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Dollinger, Isaiah, Melanchthon, Lenormant, Humboldt, Sir John Lubbock, and Don Domingo Juarros, finally satisfying himself that the statue was "brought over by a colony of Phenicians," possibly several hundred years before Christ. See the "Galaxy" article, as above, passim.

Comte's Positive Polity, vols. i. and ii, passim. Comte, Positive Polity, ii 116. See Delisle Burns, Morality of Nations, and The Unity of Western Civilization, passim. Purgatorio, ix. 94-108. If I am unable to deliver this lecture in person, it will be because I have to attend in Jersey to the excavation of a cave once occupied by men of the Glacial Epoch.

When the time came for Rousseau to pay and depart, the peasant's fears returned. He refused money, he was evidently distressed. Vauban, 51, and passim. As it was for the advantage of individuals to be thought poor, so it was best for villages to appear squalid.

Howard, passim. The English have long boasted that torture is not allowed by their law; and although the peine forte et dure was undoubted torture, the boast is in general not unfounded. Torture was abolished in several parts of Germany in the eighteenth century, but lingered in other parts until the nineteenth. It was not done away in Baden until 1831.

This last Anthidium is the victim also of the Unarmed Zonitis. Thus we have two closely-related exploiters for the same victim. Bramble-bees and Others: chaps. i., iii. and x. Bramble-bees and Others: passim. During the last fortnight of July, I witness the emergence of the Burnt Zonitis from the pseudochrysalis. The latter is cylindrical, slightly curved and rounded at both ends.

For example, see his Own Story, 82; but, unfortunately, one may refer to that book passim for evidence of the statement. N. and H. iv. 469. Ibid. v. 140. Letter to Lincoln, February 3, 1862. Army of Potomac, 97. Swinton says: "He should have made the lightest possible draft on the indulgence of the people." Ibid. 69. General Webb says: "He drew too heavily upon the faith of the public."

From the King's Quair and the poems of Henryson, Dunbar, and Gawain Douglas, select passages that show first-hand intimacy with nature. Compare these with lines from any poet whose knowledge of nature seems to you to be acquired from books. Ballads. Ward. I., passim, contains among others three excellent ballads, Sir Patrick Spens, The Twa Corbies, Robin Hood Rescuing the Widow's Three Sons.

I wish to be usefull to you being with regard sir Your most obt. hl. servant ESTEVAN MIRO. The duplicity of the Spaniards is well illustrated by the fact that the Gardoqui MSS. give clear proof that they were assisting the Creeks with arms and ammunition at the very time Miro was writing these letters. See the Gardoqui MSS., passim, especially Miro's letter of June 28, 1786.

"The Hunting Wasps": passim. The most important matter has escaped me. What I wanted, what I still want to see is the Pompilus engaged in mortal combat with the Lycosa. What a duel, in which the cunning of the one has to overcome the terrible weapons of the other! Does the Wasp enter the burrow to surprise the Tarantula at the bottom of her lair? Such temerity would be fatal to her.

Huxley's Writings, passim. Haeckel's "Natural History of Creation." Weismann's "Studies in the Theory of Descent" and subsequent papers. Romanes's "Scientific Evidences of Organic Evolution." Lankester's "Degeneration." Fiske's "Darwinism and Other Essays." For adverse criticism of Darwin, read Mivart's "Genesis of Species," and the Duke of Argyll's "Unity of Nature."