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I mention these things because it is right you know them; they are an additional proof that, even in this world, the Providence has decreed that injustice and violence shall meet with their appropriate punishment, and that justice and mercy shall also have their reward, etc. etc. Lettre de lord Palmerston

79 20 Par exemple: 'as luck would have it'; cf. note to 11 24. 79 23 tête de bédouin: 'Bedouin-like head'; cf. note to 1 5. 79 27 Toujours la folie orientale! 'his craze about things oriental was still with him! 79 30 tout en haut = tout

Hamlet ne dit-il point, au moment vient de lui apparaître l'ombre de son père: There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than there are dreamt of in your philosophy?... Eh bien, Luisa, c'est d'un de ces mystères que je vous parle. Mon ami, dit Luisa, savez-vous que parfois vous m'effrayez? Le jeune homme lui serra la main et la regarda de son plus doux regard.

Revue des Traditions populaires, VIII, 591; IX, 195, 217, 233. Timbs, Things generally not known, I, 175. La Bédollière, Les Industriels, 83, 85. E. Rolland, Faune populaire. V, 67. Jacques de Vitry, Exempla, 70 (éd. de Folk-Lore Society). E. Monteil, l'Industrie française. I, 92, 243. De Lamare, Traité de la police, III, 85, 86. Legrand d'Aussy, Vie privée des Français, I, 307. Assier, Légendes de la Champagne, 47, 48. Vinçard, Les Ouvriers de Paris, 131, 157. Desmaze, Curiosités des anciennes justices, 313. Ant. Caillot, Vie publique des Français, II, 212, 218. Souvenirs

Lemercier de Neuville, Physiologie du coiffeur, 56, 138. Fournier, Histoire des enseignes, 135, 303. 157. Akerlio, Eloge des perruques, 161. Lefeuve, Histoire de Paris, rue par rue, I, 505. Challamel. Timbs, Things generally not known, I. 124; II. 20. Ant. Caillot, Vie publique des Français, II, 117. Cambry. Revue des traditions populaires. Sarcaud, Légendes du Bassigny champenois, 33.

The first part is misquoted in various forms, as here, by Europeans who have been confused by the series of sounds. 92 3 viédaze: a Provençal word, used of persons, = 'a good for nothing, of things, = 'a trifle. Here 'isn't worth a straw.

Voici donc comment s'exprime M. Cobden: «Let me thank you for introducing to us Mr. Fonteyraud, who excited our admiration not only by his superior talents, but by the warmth of his zeal in the cause of free-trade. I have rarely met with a young man of his age possessing so much knowledge and so mature a judgement both as respects men and things.

I am working at its preparation and write while the model reposes... it is not the preparation, as we say at Julian's, I am only doing studies for it must not be done in an atelier;... well, I was going to tell the great secret... I am glad to hear Miss Webb does good things, she is nice; mes très sincères amitiés to her and Miss B...

Qu'a-t-il vu? 7. Qu'a-t-il fait? 8. Après le coup de fusil qu'a-t-on vu dans l'air? 9. Qu'est-ce que Tartarin a aperçu? 10. Qu'est-ce que Tartarin a tué? Put not your trust in princes. 2. He raised his head and asked if the captain knew where the prince was. 3. I believe that he even let himself be caught. 4. Besides, I know he saw only the most disagreeable things. 5.

If not a beast-like, yet a priest-like zeal. And sad it is to think he should feel so, My candid reader, both for you and me. For if things take a natural course you know, Why they may chance to shock your modesty, If you have any: yet, indeed, I trow To be without it is almost an oddity, 'Tis common now-a-days; though folks 'tis said Ne'er fail to doff it when they go to bed.