e enjte, 26 korrik 2007

The reasons for believing in Australia are mostly as sentimental



as the most sentimental reasons for believing in heaven
The reasons for believing in Australia are mostly as sentimental
as the most sentimental reasons for believing in heaven.
New South Wales is quite literally regarded as a place where the wicked
cease from troubling and the weary are at rest; that is, a paradise
for uncles who have turned dishonest and for nephews who are born tired.
British Columbia is in strict sense a fairyland, it is a world where
a magic and irrational luck is supposed to attend the youngest sons.
This strange optimism about the ends of the earth is an English weakness;
but to show that it is not a coldness or a harshness it is quite
sufficient to say that no one shared it more than that gigantic
English sentimentalist--the great Charles Dickens. The end
of 'David Copperfield' is unreal not merely because it is an
optimistic ending, but because it is an Imperialistic ending.
The decorous British happiness planned out for David Copperfield and Agnes
would be embarrassed by the perpetual presence of the hopeless tragedy
of Emily, or the more hopeless farce of Micawber. Therefore, both Emily
and Micawber are shipped off to a vague colony where changes
come over them with no conceivable cause, except the climate.
The tragic woman becomes contented and the comic man becomes responsible,
solely as the result of a sea voyage and the first sight of a kangaroo.


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Let American liberty be an intelligent liberty, and therefore a



self-sustaining liberty
Let American liberty be an intelligent liberty, and therefore a
self-sustaining liberty. Freedom, more or less complete, has been found
in two conditions of life. Man, in a rude state, where his condition
seemed to be normal, rather than the result of a process of mental and
moral degeneracy, has often possessed a large share of independence; but
this should by no means be confounded with what in America is called
liberty. The independence of the savage, or nomad, is manifested in the
absence of law; but the liberty of an American citizen is the power to
do whatever may be beneficial to himself, and not injurious to his
neighbor nor to the state. The first leaves self-protection and
self-regulation to the individual, while the latter restrains the
aggressive tendencies of all for the security of each. The first is
natural equality without law; the second is natural equality before the
law. With the first, might makes right; with the latter, right makes
might. With the first, the power of the law, or of the will of an
individual or clan, is in the rigor and success of execution; with the
latter, the power of the law is in the justice of its demand. We, as a
people, have passed the savage and nomadic state, and can return to it
only after a long and melancholy process of decay and change, out of
which ultimately might come a new and savage race of men. This, then, is
not our immediate, even if it be a possible danger. But we are to guard
against intellectual, political, and moral degeneracy. We are, through
family, religious, and public education, to take security of the
childhood and youth of the land for the preservation of the institutions
we have, and for the growth, greatness, and justice, of the republic.
Liberty in America, if you will admit the distinction, is a growth and
not a creation. The institutions of liberty in America have the same
character. By many centuries of trial, struggle, and contest, through
many years of experience, sometimes joyous, and sometimes sad, the fact
and the institutions of liberty in America have been evolved. It has not
been a work of destruction and creation, but a process of change and
progress. And so it must ever be. Reformation does not often follow
destruction; and they who seek to destroy the institutions of a country
are not its friends in fact, however they may be in purpose. Ignorance
can destroy, but intelligence is required to reform or build up. Let
the prejudice against learning, not common now, but possibly existing in
some minds, be forever banished. Learning is the friend of liberty. Of
this America has had evidence in her own history, and in her observation
of the experience of others. The literary institutions and the
cultivated men of America, like Milton and Hampden in England, preferred


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e mërkurë, 25 korrik 2007

It is proper to advert to one specific influence in moral enactments,



serving to disguise the Ethical end, and to widen the distinction
between morality as it has been, and morality as it ought to be
It is proper to advert to one specific influence in moral enactments,
serving to disguise the Ethical end, and to widen the distinction
between morality as it has been, and morality as it ought to be. The
enforcing of legal and moral enactments demands a _power of coercion_,
to be lodged in the hands of certain persons; the possession of which
is a temptation to exceed the strict exigencies of public safety, or
the common welfare. Probably many of the whims, fancies, ceremonies,
likings and antipathies, that have found their way into the moral
codes of nations, have arisen from the arbitrary disposition of
certain individuals happening to be in authority at particular
junctures. Even the general community, acting in a spontaneous manner,
imposes needless restraints upon itself, delighting more in the
exercise of power, than in the freedom of individual action.


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1



1. _Disinterestedness_. Under the name _Sympathy_, Hartley includes
four kinds of feelings:--(1) Rejoicing at the happiness of
others--Sociality, Good-will, Generosity, Gratitude; (2) Grieving for
the misery of others--Compassion, Mercy; (3) Rejoicing at the misery of
others--Anger, Jealousy, Cruelty, Malice; and (4) Grieving for the
happiness of others--Emulation, Envy. All these feelings may be shown
to originate in association. We select as examples of Hartley"s method,
Benevolence and Compassion. Benevolence is the pleasing affection that
prompts us to act for the benefit of others. It is not a primitive
feeling; but grows out of such circumstances as the following. Almost
all the pleasures, and few, in comparison, of the pains, of children,
are caused by others; who are thus, in the course of time, regarded
with pleasure, independently of their usefulness to us. Many of our
pleasures are enjoyed along with, and are enhanced by, the presence of
others. This tends to make us more sociable. Moreover, we are taught
and required to put on the appearance of good-will, and to do kindly
actions, and this may beget in us the proper feelings. Finally, we must
take into account the praise and rewards of benevolence, together with
the reciprocity of benefits that we may justly expect. All those
elements may be so mixed and blended as to produce a feeling that shall
teach us to do good to others without any expectation of reward, even
that most refined recompense--the pleasure arising from a beneficent
act. Thus Hartley conceives that he both proves the existence of
disinterested feeling, and explains the manner of its developement.


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e martë, 24 korrik 2007

In every large city throughout the world thousands of women are so set



aside as outcasts from decent society that it is considered an
impropriety to speak the very word which designates them
In every large city throughout the world thousands of women are so set
aside as outcasts from decent society that it is considered an
impropriety to speak the very word which designates them. Lecky calls
this type of woman 'the most mournful and the most awful figure in
history': he says that 'she remains, while creeds and civilizations rise
and fall, the eternal sacrifice of humanity, blasted for the sins of the
people.' But evils so old that they are imbedded in man"s earliest
history have been known to sway before an enlightened public opinion and
in the end to give way to a growing conscience, which regards them first
as a moral affront and at length as an utter impossibility. Thus the
generation just before us, our own fathers, uprooted the enormous upas
of slavery, 'the tree that was literally as old as the race of man,'
although slavery doubtless had its beginnings in the captives of man"s
earliest warfare, even as this existing evil thus originated.


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'Miss A---- graduated with honor at the normal school after several



years of close study, much of the time out of school; never attended
balls or parties; sank into a low state of health at once with
depression
'Miss A---- graduated with honor at the normal school after several
years of close study, much of the time out of school; never attended
balls or parties; sank into a low state of health at once with
depression. Was very absurdly allowed to marry while in this state,
and soon after became violently insane, and is likely to remain so.'


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To me this modification of the Laplacian hypothesis is



unsatisfactory, for several reasons
To me this modification of the Laplacian hypothesis is
unsatisfactory, for several reasons. To mention only one: if
Jupiter was a large gaseous mass extending out as far as the
8th and 9th satellites, the gaseous body was very highly
attenuated; friction in the outer strata would be essentially a
negligible quantity, and tidal retardation would not be very
effective; and it would be under just these conditions that
loss of heat from the planet should be most rapid and the rate
of increase of retrograde rotation resulting therefrom be
comparatively high. It would seem that the rotation of the
planet in the retrograde direction must have accelerated under
the contractional cause, rather than have decreased and
reversed in direction under an excessively feeble tidal cause.


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e hënë, 23 korrik 2007

[L] THAT IS, WHERE--ACCORDING TO THE MORTALITY TABLES UPON WHICH



PREMIUMS ARE BASED--100 WERE EXPECTED TO DIE, ONLY 66 ACTUALLY DIED
[L] THAT IS, WHERE--ACCORDING TO THE MORTALITY TABLES UPON WHICH
PREMIUMS ARE BASED--100 WERE EXPECTED TO DIE, ONLY 66 ACTUALLY DIED.


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The constant little struggles of the Greeks among themselves



made no great showing as to numbers compared to other wars, but
they wiped out the most valuable people, the best blood, the
most promising heredity on earth
The constant little struggles of the Greeks among themselves
made no great showing as to numbers compared to other wars, but
they wiped out the most valuable people, the best blood, the
most promising heredity on earth. This cost the world more than
the killing of millions of barbarians. In two centuries there
were born under the shadow of the Parthenon more men of genius
than the Roman Empire had in its whole existence. Yet this
empire included all the civilized world, even Greece herself.
(La Pouge.)


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To get a clue to the common idea running through all these meanings,



the author refers to the etymology of the word, which, in most
languages, points to something ordained by _law_
To get a clue to the common idea running through all these meanings,
the author refers to the etymology of the word, which, in most
languages, points to something ordained by _law_. Even although there
be many things considered just, that we do not usually enforce by law,
yet in these cases it would give us pleasure if law could be brought to
bear upon offenders. When we think a person bound in justice to do a
thing, we should like to see him punished for not doing it; we lament
the obstacles that may be in the way, and strive to make amends by a
strong expression of our own opinion. The idea of legal constraint is
thus the generating idea of justice throughout all its transformations.


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e diel, 22 korrik 2007

Thus it is seen that there are great gaps in the different rates to



which our senses are fitted to respond--a sudden drop from billions in
the case of the eye to millions in touch, and to thousands or even tens
in hearing
Thus it is seen that there are great gaps in the different rates to
which our senses are fitted to respond--a sudden drop from billions in
the case of the eye to millions in touch, and to thousands or even tens
in hearing. This makes one wonder whether there are not many things in
nature which man has never discovered simply because he has not the
sense mechanism enabling him to become conscious of their existence.
There are undoubtedly 'more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt
of in our philosophy.'


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e shtunë, 21 korrik 2007

Foods to avoid, in cases of overweight, are sugar, fats, milk as a



beverage, salmon, lobster, crabs, sardines, herring, mackerel, pork and
goose, fat meats, nuts, butter, cream, olive oil, pastry and sweets,
water at meals
Foods to avoid, in cases of overweight, are sugar, fats, milk as a
beverage, salmon, lobster, crabs, sardines, herring, mackerel, pork and
goose, fat meats, nuts, butter, cream, olive oil, pastry and sweets,
water at meals. Alcohol, which is not a food, although often so called,
should be avoided, as it is a fuel. It is good to burn in a stove, but
not in the human body.


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The preceding physiological and pathological data naturally open the



way to a consideration of the co-education of the sexes
The preceding physiological and pathological data naturally open the
way to a consideration of the co-education of the sexes.


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e premte, 20 korrik 2007

Blindness or tobacco amblyopia, a form of neuritis, is not an uncommon



affection among smokers
Blindness or tobacco amblyopia, a form of neuritis, is not an uncommon
affection among smokers. There is also often an irritant effect on the
mucous membranes of eyes from the direct effect of the smoke.


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e enjte, 19 korrik 2007

THE NORMAL WILL



THE NORMAL WILL.--The golden mean between these two abnormal types of
will may be called the _normal_ or _balanced_ will. Here there is a
proper ratio between impulsion and inhibition. Ideas are not acted upon
the instant they enter the mind without giving time for a survey of the
field of motives, neither is action 'sicklied o"er with the pale cast of
thought' to such an extent that it becomes impossible. The evidence is
all considered and each motive fully weighed. But this once done,
decision follows. No dilatory and obstructive tactics are allowed. The
fleeting impulse is not enough to persuade to action, neither is action
unduly delayed after the decision is made.


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e mërkurë, 18 korrik 2007

The analysis thus far he claims to be strictly scientific; he now



proceeds to vary the case, taking actions of our own
The analysis thus far he claims to be strictly scientific; he now
proceeds to vary the case, taking actions of our own. I am supposed
entrusted by a dying friend with a deposit for another, and a struggle
ensues between interest and probity as to whether I should pay it. If
interest conquers, remorse ensues. He paints the state of remorse, and
analyzes it into the same elements as before, the idea of _good_ and
_evil_, of an _obligatory law_, of _liberty_, of _merit_ and _demerit_;
it thus includes the whole phenomenon of morality. The exactly opposite
state that follows upon the victory of probity, is proved to imply the
same facts.


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e martë, 17 korrik 2007

The POLITIKUS is on the Art of Government, and gives the Platonic



_beau ideal_ of the One competent person, governing absolutely, by
virtue of his scientific knowledge, and aiming at the good and
improvement of the governed
The POLITIKUS is on the Art of Government, and gives the Platonic
_beau ideal_ of the One competent person, governing absolutely, by
virtue of his scientific knowledge, and aiming at the good and
improvement of the governed. This is merely another illustration of
the Sokratic ideal--a despotism, anointed by supreme good intentions,
and by an ideal skill. The Republic is an enlargement of the lessons
of the Politikus without the dialectic discussion.


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The nature of moral _approbation_ being thus solved, there remains the



nature of _obligation_; by which the author means to enquire, if a man
having a view to his own welfare, will not find his best account in the
practice of every moral virtue
The nature of moral _approbation_ being thus solved, there remains the
nature of _obligation_; by which the author means to enquire, if a man
having a view to his own welfare, will not find his best account in the
practice of every moral virtue. He dwells upon the many advantages of
social virtue, of benevolence and friendship, humanity and kindness, of
truth and honesty; but confesses that the rule that "honesty is the
best policy" is liable to many exceptions. He makes us acquainted with
his own theory of Happiness. How little is requisite to supply the
_necessities_ of nature? and what comparison is there between, on the
one hand, the cheap pleasures of conversation, society, study, even
health, and, on the other, the common beauties of nature, with
self-approbation; and the feverish, empty amusements of luxury and
expense?


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(1) It may be held that in performing good actions, we expect and



obtain an immediate reward fully equivalent to the sacrifice made
(1) It may be held that in performing good actions, we expect and
obtain an immediate reward fully equivalent to the sacrifice made.
Occasionally we are rewarded in kind; but the reward most usually
forthcoming (according to Mandeville), is praise or flattery, to which
the human mind is acutely sensitive.


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e hënë, 16 korrik 2007

President Hall calls attention to the fact that night is now the safest



time of the twenty-four hours; serpents are no longer our most deadly
enemies; strangers are not to be feared; neither are big eyes or teeth;
there is no adequate reason why the wind, or thunder, or lightning
should make children frantic as they do
President Hall calls attention to the fact that night is now the safest
time of the twenty-four hours; serpents are no longer our most deadly
enemies; strangers are not to be feared; neither are big eyes or teeth;
there is no adequate reason why the wind, or thunder, or lightning
should make children frantic as they do. But 'the past of man forever
seems to linger in his present'; and the child, in being afraid of these
things, is only summing up the fear experiences of the race and
suffering all too many of them in his short childhood.


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e premte, 13 korrik 2007

It is a very grave mistake to suppose that in such cases so-called arch



supports will either cure flat foot or that people with weak feet are
necessarily condemned to wear such supports throughout life
It is a very grave mistake to suppose that in such cases so-called arch
supports will either cure flat foot or that people with weak feet are
necessarily condemned to wear such supports throughout life.


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e enjte, 12 korrik 2007

In temperament and ambitions the spirits of the dead remained



as they were upon earth, but of more monstrous growth in all
respects, resembling giants greater and more vicious than man
In temperament and ambitions the spirits of the dead remained
as they were upon earth, but of more monstrous growth in all
respects, resembling giants greater and more vicious than man.
War and cannibalism still prevailed in heaven, and the
character of the inhabitants seems to have been fiendish or
contemptible as on earth; for the spirits of women who were not
tattooed were unceasingly pursued by their more fortunate
sisters, who tore their bodies with sharp shells, often making
mince-meat of them for the gods to eat. Also the shade of any
one whose ears had not been pierced was condemned to carry a
masi log over his shoulder and submit to the eternal ridicule
of his fellow spirits.


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We have many feelings that urge us to act and abstain from acting; but



the prompting of conscience has something peculiar to itself, which
has been expressed by the terms rightness, authority, supremacy
We have many feelings that urge us to act and abstain from acting; but
the prompting of conscience has something peculiar to itself, which
has been expressed by the terms rightness, authority, supremacy. Other
motives,--hunger, curiosity, benevolence, and so on,--have might, this
has right.


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The same is true, of course, of physical capacity



The same is true, of course, of physical capacity. Sandow has an
extraordinary muscular ability, developed by certain exercises. Similar
exercises will not, however, develop all men into Sandows, no matter
how constant their faith and persistent their efforts. Sandow was, we
may assume, hereditarily gifted with a superior muscular capacity, which
his exercises have enabled him to fully develop. It is true, however,
that few people ever realize their full physical and mental capacities,
owing to lack of opportunity, inclination, etc., and that there
generally exist untold possibilities for improvement for those who wish
to get the most out of themselves.


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e mërkurë, 11 korrik 2007

In the meantime a chemical explanation of the phenomena



observed by Galvani had been proposed in 1792 by Fabroni, a
physicist of Florence
In the meantime a chemical explanation of the phenomena
observed by Galvani had been proposed in 1792 by Fabroni, a
physicist of Florence. After discussing the Sulzer phenomenon
already mentioned in this paper, Fabroni argues that the
peculiar taste caused by bringing the two metals into contact
while on the tongue is due to a chemical, rather than to an
electrical, action. He then discusses the different chemical
behavior of metals when taken singly and when placed in contact
with other metals. He says:[2]


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Another experience during which a girl faces a peculiar danger is when



she has lost one 'job' and is looking for another
Another experience during which a girl faces a peculiar danger is when
she has lost one 'job' and is looking for another. Naturally she loses
her place in the slack season and pursues her search at the very moment
when positions are hardest to find, and her un-employment is therefore
most prolonged. Perhaps nothing in our social order is so unorganized
and inchoate as our method, or rather lack of method, of placing young
people in industry. This is obvious from the point of view of their
first positions when they leave school at the unstable age of fourteen,
or from the innumerable places they hold later, often as high as ten a
year, when they are dismissed or change voluntarily through sheer
restlessness. Here again a girl"s difficulty is often increased by the
lack of sympathy and understanding on the part of her parents. A girl is
often afraid to say that she has lost her place and pretends to go to
work each morning while she is looking for a new one; she postpones
telling them at home day by day, growing more frantic as the usual
pay-day approaches. Some girls borrow from loan sharks in order to take
the customary wages to their parents, others fall victims to
unscrupulous employment agencies in their eagerness to take the first
thing offered.


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e martë, 10 korrik 2007

"The effective cause of the whole phenomenon in either case is



the greater affinity of oxygen for zinc rather than copper
"The effective cause of the whole phenomenon in either case is
the greater affinity of oxygen for zinc rather than copper."


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One of the simplest and most effective methods of avoiding



self-poisoning is by maintaining an erect posture
One of the simplest and most effective methods of avoiding
self-poisoning is by maintaining an erect posture. In an erect posture
the abdominal muscles tend to remain taut and to afford proper support
or pressure to the abdomen, including the great splanchnic circulation
of large blood-vessels. In an habitual slouching posture, the blood of
the abdomen tends to stagnate in the liver and the splanchnic
circulation, causing a feeling of despondency and mental confusion,
headache, coldness of the hands and feet, and chronic fatigue or
neurasthenia, and often constipation.




e hënë, 9 korrik 2007

The scientific program of the meeting began with a lecture by



Professor Michael I
The scientific program of the meeting began with a lecture by
Professor Michael I. Pupin, of Columbia University, who
described the work on aerial transmission of speech of which no
authentic account has hitherto been made public. To Professor
Pupin we owe the discovery through mathematical analysis and
experimental work of the telephone relays which recently made
speech by wire between New York City and San Francisco
possible, and we now have an authoritative account of speaking
across the land and sea a quarter way round the earth. One
session of the academy was devoted to four papers of general
interest. Professor Herbert S. Jennings, of the Johns Hopkins
University, described experiments showing evolution in
progress, and Professor John M. Coulter, of the University of
Chicago, discussed the causes of evolution in plants Professor
B. B. Boltwood made a report on the life of radium which may he
regarded as a study of inorganic evolution. Professor Theodore
Richards, of Harvard University, spoke of the investigations
recently conducted in the Wolcott Gibbs Memorial Laboratory.
These are in continuation of the work accomplished by Professor
Richards in the determination of atomic weights, which led to
the award to him of a Nobel prize, the third to be given for
scientific work done in this country, the two previous awards
having been to Professor Michelson, of the University of
Chicago, in physics, and Dr. Carrel, of the Rockefeller
Institute, in physiology.


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Chapter III



Chapter III. continues the subject, and examines objections. The first
objection taken up is that derived from the influence of education,
with which he combines the farther objection (of Locke and his
followers) arising from the diversity of men"s moral judgments in
various nations. With regard to education, he contends that there are
limits to its influence, and that however it may modify, it cannot
create our judgments of right and wrong, any more than our notions of
beauty and deformity. As to the historical facts relating to the
diversity of moral judgments, he considers it necessary to make full
allowance for three circumstances--I.--Difference of situation with
regard to climate and civilization. II.--Diversity of speculative
opinions, arising from difference of intellectual capacity; and,
III.--The different moral import of the same action under different
systems of behaviour. On the first head he explains the indifference to
theft from there being little or no fixed property; he adduces the
variety of sentiments respecting Usury, as having reference, to
circumstances; and alludes to the differences of men"s views as to
political assassination. On the second head he remarks, that men may
agree on _ends_, but may take different views as to means; they may
agree in recognizing obedience to the Deity, but differ in their
interpretations of his will. On the third point, as regards the
different moral import of the same action, he suggests that Locke"s
instance of the killing of aged parents is merely the recognized mode
of filial affection; he also quotes the exceeding variety of ceremonial
observances.


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e shtunë, 7 korrik 2007

The author next examines the _particular laws_ embodying justice and



determining property
The author next examines the _particular laws_ embodying justice and
determining property. He supposes a creature, having reason, but
unskilled in human nature, to deliberate with himself how to distribute
property. His most obvious thought would be to give the largest
possessions to the most virtuous, so as to give the power of doing good
where there was the most inclination. But so unpracticable is this
design, that although sometimes conceived, it is never executed; the
civil magistrate knows that it would be utterly destructive of human
society; sublime as may be the ideal justice that it supposes, he sets
it aside on the calculation of its bad consequences.


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e premte, 6 korrik 2007

To get a clue to the common idea running through all these meanings,



the author refers to the etymology of the word, which, in most
languages, points to something ordained by _law_
To get a clue to the common idea running through all these meanings,
the author refers to the etymology of the word, which, in most
languages, points to something ordained by _law_. Even although there
be many things considered just, that we do not usually enforce by law,
yet in these cases it would give us pleasure if law could be brought to
bear upon offenders. When we think a person bound in justice to do a
thing, we should like to see him punished for not doing it; we lament
the obstacles that may be in the way, and strive to make amends by a
strong expression of our own opinion. The idea of legal constraint is
thus the generating idea of justice throughout all its transformations.


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In sitting at a desk or table, when reading or working, the common fault



is to adopt a sprawling attitude, with the shoulders hunched up, the
elbows stretched outward, the body too far away from the desk or table,
and the weight resting on the buttocks
In sitting at a desk or table, when reading or working, the common fault
is to adopt a sprawling attitude, with the shoulders hunched up, the
elbows stretched outward, the body too far away from the desk or table,
and the weight resting on the buttocks. Very often the desk or table is
too high and the arms can not rest easily upon it, thus causing a
continuous strain on the structures around the shoulder-joints.


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e enjte, 5 korrik 2007

Not content with these five express moral principles, he considers that



the Supreme Law requires, as adjuncts, two other virtues; to these he
gives the names EARNESTNESS, or Zeal, and MORAL PURPOSE, meaning that
everything whatsoever should be done for _moral ends_
Not content with these five express moral principles, he considers that
the Supreme Law requires, as adjuncts, two other virtues; to these he
gives the names EARNESTNESS, or Zeal, and MORAL PURPOSE, meaning that
everything whatsoever should be done for _moral ends_.


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AT the Manchester meeting of the British Association for the



Advancement of Science, Sir Arthur J
AT the Manchester meeting of the British Association for the
Advancement of Science, Sir Arthur J. Evans, F.R S., the
archeologist, honorary keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford,
was elected president for next year"s meeting, to be held at
Newcastle-on-Tyne. The meeting of 1917 will be held at
Bournemouth.


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Dostoievsky himself is of it, and is luminous not with a mere



facet flash of its philosophy but with the whole orb of it
Dostoievsky himself is of it, and is luminous not with a mere
facet flash of its philosophy but with the whole orb of it. To
him the Russians 'are more than human, they are pan-human.'


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e mërkurë, 4 korrik 2007

When the judgment of her peers becomes not less firm but more kindly,



the self-supporting girl will have a safeguard and restraint many times
more effective than the individual control which has become so
inadequate, or the family discipline that, with the best intentions in
the world, cannot cope with existing social conditions
When the judgment of her peers becomes not less firm but more kindly,
the self-supporting girl will have a safeguard and restraint many times
more effective than the individual control which has become so
inadequate, or the family discipline that, with the best intentions in
the world, cannot cope with existing social conditions.


cheapipod


It is now conceded that alcohol is not a real brain stimulant, but acts



by narrowing the field of consciousness
It is now conceded that alcohol is not a real brain stimulant, but acts
by narrowing the field of consciousness. By gradually overcoming the
higher brain elements the activities of the lower ones are released,
hence the so-called stimulation and the lack of judgment and common
sense often shown by those even slightly under the influence of alcohol.
The man who wakes up under alcohol is really going to sleep, as far as
his judgment and reason are concerned. Complete abolition of
consciousness is brought about by sufficient doses as when ether or
chloroform is taken.


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'He will come, back,' said he, 'my son will come; and I would now rather



see him dead than that he should fear to be a man
'He will come, back,' said he, 'my son will come; and I would now rather
see him dead than that he should fear to be a man.'




'"Fore heaven! some covert insult would seem to be intended,' exclaimed



Buckingham
'"Fore heaven! some covert insult would seem to be intended,' exclaimed
Buckingham. 'Who is this young man, Sir Giles?'




The spot selected for the May-pole was a piece of green sward in the



centre of the village, surrounded by picturesque habitations, and
having, on one side of it, the ancient Cross
The spot selected for the May-pole was a piece of green sward in the
centre of the village, surrounded by picturesque habitations, and
having, on one side of it, the ancient Cross. The latter, however, was
but the remnant of the antique structure, the cross having been robbed
of its upper angular bar, and otherwise mutilated, at the time of the
Reformation, and it was now nothing more than a high wooden pillar,
partly cased with lead to protect it from the weather, and supported by
four great spurs.




Like a bad dream did the trying experiences through which he had passed



seem, and he actually pinched himself to see if, after all, it might not
have been some sleep delusion
Like a bad dream did the trying experiences through which he had passed
seem, and he actually pinched himself to see if, after all, it might not
have been some sleep delusion. But the pain of the sharp nip he gave
himself satisfied him that he was indeed awake, and further evidence of
the fact that his experiences had been all too real was given by the
presence of the five-dollar bill in his pocket.




But not having yet completed our description of the charming Bordelaise



we must add that she possessed a rich southern complexion, fine
sparkling black eyes, shaded by long dark eye-lashes, and over-arched by
jetty brows, and that her raven hair was combed back and gathered in a
large roll over her smooth forehead, which had the five points of beauty
complete
But not having yet completed our description of the charming Bordelaise
we must add that she possessed a rich southern complexion, fine
sparkling black eyes, shaded by long dark eye-lashes, and over-arched by
jetty brows, and that her raven hair was combed back and gathered in a
large roll over her smooth forehead, which had the five points of beauty
complete. Over this she wore a prettily-conceived coif, with a frontlet.
A well-starched, well-plaited ruff encompossed her throat. Her upper lip
was darkened, but in the slightest degree, by down like the softest
silk; and this peculiarity (a peculiarity it would be in an
Englishwoman, though frequently observable in the beauties of the South
of France) lent additional piquancy and zest to her charms in the eyes
of her numerous adorers. Her ankles we have said were trim; and it may
be added that they were oftener displayed in an embroidered French
velvet shoe than in one of Spanish leather; while in walking out she
increased her stature 'by the altitude of a chopine.'




As De Gondomar with a profound obeisance drew back, the King put his



steed in motion
As De Gondomar with a profound obeisance drew back, the King put his
steed in motion. General attention having been thus called to Jocelyn,
all eyes were turned towards him, his appearance and attire were
criticised, and much speculation ensued as to what could be the Spanish
Ambassador"s motive for undertaking the presentation.




'Oh, thin, in trogs, it"s ill their common to hate you as they do; but



thin, you see, this faction-work will keep yees asundher for ever
'Oh, thin, in trogs, it"s ill their common to hate you as they do; but
thin, you see, this faction-work will keep yees asundher for ever. Now
gi" me your stick, an" wait, any way, till you see whether she comes or
not.'




While thus occupied, he perceived two persons issue from the arched



entrance fronting the gate (adjoining the porter"s lodge, in which the
prisoner was still detained), and make their way slowly across the
quadrangle, in the direction of the cloister on its eastern side, above
which were apartments assigned to the Secretary of State, Sir Thomas
Lake
While thus occupied, he perceived two persons issue from the arched
entrance fronting the gate (adjoining the porter"s lodge, in which the
prisoner was still detained), and make their way slowly across the
quadrangle, in the direction of the cloister on its eastern side, above
which were apartments assigned to the Secretary of State, Sir Thomas
Lake.




'Ellen,' said John, 'hear me



'Ellen,' said John, 'hear me. You never will become my wife till my
disgrace is wiped away. I love you too well ever to see you blush for
your husband. My mind"s made up--so say no more. Ay, an" I tell you that
to live three months in this state would break my heart.'




'Intercede not for me,' cried Hugh Calveley



'Intercede not for me,' cried Hugh Calveley. 'I would not accept any
grace at the tyrant"s hands. Let him hew me in pieces, and my blood
shall cry out for vengeance upon his head.'




Reassured by the information that it would be unnecessary for him to



leave the train in order to reach the proper car, Bob rose from the soft
and luxurious seat slowly
Reassured by the information that it would be unnecessary for him to
leave the train in order to reach the proper car, Bob rose from the soft
and luxurious seat slowly.




'I find such grave fault with it,' replied the Secretary of State, still



without looking up, 'that I would amend it by casting it into the
flames
'I find such grave fault with it,' replied the Secretary of State, still
without looking up, 'that I would amend it by casting it into the
flames. Lady Lake, it is my duty to warn you. This is a fearful crime
you would commit, and severely punishable by the law. You may excuse it
to yourself, because you have an end in view which seems to justify the
means; but the excuse will not avail you with others. You have said that
in a conflict with one so cunning and unscrupulous as our noble
son-in-law, you are compelled to fight him with his own weapons--to meet
trick with trick, manoevre with manoeuvre; but take my word for it, you
would more easily defeat him by straight-forward means. Be ruled by me
in this one instance. Abandon a scheme which must inevitably lead to
consequences I shudder to contemplate; and let this fabricated
confession be destroyed.'




'It all depends on whose ranch you strike



'It all depends on whose ranch you strike. Most cowpunchers don"t cotton
to tenderfeet. The last one that hit Fairfax stayed just three days and
was mighty glad to light out on a freight train.'




'That only shows how deceptive appearances are, chuck, and how little we



ought to trust to them,' observed Lord Roos
'That only shows how deceptive appearances are, chuck, and how little we
ought to trust to them,' observed Lord Roos.




'Oh, I say! you are surely not going to make that kid ride in the patrol



wagon?' protested one of the other newspaper men
'Oh, I say! you are surely not going to make that kid ride in the patrol
wagon?' protested one of the other newspaper men. 'That would be rubbing
it in too hard.'




'I won"t go in,' said Bob, shaking his head decidedly, 'but I"ll wait



over by that pile of boxes on the opposite side of the street
'I won"t go in,' said Bob, shaking his head decidedly, 'but I"ll wait
over by that pile of boxes on the opposite side of the street. Probably
he"ll be coming out before long.'




e martë, 3 korrik 2007

'What, you here!' the grocer exclaimed, as he regained control of



himself
'What, you here!' the grocer exclaimed, as he regained control of
himself. 'I thought--that is, I was told--I mean, I heard that you had
been arrested, and I didn"t expect to see you again for some time; that
is--I mean not here in the store. If you had been sent to prison I
should, of course, have gone to see you.'




The magistrate immediately despatched two of the constables, with strict



injunctions! to secure her, if possible
The magistrate immediately despatched two of the constables, with strict
injunctions! to secure her, if possible.




But Sir Giles continued perfectly unmoved by the tempest raging around,



and laughed to scorn these menaces, contenting himself with signing to
Captain Bludder to be in readiness
But Sir Giles continued perfectly unmoved by the tempest raging around,
and laughed to scorn these menaces, contenting himself with signing to
Captain Bludder to be in readiness.




'The prisoner!--gentlemen "prentices--do not forget him!' cried Cyprien,



who, with two other serving-men and the cook, had joined the assailing
party
'The prisoner!--gentlemen "prentices--do not forget him!' cried Cyprien,
who, with two other serving-men and the cook, had joined the assailing
party. 'Madame Bonaventure implores you to effect his rescue.'




'"Tis enough to drive an honest man distracted,' Jocelyn said, 'and you



cannot wonder at my indignation, though you may blame my want of
caution
'"Tis enough to drive an honest man distracted,' Jocelyn said, 'and you
cannot wonder at my indignation, though you may blame my want of
caution. I have said nothing half so strong as you have just uttered,
Master Wolfe.'




'Yes, I guess you were,' assented Bob, a bit ruefully, for he had



expected to have at least a portion of the food, put up for him by the
kind waitress, to eat during the day
'Yes, I guess you were,' assented Bob, a bit ruefully, for he had
expected to have at least a portion of the food, put up for him by the
kind waitress, to eat during the day.




Such action at first mystified Firefly, but Bob patted and spoke to him,



explaining what he was trying to do just as though he were talking to a
human being
Such action at first mystified Firefly, but Bob patted and spoke to him,
explaining what he was trying to do just as though he were talking to a
human being.




Such was the character which this woman bore; whether unjustly or not,



matters little
Such was the character which this woman bore; whether unjustly or not,
matters little. For the present it is sufficient to say, that after
having passed on, leaving Lamh Laudher to proceed in the direction he
had originally intended, she bent her steps towards the head inn of the
town. Her presence here produced some cautious and timid mirth of which
they took care she should not be cognizant. The servants greeted her
with an outward show of cordiality, which the unhappy creature easily
distinguished from the warm kindness evinced to vagrants whose history
had not been connected with evil suspicion and mystery. She accordingly
tempered her manner and deportment towards them with consummate skill.
Her replies to their inquiries for news were given with an appearance
of good humor; but beneath the familiarity of her dialogue there lay an
ambiguous meaning and a cutting sarcasm, both of which were tinged with
a prophetic spirit, capable, from its equivocal drift, of being applied
to each individual whom she addressed. Owing to her unsettled life, and
her habit of passing from place to place, she was well acquainted with
local history. There lived scarcely a family within a very wide circle
about her, of whom she did not know every thing that could possibly be
known; a fact of which she judiciously availed herself by allusions
in general conversations that were understood only by those whom they
concerned. These mysterious hints, oracularly thrown out, gained her the
reputation of knowing more than mere human agency could acquire, and of
course she was openly conciliated and secretly hated.




Needing time to think, the boy hastened along till he came to a building



which served as a saloon, diningroom and gambling den
Needing time to think, the boy hastened along till he came to a building
which served as a saloon, diningroom and gambling den.




'Why so you were, child,' the Puritan rejoined, 'because I had full



reliance on you, and did not conceive you could have been so easily
beguiled by Satan
'Why so you were, child,' the Puritan rejoined, 'because I had full
reliance on you, and did not conceive you could have been so easily
beguiled by Satan. I lament to find you cannot discern the superstition
and wickedness lurking within this false, though fair-seeming spectacle.
Do you not perceive that in setting up this wooden idol, and worshipping
it, these people are returning to the dark and sinful practices of
Paganism of which it is an undoubted remnant? If you cannot discern
this, I will make it manifest to you anon. But I tell you now briefly,'
he continued in a voice of thunder, calculated to reach those at a
distance, 'that the ceremony is impious; that those who take part in it
are idolaters; and that those who look on and approve are participators
in the sin; yea, are equal in sin to the actors themselves.'




'The prisoner!--gentlemen "prentices--do not forget him!' cried Cyprien,



who, with two other serving-men and the cook, had joined the assailing
party
'The prisoner!--gentlemen "prentices--do not forget him!' cried Cyprien,
who, with two other serving-men and the cook, had joined the assailing
party. 'Madame Bonaventure implores you to effect his rescue.'




The plan he had decided upon was to get his ten dollars and enough more



of the money his father had left him to pay his fare to some town in
Oklahoma, where he could begin his long-dreamed-of life on a ranch
The plan he had decided upon was to get his ten dollars and enough more
of the money his father had left him to pay his fare to some town in
Oklahoma, where he could begin his long-dreamed-of life on a ranch. He
would not be bothered with the packing of any clothes, for his guardian
had never allowed him any extra clothing, and he had nothing but the
suit upon his back; but he did have his money, and two letters which he
had hidden under a board in the floor that he had fixed so that he could
take it up and put it back whenever he wished.




Not far had he gone, however, before he realized that unless he could



make greater speed, his pursuers would soon overtake him
Not far had he gone, however, before he realized that unless he could
make greater speed, his pursuers would soon overtake him.




'I reckon you"ll be safe with him,' commented the agent



'I reckon you"ll be safe with him,' commented the agent. 'Take care of
yourself, Bob. And come over to see me when you can. By the way, has
John said where he was going to send you?'




Under the discreet guidance of the railroad president, Bob was led to



tell him of his life and of the experiences of the day before that had
resulted in the severing of all ties, and the taking of so radical a
step as the trip to the West
Under the discreet guidance of the railroad president, Bob was led to
tell him of his life and of the experiences of the day before that had
resulted in the severing of all ties, and the taking of so radical a
step as the trip to the West.




From his moaning Bob realized the pony was in great pain, and for a



moment he stood undecided what to do
From his moaning Bob realized the pony was in great pain, and for a
moment he stood undecided what to do. Then a hoarse shout of triumph
raised by the conspirators reached his ears, and, gritting his teeth,
Bob pulled out his revolver, placed it against Firefly"s head and pulled
the trigger.




'Mighty little, so long as you have the dog with you



'Mighty little, so long as you have the dog with you. He"s as good as
any cowboy.' And then Merry Dick explained that Bob"s duties lay in
riding around and driving back the cattle that strayed from the herd,
especially in the morning, and in case of a stampede, than which there
is nothing more dreaded by cowboys, in outrunning the leaders and
changing their direction, yelling and waving arms, until the frenzied
animals are made to tire themselves out traveling in a circle.




Such was the character which this woman bore; whether unjustly or not,



matters little
Such was the character which this woman bore; whether unjustly or not,
matters little. For the present it is sufficient to say, that after
having passed on, leaving Lamh Laudher to proceed in the direction he
had originally intended, she bent her steps towards the head inn of the
town. Her presence here produced some cautious and timid mirth of which
they took care she should not be cognizant. The servants greeted her
with an outward show of cordiality, which the unhappy creature easily
distinguished from the warm kindness evinced to vagrants whose history
had not been connected with evil suspicion and mystery. She accordingly
tempered her manner and deportment towards them with consummate skill.
Her replies to their inquiries for news were given with an appearance
of good humor; but beneath the familiarity of her dialogue there lay an
ambiguous meaning and a cutting sarcasm, both of which were tinged with
a prophetic spirit, capable, from its equivocal drift, of being applied
to each individual whom she addressed. Owing to her unsettled life, and
her habit of passing from place to place, she was well acquainted with
local history. There lived scarcely a family within a very wide circle
about her, of whom she did not know every thing that could possibly be
known; a fact of which she judiciously availed herself by allusions
in general conversations that were understood only by those whom they
concerned. These mysterious hints, oracularly thrown out, gained her the
reputation of knowing more than mere human agency could acquire, and of
course she was openly conciliated and secretly hated.




'I am a believer in the Gospel,' the Puritan replied



'I am a believer in the Gospel,' the Puritan replied. 'And am willing to
seal my faith in it with my blood. I am sent hither to warn thee, O
King, and thou wilt do well not to despise my words. Repent ere it be
too late. Wonderfully hath thy life been preserved. Dedicate the
remainder of thy days to the service of the Most High. Persecute not His
people, and revile them not. Purge thy City of its uncleanness and
idolatry, and thy Court of its corruption. Profane not the Sabbath'--




'Pardon me, Sire,' said De Gondomar, 'if I venture to suggest that your



Majesty hath an admirable opportunity, which I should be sorry to see
neglected, of showing your goodness and clemency, and silencing for ever
the voice of calumny, which will sometimes be raised against you
'Pardon me, Sire,' said De Gondomar, 'if I venture to suggest that your
Majesty hath an admirable opportunity, which I should be sorry to see
neglected, of showing your goodness and clemency, and silencing for ever
the voice of calumny, which will sometimes be raised against you.'




The crisp, bracing air seemed a stimulant to his lungs which had never



breathed any but the contaminated air of New York, and he gloried in the
fact that he was at last in a land where success did not depend on
influence and riches, but where a man 'made good' or failed, according
to whether he was made of the right stuff or not
The crisp, bracing air seemed a stimulant to his lungs which had never
breathed any but the contaminated air of New York, and he gloried in the
fact that he was at last in a land where success did not depend on
influence and riches, but where a man 'made good' or failed, according
to whether he was made of the right stuff or not.




During the slender repast, Jocelyn, in reply to the inquiries of the



Puritan, explained the two-fold motive of his coming to London; namely,
the desire of taking vengeance on his father"s enemies, and the hope of
obtaining some honourable employment, such as a gentleman might accept
During the slender repast, Jocelyn, in reply to the inquiries of the
Puritan, explained the two-fold motive of his coming to London; namely,
the desire of taking vengeance on his father"s enemies, and the hope of
obtaining some honourable employment, such as a gentleman might accept.




'Will there be enough money aboard to make it worth while?' inquired one



of the schemers, with an evidently practical turn of mind
'Will there be enough money aboard to make it worth while?' inquired one
of the schemers, with an evidently practical turn of mind.




'Andy Hart!' said Nell, raising herself with a violent jerk, and



screaming, 'Andy Hart! Andy Hart! stand over before me
'Andy Hart!' said Nell, raising herself with a violent jerk, and
screaming, 'Andy Hart! Andy Hart! stand over before me. Andy Hart! It is
his father"s voice. Oh God! Strip his breast there, an" see if there"s a
blood-mark on the left side.'




'Certes, you must not contemn the Star-Chamber, or you will incur its



censure,' Sir Francis replied in a low tone
'Certes, you must not contemn the Star-Chamber, or you will incur its
censure,' Sir Francis replied in a low tone. 'No court in England is so
jealous of its prerogatives, nor so severe in punishment of its
maligners. It will not have its proceedings canvassed, or its judgments
questioned.'




It is needless to say that the ladies who had thus broken upon Lord



Roos"s privacy, and obtained full confirmation of their suspicions (if
they had any doubts remaining) were his wife and mother-in-law
It is needless to say that the ladies who had thus broken upon Lord
Roos"s privacy, and obtained full confirmation of their suspicions (if
they had any doubts remaining) were his wife and mother-in-law.




Watching out the corner of his eye, as he scanned the track ahead, the



engineer smiled at the boy"s trouble in staying on the seat
Watching out the corner of his eye, as he scanned the track ahead, the
engineer smiled at the boy"s trouble in staying on the seat.




As he dashed from the restaurant, Chester leaped to his feet and, back



bristling, jaws distended, faced the pursuers
As he dashed from the restaurant, Chester leaped to his feet and, back
bristling, jaws distended, faced the pursuers.




His father"s countenance fell again, as did those of his friends who



were present, on hearing what appeared to be almost an admission of his
guilt
His father"s countenance fell again, as did those of his friends who
were present, on hearing what appeared to be almost an admission of his
guilt.




'Well,' said the woman, 'I knew nothin" about that; but I want to see



Meehaul Neil, and I know he"s in the house
'Well,' said the woman, 'I knew nothin" about that; but I want to see
Meehaul Neil, and I know he"s in the house.'




And with, great effort he swallowed a few drops from the cup filled for



him by Jocelyn
And with, great effort he swallowed a few drops from the cup filled for
him by Jocelyn. Still, his appearance was so alarming, that the young
man could not help urging him not to delay.




The tone in which the boy spoke was cold and bitter



The tone in which the boy spoke was cold and bitter. Yet, instead of
terrifying the storekeeper, it caused him to laugh as he exclaimed: 'You
can"t blackmail me, you ungrateful young wretch! Get out of here, before
I call the police! I steal your money, indeed! Insanity seems to run in
the Chester family!'




But the next instant another voice asking, 'How you goin" to do it?'



decided him that the speakers must be crouching against the end of the
empty coal car to which he was holding
But the next instant another voice asking, 'How you goin" to do it?'
decided him that the speakers must be crouching against the end of the
empty coal car to which he was holding.




At these surprising answers, Bob"s heart seemed to come up in his



throat, stifling his speech
At these surprising answers, Bob"s heart seemed to come up in his
throat, stifling his speech. But noticing that his questions had aroused
the clerk"s curiosity, he hurriedly left the office.




'Exactly



'Exactly. But you must be careful. If he really had the money, he may
have possessed other property which is being withheld from you. In that
case, should the interested persons learn that Horace Chester"s son was
in Fairfax something might happen to you.'




'You are very kind,' he said, when the second plate of the savory food



was placed before him
'You are very kind,' he said, when the second plate of the savory food
was placed before him. 'I suppose I shall be hungry sometimes before I
get to Oklahoma, but I don"t expect to "hobo" it.'




'There"s no use building air castles,' he told himself



'There"s no use building air castles,' he told himself. 'If Mr. Ford
hires me and knows anything about father, I"ll find it out in due time.
There"s one good thing, if I do land the job, Red Top will be ten miles
nearer--and I can get away without exciting so much comment as from
Fairfax.'




Sir Thomas Lake then turned to the paper which he had just opened before



Aveline"s appearance, and was soon so much engrossed by it that he
seemed quite unconscious of her presence
Sir Thomas Lake then turned to the paper which he had just opened before
Aveline"s appearance, and was soon so much engrossed by it that he
seemed quite unconscious of her presence. His countenance became
gloomier and more austere as he read on, and an expression of
pain--almost a groan--escaped him. He appeared then to feel sensible
that he had committed an indiscretion, for he laid down the paper, and,
as if forcibly diverting himself from its contents, addressed Aveline.




'Then,' said Meehaul, 'here, before witnesses, I give you the coward,



that you may carry the name to the last hour of your life
'Then,' said Meehaul, 'here, before witnesses, I give you the coward,
that you may carry the name to the last hour of your life.'




'I"m not trying to beat my way,' rejoined Bob



'I"m not trying to beat my way,' rejoined Bob. 'I"m not going back to
New York. I"m going to Chicago--and then to Oklahoma,' he added in a
boyish attempt to impress the boatman with his importance.




His occupation, however, necessitated his being resourceful, and, seeing



an elderly woman peering at him closely from a window of the neighboring
house, Foster hastened toward her
His occupation, however, necessitated his being resourceful, and, seeing
an elderly woman peering at him closely from a window of the neighboring
house, Foster hastened toward her.




'You stand a fine chance of getting it,' returned the policeman, 'but I



will do what I can for you
'You stand a fine chance of getting it,' returned the policeman, 'but I
will do what I can for you. I"ll take you around to the police station,
and you can make a complaint to the sergeant and give him a description
of the "con" men.'




'There was a time,' observed the other, 'when you and I were enemies



only because our cleaveens were enemies but now there is, an" you know
it, a blacker hatred between us
'There was a time,' observed the other, 'when you and I were enemies
only because our cleaveens were enemies but now there is, an" you know
it, a blacker hatred between us.'




'Oh! Lamh Laudher,' said Ellen, affected at the imputation contained in



his last observation; 'don"t you treat me with such suspicion
'Oh! Lamh Laudher,' said Ellen, affected at the imputation contained in
his last observation; 'don"t you treat me with such suspicion. I suffer
enough for your sake, as it is. For nearly two years, a day has hardly
passed that my family hasn"t wrung the burnin" tears from my eyes on
your account. Haven"t I refused matches that any young woman in my
station of life ought to be I proud to accept?'




As Bob received the amazingly long ticket, his breast swelled with



pride
As Bob received the amazingly long ticket, his breast swelled with
pride. Its possession meant the beginning of his long-cherished dream,
and he started to study it, when the voice of the officer warned him:




The Dead Boxer, in preparing for battle, observed a series of forms



peculiar to himself, which were certainly of an appalling character
The Dead Boxer, in preparing for battle, observed a series of forms
peculiar to himself, which were certainly of an appalling character. As
a proof that the challenge was accepted, he ordered a black flag,
which he carried about with him, to wave from a window of the inn, a
circumstance which thrilled all who saw it with an awful certainty of
Lamh Laudher"s death. He then gave order for the drums to be beaten,
and a dead march to be played before him, whilst he walked slowly up
the town and back, conversing occasionally with some of those who
immediately surrounded him. When he arrived nearly opposite the
market-house, some person pointed out to him a small hut that stood in a
situation isolated from the other houses of the street.




'So you"re the kid Miser Jenkins thought stole your pass?' exclaimed one



of the trainmen, after a searching scrutiny of the boy
'So you"re the kid Miser Jenkins thought stole your pass?' exclaimed one
of the trainmen, after a searching scrutiny of the boy. 'He must be
losing his eyesight. That face of yours ought to vouch for you, if
nothing else. Crooks don"t have such honest faces.'




'Be not abashed, my pretty maiden,' the Countess said, in a kind and



encouraging tone; 'there is nothing to be afraid of
'Be not abashed, my pretty maiden,' the Countess said, in a kind and
encouraging tone; 'there is nothing to be afraid of. Aware that I am in
want of a damsel like yourself, to tire my hair and attend upon me, Lord
Roos has drawn my attention to you; and if I may trust to
appearances--as I think I may,' she added, with a very flattering and
persuasive smile, 'in your case--you are the very person to suit me,
provided you are willing to enter my service. I am the Countess of
Exeter.'




'No,' Sir Giles replied, 'I will not lose sight of him



'No,' Sir Giles replied, 'I will not lose sight of him. He shall not
have a chance of escape. Marked you not, Lupo, how the rash fool
committed himself with Buckingham? And think you the proud Marquis would
hold me blameless, if, by accident, he should get off scot-free, after
such an outrage? But see! the room is well-nigh cleared. Only a few
loiterers remain. The time is come.'




'I wonder what it means,' said the reporter to himself



'I wonder what it means,' said the reporter to himself. 'Perhaps Bob
didn"t come back, and the old man, repenting of his refusing to go to
his ward"s assistance, is on his way either to the police station or to
the court.'




At the request of the latter, the boy related his experience at Ford"s



ranch
At the request of the latter, the boy related his experience at Ford"s
ranch. As he did so, the agent looked at him with an expression of
mingled amazement and approval, and as the story was finished,
exclaimed:




As the last piece of food was devoured, the man reached down, put the



cover on the box, folded the paper, wrapped up the box and set it on the
floor, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand, then exclaimed:




Meehaul now directed his steps homewards, literally stunned by the



unexpected cowardice of his enemy
Meehaul now directed his steps homewards, literally stunned by the
unexpected cowardice of his enemy. On approaching his father"s door, he
found Nell M"Collum seated on a stone bench, waiting his arrival.
The moment she espied him she sprang to her feet, and with her usual
eagerness of manner, caught the breast of his coat, and turning him
round towards the moonlight, looked eagerly into his face.




'_Now_ will you try to get fresh with a tenderfoot?' asked one of the



others when their laughter at Bob"s sharp rejoinder had subsided
'_Now_ will you try to get fresh with a tenderfoot?' asked one of the
others when their laughter at Bob"s sharp rejoinder had subsided.




e hënë, 2 korrik 2007

But having, as yet, omitted the principal figure, we must hasten to



describe him by whom the party was headed
But having, as yet, omitted the principal figure, we must hasten to
describe him by whom the party was headed. The King, then, was mounted
on a superb milk-white steed, with wide-flowing mane and tail, and of
the easiest and gentlest pace. Its colour was set off by its red
chanfrein, its nodding crest of red feathers, its broad poitrinal with
red tassels, and its saddle with red housings. Though devoted to the
chase, as we have shown, James was but an indifferent horseman; and his
safety in the saddle was assured by such high-bolstered bows in front
and at the back, that it seemed next to impossible he could be shaken
out of them. Yet, in spite of all these precautions, accidents had
befallen him. On one occasion, Sir Symonds D"Ewes relates that he was
thrown headlong into a pond; and on another, we learn from a different
source that he was cast over his horse"s head into the New River, and
narrowly escaped drowning, his boots alone being visible above the ice
covering the stream. Moreover the monarch"s attire was excessively stiff
and cumbrous, and this, while it added to the natural ungainliness of
his person, prevented all freedom of movement, especially on horseback.
His doublet, which on the present occasion was of green velvet,
considerably frayed,--for he was by no means particular about the
newness of his apparel,--was padded and quilted so as to be
dagger-proof; and his hose were stuffed in the same manner, and
preposterously large about the hips. Then his ruff was triple-banded,
and so stiffly starched, that the head was fixed immovably amidst its
plaits.




The young lady was Mistress Aveline Calveley, his informant said, only



child of Master Hugh Calveley, who had but lately come to dwell in
Tottenham, and of whom little was known, save that he was understood to
have fought at the battle of Langside, and served with great bravery,
under Essex, both in Spain and in Ireland, in the times of good Queen
Bess--such times as England would never see again, the old farmer
parenthetically remarked, with a shake of the head
The young lady was Mistress Aveline Calveley, his informant said, only
child of Master Hugh Calveley, who had but lately come to dwell in
Tottenham, and of whom little was known, save that he was understood to
have fought at the battle of Langside, and served with great bravery,
under Essex, both in Spain and in Ireland, in the times of good Queen
Bess--such times as England would never see again, the old farmer
parenthetically remarked, with a shake of the head. Master Hugh
Calveley, he went on to say, was a strict Puritan, austere in his life,
and morose in manner; an open railer against the licence of the times,
and the profligacy of the court minions,--in consequence of which he had
more than once got himself into trouble. He abhorred all such sports as
were now going forward; and had successfully interfered with the parish
priest, Sir Onesimus, who was somewhat of a precisian himself, to
prevent the setting up the May-pole on the past Sunday,--for which, the
farmer added, some of the young folks owe him a grudge; and he expressed
a hope, at the same time, that the day might pass by without any
exhibition being made of their ill-will towards him.




All the while, he had been steadily looking into the dog"s eyes, and



just as the creature was upon him the same power that had urged him to
come to the Ford ranch seemed to tell him to speak to the animal
All the while, he had been steadily looking into the dog"s eyes, and
just as the creature was upon him the same power that had urged him to
come to the Ford ranch seemed to tell him to speak to the animal.




Brookleigh understood him; but the last assertion, though it exonerated



him in the opinion of a man who knew something about character, went far
in that of his friends who were present to establish his guilt
Brookleigh understood him; but the last assertion, though it exonerated
him in the opinion of a man who knew something about character, went far
in that of his friends who were present to establish his guilt.




'You hear what this man says, Mounchensey?' Sir Giles cried



'You hear what this man says, Mounchensey?' Sir Giles cried. 'You have
been guilty of the same offence as he. Why should you not be similarly
punished?'




And Bob described the location of the apartment house where he expected



to find Mrs
And Bob described the location of the apartment house where he expected
to find Mrs. Cameron, the sister of the waitress who had been so kind to
him.




'You reporters are certainly good ones at putting up a plausible story,'



retorted the officer contemptuously
'You reporters are certainly good ones at putting up a plausible story,'
retorted the officer contemptuously.




'Say! how long do you think you can stay here eating, or are you hoping



that you will get a chance to sneak off without paying me? But that game
won"t work
'Say! how long do you think you can stay here eating, or are you hoping
that you will get a chance to sneak off without paying me? But that game
won"t work. I"m too wise to get caught by any trick like that. So just
come across with the price of your feed.'




'Then wherefore persist in troubling me?' rejoined Hugh Calveley



'Then wherefore persist in troubling me?' rejoined Hugh Calveley. 'Have
I not good cause for my dislike of you? You have disappointed the
expectations I had formed of you. You failed me when I put your
professions to the test. You thwarted my design at the moment when its
success was certain, and when the tyrant was completely in my power. But
for you I should not be here, loaded with these fetters; or if I were, I
should be consoled by the thought that I had liberated my country from
oppression, instead of being crushed by the sense of failure. What seek
you from me, miserable time-server? Have you not had your reward for the
service you have rendered the King? Is he not grateful enough? I have
served as your stepping-stone to promotion. What more can I do?'




'_Dher ma chorp_,' they exclaimed with astonishment, 'but Lamh Laudher"s



afeard of him!--the _garran bane"s_ in him, now that he finds he has met
his match
'_Dher ma chorp_,' they exclaimed with astonishment, 'but Lamh Laudher"s
afeard of him!--the _garran bane"s_ in him, now that he finds he has met
his match.'




But Hugh Calveley regarded him with cold disdain, and though he moved



not his lips, he seemed to say, 'You have destroyed me; and I will not
remove the guilt of my destruction from your head
But Hugh Calveley regarded him with cold disdain, and though he moved
not his lips, he seemed to say, 'You have destroyed me; and I will not
remove the guilt of my destruction from your head.'




Amongst the foremost of those who thus obstructed Sir Francis and his



party was a young man with a lithe active figure, bright black eyes,
full of liveliness and malice, an olive complexion, and a gipsy-like
cast of countenance
Amongst the foremost of those who thus obstructed Sir Francis and his
party was a young man with a lithe active figure, bright black eyes,
full of liveliness and malice, an olive complexion, and a gipsy-like
cast of countenance. Attired in a tight-fitting brown frieze jerkin with
stone buttons, and purple hose, his head was covered with a montero cap,
with a cock"s feather stuck in it. He was armed neither with sword nor
dagger, but carried a large cudgel or club, the well-known and
formidable weapon, of the London "prentices, in the use of which,
whether as a quarterstaff or missile, they were remarkably expert. Even
a skilful swordsman stood but poor chance with them. Besides this
saucy-looking personage, who was addressed as Dick Taverner by his
comrades, there were many others, who, to judge from their habiliments
and their cudgels, belonged to the same fraternity as himself; that is
to say, they were apprentices to grocers, drapers, haberdashers,
skinners, ironmongers, vintners, or other respectable artificers or
tradesfolk.




Eager to begin Western life, Bob quickly took off his new suit and put



on a pair of the corduroy trousers and one of the blue flannel shirts
Mr
Eager to begin Western life, Bob quickly took off his new suit and put
on a pair of the corduroy trousers and one of the blue flannel shirts
Mr. Nichols had bought him and then proudly placed on his head a
sombrero.




'Hands up!' commanded Ford



'Hands up!' commanded Ford. 'That"s the way! Now, boys, take their guns
and knives, then bind their hands behind their backs and each carry one
behind you. We"re going to take them to Red Top jail.'




Bob"s first impulse was to flee, but such tremendous leaps did the



creature take that he realized it would be only a few minutes before the
dog would overtake him
Bob"s first impulse was to flee, but such tremendous leaps did the
creature take that he realized it would be only a few minutes before the
dog would overtake him. Then it flashed through his mind that this might
be the ranchman"s way of 'trying out' strangers who came to his door,
and the boy determined to stand his ground.




The spot selected for the May-pole was a piece of green sward in the



centre of the village, surrounded by picturesque habitations, and
having, on one side of it, the ancient Cross
The spot selected for the May-pole was a piece of green sward in the
centre of the village, surrounded by picturesque habitations, and
having, on one side of it, the ancient Cross. The latter, however, was
but the remnant of the antique structure, the cross having been robbed
of its upper angular bar, and otherwise mutilated, at the time of the
Reformation, and it was now nothing more than a high wooden pillar,
partly cased with lead to protect it from the weather, and supported by
four great spurs.




The tone in which the reporter spoke was one that could not fail to be



impressive, and after a moment"s hesitation, the magistrate, who knew
Foster as a reporter and admired him for his manly fearlessness, asked:




And Bob described the location of the apartment house where he expected



to find Mrs
And Bob described the location of the apartment house where he expected
to find Mrs. Cameron, the sister of the waitress who had been so kind to
him.




By the time of their arrival, more trainmen were on duty, and to each



the story of Bob"s getting left had been told
By the time of their arrival, more trainmen were on duty, and to each
the story of Bob"s getting left had been told.




'Never,' replied Lord Roos, with a sudden change of manner, and laying



aside the levity he had hitherto exhibited
'Never,' replied Lord Roos, with a sudden change of manner, and laying
aside the levity he had hitherto exhibited. 'There is but one way of
ending the struggle. Luke Hatton can help us to it. Persuaded we should
require him, I have brought him with me. He waits in the hall below with
Diego. Shall I summon him to our conference?'




But to prevent any possible miscarriage of their plans, Bob wrote his



discoveries to Mr
But to prevent any possible miscarriage of their plans, Bob wrote his
discoveries to Mr. Nichols, mailing the letter before he left Red Top.
These details attended to, Ford borrowed a horse for Bob, and they set
out for the home ranch, which they reached in due course.




'Well, Ellen,' replied Lamh Laudher, with a firm seriousness of manner,



'you have brought me into danger
'Well, Ellen,' replied Lamh Laudher, with a firm seriousness of manner,
'you have brought me into danger. I doubt, without knowin" it. For my
own part, I don"t care so much. Her unlucky aunt met me comin" here this
evenin", and threatened both our family and yours. I know she would sink
us into the earth if she could. Either she or your brother is at the
bottom of this business, whatever it is. Your brother I don"t fear; but
she is to be dreaded, if, all"s true that"s said about her.'




But the plucky boy saw and recognized his employer long before he heard



his reassuring words, and the sight lent him fresh strength
But the plucky boy saw and recognized his employer long before he heard
his reassuring words, and the sight lent him fresh strength.




Upon the arrival of the special car at Kansas City, the officers were



met by a messenger with instructions to have Bob taken to the offices of
the railroad company, as the vice-president wished to talk with him
Upon the arrival of the special car at Kansas City, the officers were
met by a messenger with instructions to have Bob taken to the offices of
the railroad company, as the vice-president wished to talk with him.




'What have I done?' the Puritan rejoined, speaking in a loud voice, as



if desirous that his words should reach the assemblage outside
'What have I done?' the Puritan rejoined, speaking in a loud voice, as
if desirous that his words should reach the assemblage outside. 'I have
done that which thou thyself should"st have done, Aveline. I have
signified my abhorrence of this vain ceremonial. But wherefore do I find
you here? This is no fitting sight for any discreet maiden to witness;
and little did I think that daughter of mine would encourage such
profane displays by her presence. Little did I think that you, Aveline,
would look on and smile while these ignorant and benighted folk set up
their idol, piping, dancing, and singing around it as the Gentiles did
at the dedications of their deities. For it _is_ an idol they have set
up, and they have become like the heathens, worshippers of stocks and
stones. Are we not expressly forbidden by the Holy Scriptures to make
unto ourselves idols and graven images? The sins of idolatry and
superstition will assuredly provoke the Divine displeasure, and kindle
the fire of its wrath, as they did in the days of Moses, after the
worshipping of the Golden Calf by the Israelites. Thus spake offended
Heaven:--"Let me alone that my wrath may wax hot against them, and that
I may consume them." Grievously will the Lord punish such as are guilty
of these sins, for hath He not declared, as we read in Leviticus, "I
will make your cities waste, and bring your sanctuaries to desolation?"
And be assured, O daughter, that heavy judgments will descend upon the
land, if warning be not taken in time.'




'O, recall those words, Frances!' cried the young nobleman, throwing



himself at her feet, and clasping her hands passionately
'O, recall those words, Frances!' cried the young nobleman, throwing
himself at her feet, and clasping her hands passionately. 'Recall them,
I implore" of you. In uttering them you pronounce my doom--a doom more
dreadful than death, which would be light in comparison with losing you.
Plunge this sword to my heart,' he exclaimed, plucking the shining
weapon from his side, and presenting it to her. 'Free me from my misery
at once, but do not condemn me to lingering agony.'




'There was a time,' observed the other, 'when you and I were enemies



only because our cleaveens were enemies but now there is, an" you know
it, a blacker hatred between us
'There was a time,' observed the other, 'when you and I were enemies
only because our cleaveens were enemies but now there is, an" you know
it, a blacker hatred between us.'




'It"s a mighty good thing I met Mr



'It"s a mighty good thing I met Mr. Perkins,' said Bob to himself, as he
rode back downtown on the street-car. 'If I hadn"t, I suppose I would
have been obliged to go to work until I could get enough money to take
me to Oklahoma, and it would have been an awful disappointment not to
find Mrs. Cameron. But it"s all right now; besides, I"m better off than
I would have been if she had been here, because I have a pass clear to
Fairfax, and her sister said her husband could only help me as far as
Kansas City.'




Lamh Laudher had been, as we have said, advancing slowly along the



craggy road which led towards the town, when she issued from an
adjoining cabin and approached him
Lamh Laudher had been, as we have said, advancing slowly along the
craggy road which led towards the town, when she issued from an
adjoining cabin and approached him. The moment he noticed her he stood
still, as if to let her pass and uttered one single exclamation of
chagrin and anger.




'It will be your own fault if you do not,' the tempter rejoined



'It will be your own fault if you do not,' the tempter rejoined. 'You
are equally well-favoured with the handsomest of them; and it was by
good looks alone that the whole party rose to their present eminence.
Why not pursue the same course; with the same certainty of success? You
have courage enough to undertake it, I presume?'




For a moment after the porter"s offer to act as his guide in seeing



Chicago, Bob thought he would accept it, and accordingly they left the
office together, the pass having been made out and delivered to the boy
For a moment after the porter"s offer to act as his guide in seeing
Chicago, Bob thought he would accept it, and accordingly they left the
office together, the pass having been made out and delivered to the boy.




'I saw you both--I watched you both; you left her beyond the Pedlar"s



Cairn, an" you"re now on your way home
'I saw you both--I watched you both; you left her beyond the Pedlar"s
Cairn, an" you"re now on your way home.'




The carman then related all that he knew, every word of which strongly



corroborated what Lamh Laudher had said
The carman then related all that he knew, every word of which strongly
corroborated what Lamh Laudher had said. He concluded by declaring it
to be his opinion, that the prisoner was innocent, and added, that,
according to the best of his belief, the box was not open when he left
it in the plaintiff"s sleeping-room above stairs.




'Have I ever been there? Well, son, I was there off and on for about ten



years, when the government first opened up the land, and you could
travel for miles without seeing anything but Injuns
'Have I ever been there? Well, son, I was there off and on for about ten
years, when the government first opened up the land, and you could
travel for miles without seeing anything but Injuns.'