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I have just this moment an opportunity of a private hand to Edinburgh, as perhaps you would not digest double postage. XCIX. To MRS. DUNLOP. MAUCHLINE, August 2nd, 1788. HONOURED MADAM, Your kind letter welcomed me, yesternight, to Ayrshire.

"APER." Well tusked, with a head of maize in his mouth; at least I suppose it to be maize, though shaped like a pine-cone. Sixth side. "CHANIS." With a bone, very ill cut; and a bald-headed species of dog, with ugly flap ears. Seventh side. Eighth side. "URSUS." With a honeycomb, covered with large bees. SECTION XCIX. TWENTY-FIRST CAPITAL. Represents the principal inferior professions.

Let Thy servant depart in peace; for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation, and then we may go to see it better in that world where we shall all, if we attain thither, be 'satisfied' when we 'awake in His likeness. 'Thou wast a God that forgavest them, though Thou tookest vengeance of their inventions. PSALM xcix. 8.

So the sipahies were told to bring this Bhuyan and they went to a potter and asked. "Ho, maker of pots, he who makes whole paddy into china: where does he live?" And the potter answered. "He who heats pewter; his house is over there." Following this direction they found the Bhuyan and he caught the thieves for them. XCIX. The Grasping Raja. There was once a Raja who was very rich.

Palmer was even more bold. Preaching on Psalm xcix. 8, this delicate little creature laid about him most manfully. Parliament are rebuked for eluding the Covenant, for too great tenderness in their dealings with delinquents, and for remissness in the prevention and punishment of false doctrine.

Say yes to your old troubadour, he will be EXCEEDINGLY GRATEFUL to you for it. I embrace you six times if you say yes. G. Sand XCIX. TO GEORGE SAND Tuesday Dear master, You cannot imagine the sorrow you give me! In spite of the longing I have, I answer "no." Yet I am distracted with my desire to say "yes." It makes me seem like a gentleman who cannot be disturbed, which is very silly.

Simon's Mémoires; Voltaire's Siècle de Louis XIV.; Guizot's History of France; Early Days of Madame de Maintenon, Eclectic Magazine, xxxii. 67; Life and Character of Madame de Maintenon, Quarterly Review, xcvi. 394; Fortnightly Review, xxv. 607; Temple Bar, Iv. 243; Fraser, xxxix. 231; Mémoires of Louis XIV., Quarterly Review, xix. 46; James's Life and Times of Louis XIV.; James's Life of Madame de Maintenon; Secret Correspondence of Madame de Maintenon; Taine on the Ancien Régime; Browning's History of the Huguenots, Edinburgh Review, xcix. 454; Butler's Lives of Fénelon and Bossuet; Abbé Ledieu's Mémoire de Bossuet; Bentley, Memoirs de Madame de Montespan, xlviii. 309; De Bausset's Life of Fénelon.

LETTER XCIX. TO CAPTAIN JOHN PAUL JONES, August 29,1785 Paris, August 29,1785. Sir, I received this moment a letter from the Marechal de Castries, of which the enclosed is a copy.

Olbers, and of the Comet which was expected to appear last January in its Return from the Sun. Phil. Trans., vol. xcviii. Observations of a Comet, made with a view to investigate its Magnitude, and the Nature of its Illumination. Phil. Trans., vol. xcix. Continuation of Experiments for investigating the Cause of Coloured Concentric Rings, and other Appearances of a similar Nature. Phil.

The statement in the text is an inference suggested by Professor Maitland's account of the statute De asportis religiosorum. For the last struggle of Edward and Winchelsea, see Stubbs's preface to Chron. of Edw. I. and Edw. II., i., xcix.-cxiii. At Clement V.'s coronation at Lyons, in November, England was represented by Winchelsea's old enemy, Bishop Walter Langton, and by the Earl of Lincoln.