. The case was called with the usual forms of procedure, when, to the disgust of Old Jim and the auditors generally, Daviess asked a further postponement owing to the absence of an indispensable witness, John Adair.

Such is the hasty and unjudicial nature of children that this single sentence finished the career of "The Christian News" with the younger generation. But Darius liked it, and continued to like it. He enjoyed it. He would spend an hour and a half in reading it. And further, he enjoyed cutting open the morsel.

It is in criticism, I think, though no doubt in criticism alone, preferable to lose one's self in a maze of perplexity distressing as this is to the critic who appreciates the indispensability of clairvoyance in criticism rather than to reach swiftly and simply a conclusion which candor would have foreseen as the inevitable and unjudicial result of following one's own likes and whims, and one's contentment with which must be alloyed with a haunting sense of insecurity.