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Updated: June 17, 2025
Michael Faraday, the son of a blacksmith, was in early life apprenticed to a bookbinder, and worked at that trade until he reached his twenty-second year: he now occupies the very first rank as a philosopher, excelling even his master, Sir Humphry Davy, in the art of lucidly expounding the most difficult and abstruse points in natural science.
"Not," her host lucidly insisted, "if you hadn't paid too much." "What do you call," she asked, "little enough?" "Well, what should you say to fifteen pounds?" "I should say," said Charlotte with the utmost promptitude, "that it's altogether too much." The dealer shook his head slowly and sadly, but firmly. "It's my price, madam and if you admire the thing I think it really might be yours.
Julia Bride could, at the point she had reached, positively ask herself this even while lucidly conscious of the inimitable, the triumphant and attested projection, all round her, of her exquisite image.
"This baby joining the prominent characteristics of the two was the oddest little mortal I have ever seen. What did its expression convey to me? 'I am fairly caught, and must brazen out the situation! There! that was what it was; I cannot put it more lucidly. Only the thing's wee face was animal conscious for the first time of itself, and inclined to rejoice in that primitive energy of knowledge.
But certainly nature has taken care that this danger should not at present be very threatening. One could not fairly describe the generality of one's neighbours as too lucidly aware of manifesting in their own persons the weaknesses which they observe in the rest of her Majesty's subjects; on the contrary, a hasty conclusion as to schemes of Providence might lead to the supposition that one man was intended to correct another by being most intolerant of the ugly quality or trick which he himself possesses. Doubtless philosophers will be able to explain how it must necessarily be so, but pending the full extension of the
The strangeness," she lucidly said, "is in what my purchase was to represent to me after I had got it home; which value came," she explained, "from the wonder of my having found such a friend." "'Such a friend'?" As a wonder, assuredly, her husband could but take it. "As the little man in the shop. He did for me more than he knew I owe it to him.
It was several minutes before Ruth could get any clear account from her sister of what had happened. But when she did finally get into the story, Agnes told it lucidly and she held Ruth's undivided attention, the reader may be sure. "Poor Neale indeed!" murmured Ruth. "What can we do?" demanded Agnes. "I don't know. But surely, there must be some way out. I I'll telephone to Mr. Howbridge."
What possible pleasure can she take in teaching them?" Anna had an idea of the pleasure it might be to feel that one was doing good, but she could not explain lucidly, so she did not attempt it. She only said Miss Alice was very benevolent and received her reward in the love bestowed upon her so freely by those whom she befriended.
She must be rather a swell." "Oh yes, she's rather a swell!" "A Woollett swell bon! I like the idea of a Woollett swell. And you must be rather one too, to be so mixed up with her." "Ah no," said Strether, "that's not the way it works." But she had already taken him up. "The way it works you needn't tell me! is of course that you efface yourself." "With my name on the cover?" he lucidly objected.
These gentlemen are themselves of "the unthinking masses" they do not know how to think. Let them try to trace and lucidly expound the chain of motives lying between the knowledge that a murderer has been hanged and the wish to commit a murder. How, precisely, does the one beget the other?
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