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In the first the sources have already been emended and classified; in the second the preliminary work on the sources, which has been only partially done, or not at all, offers no great difficulty; in the third the sources are in a very bad state, and require a great deal of labour to fit them for use.

'Seventeen last May-day; but the minister does not like to hear me calling it May-day, said she, checking herself with a little awe. 'Phillis was seventeen on the first day of May last, she repeated in an emended edition. 'And I am nineteen in another month, thought I, to myself; I don't know why. Then Phillis came in, carrying a tray with wine and cake upon it.

And this forms the transcendental deduction of all speculative ideas, not as constitutive principles of the extension of our cognition beyond the limits of our experience, but as regulative principles of the systematic unity of empirical cognition, which is by the aid of these ideas arranged and emended within its own proper limits, to an extent unattainable by the operation of the principles of the understanding alone.

'Henrietta, he said firmly, 'come and have dinner and we'll talk about it. 'If you'll promise to help me. 'There's nothing I want to do so much, he said. 'We mustn't forget the bag. 'Somewhere quiet, Charles, she murmured. 'Somewhere good, he emended. She looked down, 'Such old clothes. 'It doesn't matter what you wear, he told her. 'You always look different from anybody else.

"So," she remarked, as they passed through the great gilt gate out to the noisy street, "you think a woman should have children to keep a man true to her." "Tied to her," Marion Reddon emended, "and truer than he otherwise might be. Then they are something in case the husband quits altogether if he turns out to be a bad lot. Most of them don't, of course; they are loyal and faithful.

You know, that frightful young brother of yours " "I know, I know," said Bob. "Burgess was telling me. He wants kicking." "He wants a frightful licking from the prefects," emended the aggrieved party. "Well, I don't know, you know. Not much good lugging the prefects into it, is there? I mean, apart from everything else, not much of a catch for me, would it be, having to sit there and look on.

which stands so in Hanmer, and, indeed is the usually received arrangement of the song. This is the last corrected passage in the first act, in the course of which Mr. Collier gives us no fewer than sixteen, altered, emended, and commented upon in his folio.

Her fame is well known, how the Bishop of Exeter sent her a gold coin of Portugal in reward for an elegant epistle; how familiarly she corresponded with Erasmus; how she emended the text of Cyprian, imitated the Declamations of Quintilian, and translated the Ecclesiastical History of Eusebius. More, English Works, 1557, f. 154 E. See F. Watson, Vives and the Renascence Education of Women, 1912.

Andrea Mongaio of Belluno lived long at Damascus for the purpose of studying Avicenna, learnt Arabic, and emended the author's text. The Venetian government afterwards appointed him professor of this subject at Padua. We must here linger for a moment over Pico della Mirandola, before passing on to the general effects of humanism.

Blake's text has been emended and corrected and 'improved, so largely and so habitually, that there was a very real danger of its becoming permanently corrupted; and this danger was all the more serious, since the work of mutilation was carried on to an accompaniment of fervent admiration of the poet. 'It is not a little bewildering, says Mr.