e premte, 27 korrik 2007

At last, a little shaking of mine arm



And thrice his head thus waving up and down,
He raised a sigh so piteous and profound
As it did seem to shatter all his bulk
And end his being
At last, a little shaking of mine arm
And thrice his head thus waving up and down,
He raised a sigh so piteous and profound
As it did seem to shatter all his bulk
And end his being.


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The simple obedience to parents on the part of these immigrant girls,



working in hotels and restaurants, often miscarries pathetically
The simple obedience to parents on the part of these immigrant girls,
working in hotels and restaurants, often miscarries pathetically. Their
unspoiled human nature, not yet immune to the poisons of city life, when
thrust into the midst of that unrelieved drudgery which lies at the
foundation of all complex luxury, often results in the most fatal
reactions. A young German woman, the proprietor of what is considered a
successful 'house' in the most notorious district in Chicago, traces her
career directly to a desperate attempt to conform to the standard of
'bringing home good wages' maintained by her numerous brothers and
sisters. One requirement of her home was rigid: all money earned by a
child must be paid into the family income until 'legal age' was
attained. The slightly neurotic, very pretty girl of seventeen heartily
detested the dish-washing in a restaurant, which constituted her first
place in America, and quite honestly declared that the heavy lifting was
beyond her strength. Such insubordination was not tolerated at home, and
every Saturday night when her meager wages, reduced by sick days 'off,'
were compared with what the others brought in, she was regularly
scolded, 'sometimes slapped,' by her parents, jeered at by her more
vigorous sisters and bullied by her brothers. She tried to shorten her
hours by doing 'rush-work' as a waitress at noon, but she found this
still beyond her strength, and worst of all, the pay of two dollars and
a half insufficient to satisfy her mother. Confiding her troubles to the
other waitresses, one of them good-naturedly told her how she could make
money through appointments in a nearby disreputable hotel, and so take
home an increased amount of money easily called 'a raise in wages.' So
strong was the habit of obedience, that the girl continued to take money
home every Saturday night until her eighteenth birthday, in spite of the
fact that she gave up the restaurant in less than six weeks after her
first experience. Although all of this happened ten years ago and the
German mother is long since dead, the daughter bitterly ended the story
with the infamous hope that 'the old lady was now suffering the torments
of the lost, for making me what I am.' Such a girl was subjected to
temptations to which society has no right to expose her.


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e mërkurë, 25 korrik 2007

With this picture of a bean lottery before us it is very easy to



understand how the colors of Andalusian fowls are inherited
With this picture of a bean lottery before us it is very easy to
understand how the colors of Andalusian fowls are inherited. When two
black fowls mate, the offspring must be black, because in this case each
parent basket contains a pair of black beans, so to speak, so that the
child taking one black bean from each basket will necessarily have a
black pair. For the same reason the child of two white fowls must be
white, but when a black and white fowl mate, the child takes a white
bean from one parent and a black from the other, its own color being
resultant or amalgam of the two, which in the case of the Andalusian
fowl is blue. Since every such hybrid child has this same combination of
a white and a black bean, all these hybrids are alike. All are blue. It
is important to remember that this hybrid blue is only a sort of
mechanical mixture of black and white, and that the black and white are
still separate beans, as it were.


title=View posts for June 2007


---------------------------+-----------+-------------



Number of | Highest | Lowest
Men
---------------------------+-----------+-------------
Number of | Highest | Lowest
Men. | Marks. | Marks.
---------------------------+-----------+-------------
101 non-smokers furnish | 11 | 6
101 smokers would furnish | 5 | 15
---------------------------+-----------+-------------


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As to Immortality, the Stoics precluded themselves, by holding the



theory of the _absorption_ of the individual soul at death into the
divine essence; but, on the other hand, their doctrine of advance and
aspiration is what has in all times been the main natural argument for
the immortality of the soul
As to Immortality, the Stoics precluded themselves, by holding the
theory of the _absorption_ of the individual soul at death into the
divine essence; but, on the other hand, their doctrine of advance and
aspiration is what has in all times been the main natural argument for
the immortality of the soul. For the most part, they kept themselves
undecided as to this doctrine, giving it as an alternative, reasoning
as to our conduct on either supposition, and submitting to the pleasure
of God in this as in all other things.


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According to the thirteenth census of the United States, the



value of the electrical machinery, apparatus and supplies
produced in this country alone, in 1909 was $221,000,000
According to the thirteenth census of the United States, the
value of the electrical machinery, apparatus and supplies
produced in this country alone, in 1909 was $221,000,000. In
1907, the value of the electric light and power stations in the
United States was $1,097,000,000, of the telephones
$820,000,000, and the combined income from these two sources
was $360,000,000. Nor does this represent a tithe of the
values, as yet barely realized, which these researches placed
at our disposal. Thus in its waterfalls, the United States is
estimated to possess 150,000,000 available horse-power, which
can only be realized through the employment of Faraday"s
electro-motor. This corresponds, at the conservative figure of
$20 per horse-power per annum to a yearly income of
$3,000,000,000, corresponding at 4 per cent. interest to a
capital value of $75,000,000,0000.[3]


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e martë, 24 korrik 2007

It was the intelligence of the country that everywhere uttered and



everywhere accepted the declaration of the town of Boston, in the
revolutionary struggle, 'We can endure poverty, but we disdain slavery
It was the intelligence of the country that everywhere uttered and
everywhere accepted the declaration of the town of Boston, in the
revolutionary struggle, 'We can endure poverty, but we disdain slavery.'
Ignorance is quicksand on which no stable political structure can be
built; and I predict the future greatness of our beloved state, in those
historical qualities that outlast the ages, from the fact that she is
not tempted by her extent of territory, salubrity of climate, fertility
of soil, or by the presence and promise of any natural source of wealth,
to falter in her devotion to learning and liberty. And I anticipate for
Massachusetts a career of influence beneficial to all, whether disputed
or accepted, when I reflect that, with less good fortune in the presence
and combination of learning and liberty, Greece, Rome, Venice, Holland,
and England, enjoyed power disproportionate to their respective
populations, territory, and natural resources. And, while the object for
which we are convened may pardon something to local attachments and
state pride, the day and the occasion ought not to pass without a
grateful and hearty acknowledgment of the interest manifested by other
states and sections in the cause of general learning, and especially in
common-school education. The Canadas are our rivals; the states of the
West are our rivals; the states of the South are our rivals; and, were
our greater experience and better opportunities reckoned against us, I
know not that there would be much in our systems of education of which
we could properly boast. It is, indeed, possible that North Carolina,
untoward circumstances having their due weight, has made more progress
in education, since 1840, than any other state of the Union.


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It will not necessarily happen that public schools will furnish to every



child and youth the desired amount of education
It will not necessarily happen that public schools will furnish to every
child and youth the desired amount of education. Professional schools,
classical schools, and academies of various grades, will be continued;
but there is an amount of intellectual and moral training needed by
every child which can be best given in the public school. This training
in the public schools ought to be carried much further than it usually
is. In the city of Newburyport, as I have been informed, there are no
exceptions to the custom of educating all the children of the town in
the public schools up to the moment when young men enter college. In
large towns and cities there is no excuse for the existence of private
schools to do the work now done in such schools as those of Newburyport
and other places where equal educational privileges exist.


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But now suppose a hybrid or blue fowl to mate with a white



But now suppose a hybrid or blue fowl to mate with a white. This means
that the child takes from the white parent or basket one of the two
white beans and from the blue parent or basket, one of the two beans, of
which one is white and the other, black; the bean taken from the first
or white basket must be white, but that taken from the second or blue or
hybrid basket may be either white or black. It is a lottery with an even
chance of drawing white or black. In the long run, half of the children
will draw white and half, black. Those which draw the white will, since
they also drew white from the other parent, be wholly white, but those
which drew the black will be blue, since they will have one black and
one white bean. We see, too, that the white child is just as truly white
as though it had not had a hybrid parent; for of the two elements or
beans which the hybrid carried, the black one was left behind untaken.
We see that the blue child is a hybrid exactly like its hybrid parent,
and not any new kind of cross between the blue and the white. In short,
the children of a blue and white are either the one or the other and not
a mixture. In the same way if a blue mates with a black, half of the
children will be black and half blue.


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e hënë, 23 korrik 2007

It is exactly this unmilitant quality in the Suffragettes that makes



their superficial problem
It is exactly this unmilitant quality in the Suffragettes that makes
their superficial problem. The problem is that their action has none
of the advantages of ultimate violence; it does not afford a test.
War is a dreadful thing; but it does prove two points sharply
and unanswerably--numbers, and an unnatural valor. One does discover
the two urgent matters; how many rebels there are alive, and how many
are ready to be dead. But a tiny minority, even an interested minority,
may maintain mere disorder forever. There is also, of course, in the case
of these women, the further falsity that is introduced by their sex.
It is false to state the matter as a mere brutal question of strength.
If his muscles give a man a vote, then his horse ought to have two votes
and his elephant five votes. The truth is more subtle than that;
it is that bodily outbreak is a man"s instinctive weapon, like the hoofs
to the horse or the tusks to the elephant. All riot is a threat
of war; but the woman is brandishing a weapon she can never use.
There are many weapons that she could and does use. If (for example)
all the women nagged for a vote they would get it in a month.
But there again, one must remember, it would be necessary to get all
the women to nag. And that brings us to the end of the political surface
of the matter. The working objection to the Suffragette philosophy
is simply that overmastering millions of women do not agree with it.
I am aware that some maintain that women ought to have votes whether the
majority wants them or not; but this is surely a strange and childish case
of setting up formal democracy to the destruction of actual democracy.
What should the mass of women decide if they do not decide their general
place in the State? These people practically say that females may vote
about everything except about Female Suffrage.


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e shtunë, 21 korrik 2007

WE MUST FORM HABITS



WE MUST FORM HABITS.--We _must_, then, form habits. It is not at all in
our power to say whether we will form habits or not; for, once started,
they go on forming themselves by day and night, steadily and
relentlessly. Habit is, therefore, one of the great factors to be
reckoned with in our lives, and the question becomes not, Shall we form
habits? but _What habits we shall form._ And we have the determining of
this question largely in our own power, for habits do not just happen,
nor do they come to us ready made. We ourselves make them from day to
day through the acts we perform, and in so far as we have control over
our acts, in that far we can determine our habits.


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It may be well to refer for a moment to the variations in



temperature known as inversions
It may be well to refer for a moment to the variations in
temperature known as inversions. In the accompanying diagram
it will be seen that the temperature falls with elevation, and
starting from the ground on a day when the temperature is near
the freezing point, 273 degrees A., one finds at a height of
seven thousand meters a fall of about forty degrees. It is not
easy to represent on a single diagram the variation in detail
and therefore we have divided the air column into three parts,
the scales being as one to a hundred.


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e premte, 20 korrik 2007

was one familiar to their minds, and it is impossible not to



feel interested in a people who were accustomed to consider
themselves surrounded by invisible intelligences, anti who
recognized in the rising sun, the mild and silver moon, the
shooting star, the meteor"s transient flame, the ocean"s roar,
the tempest"s blast, or the evening breeze the movements of
mighty spirits
was one familiar to their minds, and it is impossible not to
feel interested in a people who were accustomed to consider
themselves surrounded by invisible intelligences, anti who
recognized in the rising sun, the mild and silver moon, the
shooting star, the meteor"s transient flame, the ocean"s roar,
the tempest"s blast, or the evening breeze the movements of
mighty spirits.


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EMOTIONS ACCOMPANYING CRISES IN EXPERIENCE



EMOTIONS ACCOMPANYING CRISES IN EXPERIENCE.--If our description of the
feelings has been correct, it will be seen that the simpler and milder
feelings are for the common run of our everyday experience; they are the
common valuers of our thought and acts from hour to hour. The emotions,
or more intense feeling states, are, however, the occasional high tide
of feeling which occurs in crises or emergencies. We are angry on some
particular provocation, we fear some extraordinary factor in our
environment, we are joyful over some unusual good fortune.


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e mërkurë, 18 korrik 2007

Not wishing to overload this long essay with too many parentheses,



apart from its thesis of progress and precedent, I append here three
notes on points of detail that may possibly be misunderstood
Not wishing to overload this long essay with too many parentheses,
apart from its thesis of progress and precedent, I append here three
notes on points of detail that may possibly be misunderstood.


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You prosecute the man or woman Who steals the goose from off the common,



But leave the larger felon loose Who steals the common from the goose
You prosecute the man or woman Who steals the goose from off the common,
But leave the larger felon loose Who steals the common from the goose.


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e martë, 17 korrik 2007

Plays and moving pictures of the right character and free from morbid



suggestions, if enjoyed in moderation, are hygienic
Plays and moving pictures of the right character and free from morbid
suggestions, if enjoyed in moderation, are hygienic. Comedy is generally
more wholesome than tragedy. Laughter lengthens life; tears do not.


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e hënë, 16 korrik 2007

Exclusively intellectual training may be sufficient for the



genius or for the few who have great initiative and
intellectual self-confidence, but for the great mass of boys
and girls this training is not sufficient
Exclusively intellectual training may be sufficient for the
genius or for the few who have great initiative and
intellectual self-confidence, but for the great mass of boys
and girls this training is not sufficient. It does not prepare
the young for the kind of work that three fourths of them will
have to do. We are now beginning to recognize this and through
manual training, vocational guidance, etc., we are teaching
boys and girls how to do things, and this, too, has the
additional merit of being, in a measure, physical training.


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When a fragment of an organism transforms, under appropriate



conditions, into a typical individual, the process includes
degenerative aa well as regenerative phases
When a fragment of an organism transforms, under appropriate
conditions, into a typical individual, the process includes
degenerative aa well as regenerative phases. There is always
some simplification of the structures present, whose character
and amount is determined by the degree of specialization which
has been attained. The smaller the piece, within certain
limits, and the younger physiologically, the more nearly does
it return to embryonic conditions, a fact which can be studied
admirably in the hydroid Corymorpha. In some cases the
simplification is accomplished by abrupt sacrifice of highly
specialized parts, as in Corymorpha, when in a process of
simplification connected with acclimatization to aquarium
conditions, the large tentacles of well-grown specimens fall
away completely from their bases. In other hydroids (e. g.,
Campanularia) the tentacles may be completely absorbed into the
body of the hydranth from which they originally sprang. Among
tissue cells degenerative changes may be abrupt, as in the
sacrifice of the highly specialized fibrillae in muscle cells;
or they may be very gradual, as in the transformation of cells
of one sort into another that occurs in the regeneration of
tentacles in Tubularia.


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e diel, 15 korrik 2007

Report received last night



Report received last night. My thanks are due for your prompt
action and confirmation of my suspicions.
STARK,
Chief Surgeon


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e shtunë, 14 korrik 2007

8



8. Kapteyn believes that he is able to divide the individual
stars--those whose proper motions are known--into the two star
streams which he has described; and he finds that the first
stream is rich in the early blue stars, less rich relatively in
yellow stars, and poor in red stars, whereas the second stream
is very poor in early blue stars, rich in yellows, and
relatively very rich in reds. His interpretation is that the
stream-one stars are effectively younger than the stream-two
stars, on the whole. Stream one still abounds in youthful
stars: they grow older and the yellow and red stars will then
predominate. Stream two abounds in stars which were once young,
but are now middle-aged and old.


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The great primitive instinct, so responsive to social control as to be



almost an example of social docility, has apparently broken with all the
restraints and decencies under two conditions: first and second, when
the individual felt that he was above social control and when the
individual has had an opportunity to hide his daily living
The great primitive instinct, so responsive to social control as to be
almost an example of social docility, has apparently broken with all the
restraints and decencies under two conditions: first and second, when
the individual felt that he was above social control and when the
individual has had an opportunity to hide his daily living. Prostitution
upon a commercial basis in a measure embraces the two conditions, for it
becomes possible only in a society so highly complicated that social
control may be successfully evaded and the individual thus feels
superior to it. When a city is so large that it is extremely difficult
to fix individual responsibility, that which for centuries was
considered the luxury of the king comes within the reach of every
office-boy, and that lack of community control which belonged only to
the overlord who felt himself superior to the standards of the people,
may be seized upon by any city dweller who can evade his acquaintances.
Against such moral aggression, the old types of social control are
powerless.


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e premte, 13 korrik 2007

The idea of Duty was of Stoical origin, fostered and developed by the



Roman spirit and legislation
The idea of Duty was of Stoical origin, fostered and developed by the
Roman spirit and legislation. The early Stoics had two different
words,--one for the "suitable" [Greek: kathaekon], or incomplete
propriety, admitting of degrees, and below the point of rectitude, and
another for the "right" [Greek: katorthoma], or complete rectitude of
action, which none could achieve except the wise man. It is a
significant circumstance that the "suitable" is the lineal ancestor of
our word "duty" (through the Latin _officium_).


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These examples are but suggestions of the many reversible



reactions that have now been observed among the compounds of
carbon
These examples are but suggestions of the many reversible
reactions that have now been observed among the compounds of
carbon. That they have peculiar significance for the present
discussion resides in the fact that living substance is
composed of carbon compounds, so many and in such exceedingly
complex relations as to present endless possibilities for
shifting equilibria and the physical and chemical adjustments
resulting therefrom.


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e enjte, 12 korrik 2007

Chapter III



Chapter III. relates to the origin of our Desires and Affections, by
which he means more especially Self-love and Benevolence. His position
here is that Self-love is the essence of a Sensible being, Benevolence
the essential of an Intelligent being. By the very nature of our
sensitive constitution, we cannot but choose happiness for self; and it
is only an act of intellectual consistency to extend the same measure
to others. The same qualification, however, is made as to the
insufficiency of a mere intellectual impulse in this matter, without
constitutional tendencies. These constitutional tendencies the author
considers as made up of our Appetites and Passions, while our
Affections are founded on our rational nature. Then follow a few
observations in confirmation of Butler"s views as to the disinterested
nature of our affections.


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Unfortunately most people can not live out of doors all of the time, and



many are so situated that they can not even secure ventilation, granted
that they want it
Unfortunately most people can not live out of doors all of the time, and
many are so situated that they can not even secure ventilation, granted
that they want it. But there is one important part of the twenty-four
hours when most people can completely control their own air supply. This
is at night. We spend a third of our time in bed. Most of us live such
confined lives during the day that we should all the more avail
ourselves of our opportunities to practise air hygiene at night.


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e mërkurë, 11 korrik 2007

Whether the Earth of its present size was ever completely



liquefied, that is, from center to surface, at one and the same
time, is doubtful
Whether the Earth of its present size was ever completely
liquefied, that is, from center to surface, at one and the same
time, is doubtful. The lack of homogeneity, as indicated by the
plumb-line, gravity, terrestrial magnetism and radiaoctive
matter, extending in a perceptible degree down to 122 km., and
quite probably in lesser and imperceptible degree to a much
greater depth, is opposed to the idea.


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e martë, 10 korrik 2007

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY received by the will of Amos F



COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY received by the will of Amos F. Eno the
residuary estate which may amount to several million dollars.
In addition, the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen
receives $1,800,000, and bequests of $250,000 each are made to
New York University, The American Museum of Natural History,
the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the New York Association for
improving the Condition of the Poor--Mr. James J. Hill has
presented $125,000 to Harvard University to be added to the
principal of the professorship in the Harvard graduate school
of business administration, which bears his name. The James J.
Hill professorship of transportation was founded by a gift of
$125,000, announced last commencement day, the donors including
John Pierpont Morgan, Thomas W. Lamont, Robert Bacon and Howard
Elliott.--The sum of about $400,000 has been subscribed in the
University of Michigan alumni campaign for $1,000,000 with
which to build and endow a home for the Michigan Union, as a
memorial to Dr. James B. Angell, president emeritus.


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Gum infection is not always due to conscious neglect



Gum infection is not always due to conscious neglect. Some people do not
know how to properly cleanse the teeth. Others have tissues of low
resistance, and need to give extra care to tooth- and gum-cleansing
under the closest dental supervision. Others have spent large sums for
dental work that has filled the mouth with crowns and bridges difficult
to keep aseptic or surgically clean. There are various means which the
individual can use to prevent or cure these dental evils.


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There are two allusions to smallpox in 'Don Juan,' which was



published in 1819, showing to what an extent Jennerian
teachings were in the air
There are two allusions to smallpox in 'Don Juan,' which was
published in 1819, showing to what an extent Jennerian
teachings were in the air. The first is:


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It will help to give a picture of food values if, before going further,



we note how much it takes of some of the common foods to make a given
amount of food value, say 100 calories
It will help to give a picture of food values if, before going further,
we note how much it takes of some of the common foods to make a given
amount of food value, say 100 calories. It is surprising in how many
cases the ordinary amount of food served at table happens to contain
about 100 calories. We find 100 calories in a small lamb chop (weighing
about an ounce); in a large egg (about 2 ounces); in a small side-dish
of baked beans (about 3 ounces); in 11/2 cubic inches of cheese (about an
ounce); in an ordinary side-dish of sweet corn (about 31/2 ounces); in one
large-sized potato (if baked, about 3 ounces; if boiled, about
4 ounces); in an ordinary thick slice of bread (about 11/2 ounces); in one
shredded wheat biscuit (about an ounce); in a very large dish of oatmeal
(about 6 ounces); in a small piece of sponge-cake (about an ounce); in a
third of an ordinary piece of pie (about 11/2 ounces); in three
teaspoonfuls or 11/2 lumps of sugar (about 1 ounce); in a dozen peanuts
(about 1/3 of an ounce); in eight pecans (about 1/2 an ounce); in four
prunes (about 1 ounce); in two apples (about 7 ounces); in a large
banana (about 4 ounces) in half a cantaloup (about 9 ounces); in seven
olives (about 11/2 ounces); in a very large orange (about 10 ounces); in
an ordinary pat of butter (about 1/2 an ounce); in a quarter of a glass of
cream (about 2 ounces); in a small glass of milk (about 5 ounces). (See
SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES for 'Table of Food Values.')




e hënë, 9 korrik 2007

He commences with the Law of Honour, which he views in its narrow



sense, as applied to people of rank and fashion
He commences with the Law of Honour, which he views in its narrow
sense, as applied to people of rank and fashion. This is of course a
very limited code.


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Another source of error is the fact that certain nationalities



or races seem to have natural inclinations and desires to
follow in disproportionate numbers one kind of activity or
occupation and are content to let other people rise to those
positions which make them 'the best-known men and women of the
United States
Another source of error is the fact that certain nationalities
or races seem to have natural inclinations and desires to
follow in disproportionate numbers one kind of activity or
occupation and are content to let other people rise to those
positions which make them 'the best-known men and women of the
United States.' As Dr. Woods states, the Jews could not be
expected to show as large a percentage, since they largely turn
their attention to the banking, wholesale and retail trades, in
which they have been very successful, but in which eminence is
not correspondingly recognized in 'Who"s Who in America.'


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e diel, 8 korrik 2007

VI



VI.--The relationship with Theology is also close. That is to say,
Plato was not satisfied to construct a science of good and evil,
without conjoining the sentiments towards the Gods. His Theology,
however, was of his own invention, and adapted to his ethical theory.
It was necessary to suppose that the gods were the authors of good, in
order to give countenance to virtue.


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This is so contrary to our ordinary experience and ideas, in



which loss of heat tends to change from gas to fluid and solid,
that we must look into it a little to make it sound reasonable
This is so contrary to our ordinary experience and ideas, in
which loss of heat tends to change from gas to fluid and solid,
that we must look into it a little to make it sound reasonable.
The recent brilliant work of P. W. Bridgman (contrary to the
earlier speculations of Tammann) indicates that the effect of
increased pressure, at high temperature, makes a substance
solid and crystalline. Crowd any atoms close enough together,
and no matter how fast they expand or contract under the
influence of heat the crystalline atomic forces will get to
work when they are crowded within their range, and the closest
packing, hence that which will yield most to the pressure,
hence that which is likely to take place, is when they are all
regularly arranged facing the same way. Such an arrangement we
call crystalline. Just so when they want to pack the most
people into the car of an elevator they ask them to all face to
the front. Keep this metaphor a moment. Any one who should try
to penetrate such a crowd would find it a hard job. They would
offer a very effective rigidity. Now suppose them to sweat in
those confined quarters their fat away, their phlogiston, their
caloric. If the walls of the car remained rigid while the
individuals therein shrunk they might after a while be able to
turn around or even move around in a car. Such is then the
supposed condition of the atoms in the FOURTH, the central,
layer of the earth"s crust. This assumes that the middle layer
is rigid and sustains itself, like the shell of a nut, as in
the figure, while within the atoms are in a less rigid
condition. That such a shell might be self-sustaining is
suggested by an experiment of Bridgman, who put a marble with a
gas bubble in it under a pressure of something like 150,000
pounds to the square inch without producing any perceptible
change.


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e shtunë, 7 korrik 2007

Commenting for a moment on the credit side of the above ledger



account, it can be said that recent psychology shows
conclusively that training in common fractions and weights and
measures can not be of much practical help as so-called
culture, or training for learning other things, unless those
other things are closely related to them, and there are not
many things in life so related to them once we had dropped our
present weights and measures
Commenting for a moment on the credit side of the above ledger
account, it can be said that recent psychology shows
conclusively that training in common fractions and weights and
measures can not be of much practical help as so-called
culture, or training for learning other things, unless those
other things are closely related to them, and there are not
many things in life so related to them once we had dropped our
present weights and measures.


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Not only a healthy mental attitude toward life, but a healthy mental



attitude toward one"s own unhygienic habits is essential
Not only a healthy mental attitude toward life, but a healthy mental
attitude toward one"s own unhygienic habits is essential. It is a very
common thing for a man to romance over his shortcomings, or his
unhealthy physical conditions, to make humor of them to his friends.
Very often the first step toward a better physical condition is a change
in this mental attitude.


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2



2. _The Moral Standard_. This is treated as a branch of Ontology, and
designated the "Real in morality," He declares that Kant"s notion of an
absolute moral law, binding by its inherent power over the mind, is a
mere fiction. The difference between inclination and the moral
imperative is merely a difference between lower and higher pleasure.
The moral law can have no authority unless imposed by a superior, as a
law emanating from a lawgiver. If man is not accountable to some higher
being, there is no distinction between duty and pleasure. The standard
of right and wrong is the moral _nature_ (not the arbitrary _will_) of
God.[25] Now, as we cannot know God--an infinite being,--so we have but
a relative conception of morality. We may have lower and higher ideas
of duty. Morality therefore admits of progress. But no advance in
morality contradicts the _principles_ previously acknowledged, however
it may vary the acts whereby those principles are carried out. And each
advance takes its place in the mind, not as a question to be supported
by argument, but as an axiom to be intuitively admitted. Each principle
appears true and irreversible so far as it goes, but it is liable to be
merged in a more comprehensive formula. It is an error of philosophers
to imagine that they have an absolute standard of morals, and thereupon
to set out _a priori_ the criterion of a possibly true revelation. Kant
said that the revealed commands of God could have no religious value,
unless approved by the moral reason; and Fichte held that no true
revelation could contain any intimation of future rewards and
punishments, or any moral rule not deducible from the principles of the
practical reason. But revelation has enlightened the practical reason,
as by the maxim--to love God with all thy heart, and thy neighbour as
thyself--a maxim, says Mr. Mansel, that philosophy in vain toiled
after, and subsequently borrowed without acknowledgment.


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e premte, 6 korrik 2007

There are many cases where the so-called focus has apparently become



established because of general bodily neglect and a general lowering of
resistance, in which the focus, even though it be the mouth, has
participated, and permitted the successful activities of germs or
parasites
There are many cases where the so-called focus has apparently become
established because of general bodily neglect and a general lowering of
resistance, in which the focus, even though it be the mouth, has
participated, and permitted the successful activities of germs or
parasites. After the focus has been established, however, it is often an
important and may be a deciding factor in keeping up the general
diseased condition of the body.


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To the endless number of possible aims of human action correspond as



many Imperatives, directing merely how they are to be attained, without
any question of their value; these are Imperatives of _Fitness_
To the endless number of possible aims of human action correspond as
many Imperatives, directing merely how they are to be attained, without
any question of their value; these are Imperatives of _Fitness_. To one
real aim, existing necessarily for all rational beings, viz.,
Happiness, corresponds the Imperative of _Prudence_ (in the narrow
sense), being assertory while hypothetical. The categorical Imperative,
enjoining a mode of action for itself, and concerned about the form and
principle of it, not its nature and result, is the Imperative of
_Morality_. These various kinds of Imperatives, as influencing the
will, may be distinguished as _Rules_ (of fitness), _Counsels_ (of
prudence), _Commands_ or _Laws_ (of morality); also as _technical,
pragmatical, moral_.


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He defines Utility in various phrases, all coming to the same



thing:--the tendency of actions to promote the happiness, and to
prevent the misery, of the party under consideration, which party is
usually the community where one"s lot is cast
He defines Utility in various phrases, all coming to the same
thing:--the tendency of actions to promote the happiness, and to
prevent the misery, of the party under consideration, which party is
usually the community where one"s lot is cast. Of this principle no
proof can be offered; it is the final axiom, on which alone we can
found all arguments of a moral kind. He that attempts to combat it,
usually assumes it, unawares. An opponent is challenged, to say--(1) if
he discards it wholly; (2) if he will act without any principle, or if
there is any other that he would judge by; (3) if that other be really
and distinctly separate from utility; (4) if he is inclined to set up
his own approbation or disapprobation as the rule; and if so, whether
he will force that upon others, or allow each person to do the same;
(5) in the first case, if his principle is not despotical; (6) in the
second case, whether it is not anarchical; (7) supposing him to add the
plea of reflection, let him say if the basis of his reflections
excludes utility; (8) if he means to compound the matter, and take
utility for part; and if so, for what part; (9) why he goes so far,
with Utility, and no farther; (10) on what other principle a meaning
can be attached to the words "_motive_ and _right_.


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An estimate of the value of all weighing and measuring



instruments places the sum at $150,000,000
An estimate of the value of all weighing and measuring
instruments places the sum at $150,000,000. Thus, we see that
in five years, merely by a saving in TIME--for time is
money--all metric measuring and weighing instruments could be
got NEW at no extra expense. This estimate of the cost of
replacing our weighing and measuring instruments by new metric
ones and of saving time has been made by others with a similar
result.


antispamserver


The First Book of Paley"s "Moral and Political Philosophy" is entitled



"PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS" it is in fact an unmethodical account of
various fundamental points of the subject
The First Book of Paley"s "Moral and Political Philosophy" is entitled
"PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS" it is in fact an unmethodical account of
various fundamental points of the subject. He begins by defining Moral
Philosophy as "_that science which teaches men their duty, and the
reasons of it_. The ordinary rules are defective and may mislead,
unless aided by a scientific investigation. These ordinary rules are
the Law of Honour, the Law of the Land, and the Scriptures.


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e enjte, 5 korrik 2007

On the other hand, reason is insufficient of itself to constitute the



feeling of moral approbation or disapprobation
On the other hand, reason is insufficient of itself to constitute the
feeling of moral approbation or disapprobation. Reason shows the means
to an end; but if we are otherwise indifferent to the end, the
reasonings fall inoperative on the mind. Here then a _sentiment_ must
display itself, a delight in the happiness of men, and a repugnance to
what causes them misery. Reason teaches the consequences of actions;
Humanity or Benevolence is roused to make a distinction in favour of
such as are beneficial.


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No small proportion of the population of a modern community are



alumni of some institution of higher learning, and one thing
that these can do is to see to it by every means in their power
that some measure of the spirit of academic freedom is
preserved in their alma mater
No small proportion of the population of a modern community are
alumni of some institution of higher learning, and one thing
that these can do is to see to it by every means in their power
that some measure of the spirit of academic freedom is
preserved in their alma mater. That the spirit of inquiry and
research is not merely tolerated therein but fostered and
substantially supported, morally and financially.


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This use of violent words or deeds in the cure of disease is as



ancient almost as the race of man
This use of violent words or deeds in the cure of disease is as
ancient almost as the race of man. The early Germans attempted
to relieve sprains by reciting confidently how Baldur"s horse
had been cured by Woden after all the other mighty inhabitants
of Valhalla had given up the task, and even earlier tribes of
Europe and Asia had used for illness such a formula as: 'The
great mill stone that is India"s is the bruiser of every worm.
With that I mash together the worms as grain with a mill
stone.' Long after Christianity had reached the Anglo- Saxons
of England, the sick often hung around their necks an image of
Thor"s hammer to frighten away the demon germs that sought to
destroy the body. This appeal to a superior being was common to
all Indo-European races, and the early Christian missionaries
wisely did not attempt to stamp out a belief of such antiquity,
but merely substituted the names of Christ, the Virgin Mary and
the saints for those of the heathen deities. And even into the
nineteenth century this ancient form of faith cure persisted;
for there are living yet in Cornwall people who heard, as
children, this charm for tooth-ache:


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Among traits known to be 'recessive' are albinism (or lack of



pigmentation), a certain degenerative disease of the eye, deafmutism,
imbecility, insanity of certain types, certain nervous diseases; also
mental traits, such as musical ability
Among traits known to be 'recessive' are albinism (or lack of
pigmentation), a certain degenerative disease of the eye, deafmutism,
imbecility, insanity of certain types, certain nervous diseases; also
mental traits, such as musical ability.


flowerbouquetfiller


The purpose of the Life Extension Institute embraces the extension of



human life, not only as to length, but also, if we may so express it, as
to breadth and depth
The purpose of the Life Extension Institute embraces the extension of
human life, not only as to length, but also, if we may so express it, as
to breadth and depth. It endeavors to accomplish this purpose in many
ways, but especially through individual hygiene.


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e mërkurë, 4 korrik 2007

The man with a weak body and without the self-confidence that



surplus energy gives is liable to be of uncertain judgment
The man with a weak body and without the self-confidence that
surplus energy gives is liable to be of uncertain judgment.
Such a man in the presence of a problem requiring quick
decision, doubts and hesitates and stands shivering on the
brink of action while hastening opportunities pass him by.


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But the view for which I contend is, that Morality properly so



called--the science of right conduct--has for its object to determine
_how_ and _why_ certain modes of conduct are detrimental, and certain
other modes beneficial
But the view for which I contend is, that Morality properly so
called--the science of right conduct--has for its object to determine
_how_ and _why_ certain modes of conduct are detrimental, and certain
other modes beneficial. These good and bad results cannot be
accidental, but must be necessary consequences of the constitution of
things; and I conceive it to be the business of Moral Science to
deduce, from the laws of life and the conditions of existence, what
kinds of action necessarily tend to produce happiness, and what kinds
to produce unhappiness. Having done this, its deductions are to be
recognized as laws of conduct; and are to be conformed to irrespective
of a direct estimation of happiness or misery.


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These results are the fundamental laws discovered by Mendel



These results are the fundamental laws discovered by Mendel. But the
results are not always as clear as in the case of the Andalusian fowl.
In that case the hybrids were not like either parent, but were a new
color, blue, so that they were labeled at once and recognizable as
hybrids--but this is not generally the case. Take, for instance, guinea
pigs. What will be the result of mating an 'albino' white with a black
guinea pig? Quite exactly the same principle applies as in the case of
the Andalusian fowl, but the principle is not as clear to see. All the
offspring are hybrid, but they will not be blue: they will be black.
They will look like the black parent, but they are different. The black
color predominates; i.e., black is 'dominant' over white, while the
white recedes out of sight, or is 'recessive.' This hybrid black guinea
pig is like the hybrid blue Andalusian fowl. It is a hybrid, a
combination of white and black, but in the guinea pig the black covers
up the white so that _nothing_ in the color reveals the fact that it is
a hybrid. Now if the hybrid black offspring of these black and white
guinea pigs mate with each other, the result will follow exactly the
same Mendelian law as applied to the Andalusian fowl. But this will not
be so clear, because now we have two kinds of black instead of a black
and a blue. One child in four will be _pure bred_ black like the
grandparent and two out of the four will be _hybrid_ black. So to the
eye we shall simply have, out of four children, one white and three
black. But those three black are not all alike. One is a thoroughbred
and two are half-breeds.


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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.




In the meantime, the conductor had sent a telegram to the offices in



Chicago where Bob had obtained the transportation, asking if a pass had
been issued to Bob Chester, and requesting a description of that
individual
In the meantime, the conductor had sent a telegram to the offices in
Chicago where Bob had obtained the transportation, asking if a pass had
been issued to Bob Chester, and requesting a description of that
individual.




'Aha!' exclaimed James, recovering in some degree, for he thought he had



a madman to deal with
'Aha!' exclaimed James, recovering in some degree, for he thought he had
a madman to deal with. 'What may thy message be?'




'Justice!' exclaimed the Puritan with deep scorn



'Justice!' exclaimed the Puritan with deep scorn. 'James Stuart knows it
not. An archhypocrite, and perfidious as hypocritical, he holdeth as a
maxim that Dissimulation is necessary to a Ruler. He has the cowardice
and the ferocity of the hyaena. He will promise fairly, but his deeds
will falsify his words. Recollect how his Judas kiss betrayed Somerset.
Recollect his conduct towards the Gowries. But imagine not, because you
have been evil intreated and oppressed, that the King will redress your
wrongs, and reinstate you in your fallen position. Rather will he take
part with the usurers and extortioners who have deprived you of your
inheritance. How many poor wretches doth he daily condemn to the same
lingering agonies and certain destruction that he doomed your father.
Lamentable as is the good Sir Ferdinando"s case, it stands not alone. It
is one of many. And many, many more will be added to the list, if this
tyrannical Herodias be suffered to govern.'




And as the waitress went to bring his order, he again felt in his pocket



to make sure he had the money with which to pay for his meal
And as the waitress went to bring his order, he again felt in his pocket
to make sure he had the money with which to pay for his meal.




'I saw seven hundred and fifty dollars of his money put in the envelope,



but all I was to get for holding the envelope until those bad men
returned was to be one dollar--and they didn"t even come back to pay me,
and now I haven"t delivered the groceries, and Mr
'I saw seven hundred and fifty dollars of his money put in the envelope,
but all I was to get for holding the envelope until those bad men
returned was to be one dollar--and they didn"t even come back to pay me,
and now I haven"t delivered the groceries, and Mr. Dardus will be very
angry.'




'All except the clothes and hat,' grunted Higgins



'All except the clothes and hat,' grunted Higgins. 'Say, you won"t have
any trouble getting a job if you go just as you are. Any rancher would
hire you to scare coyotes away from the home ranch.'




As the conductor announced this alternative, he watched Bob closely, and



the start the latter gave at the mention of the possibility of arrest,
only confirmed the man in his suspicion that there was something
irregular about the boy"s having the free transportation
As the conductor announced this alternative, he watched Bob closely, and
the start the latter gave at the mention of the possibility of arrest,
only confirmed the man in his suspicion that there was something
irregular about the boy"s having the free transportation. But as the
reader knows, it was no thought of the pass being spurious that
disturbed Bob. The word 'jail' had brought to his mind his unpleasant
experience in New York.




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.




'I hold a warrant from the Star-Chamber for your arrest,' said the man



in the mask; 'and you will vainly offer resistance if I choose to
execute it
'I hold a warrant from the Star-Chamber for your arrest,' said the man
in the mask; 'and you will vainly offer resistance if I choose to
execute it. Let this be well understood before I proceed. And now to
show you the extent of my information concerning you, and that I am
fully aware of your proceedings, I will relate to you what you have done
since you fled with that froward apprentice, whose tricks will assuredly
bring him to Bridewell, from the Three Cranes. You were landed at London
Bridge, and went thence with your companion to the Rose at Newington
Butts, where you lay that night, and remained concealed, as you fancied,
during the whole of the next day. I say, you fancied your retreat was
unknown, because I was aware of it, and could have seized you had I been
so disposed. The next night you removed to the Crown in Bishopgate
Street, and as you did not care to return to your lodgings near Saint
Botolph"s Church without Aldgate, you privily despatched Dick Taverner
to bring your horses from the Falcon in Gracechurch Street, where you
had left them, with the foolhardy intention of setting forth this
morning to Theobalds, to try and obtain an interview of the King.'




'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.'




e martë, 3 korrik 2007

Believing the men who tried to stop Bob must have been robbed, several



of those about the store leaped onto their horses and gave chase
Believing the men who tried to stop Bob must have been robbed, several
of those about the store leaped onto their horses and gave chase.




'_Bought_ him?' repeated the cowboy in amazement



'_Bought_ him?' repeated the cowboy in amazement. 'You must be rollin"
in money, kid. Simons said he"d never sell for less than two hundred
dollars.'




The magistrate nodded, and Lamh Laudher immediately took his leave



The magistrate nodded, and Lamh Laudher immediately took his leave. In a
short time the intelligence spread. From the sovereign it passed to his
clerk, from the clerk to the other members of the corporation, and, ere
an hour, the town was in a blaze with the intelligence.




Proud, indeed, did Bob feel as his hand clasped the smooth handle of the



lever
Proud, indeed, did Bob feel as his hand clasped the smooth handle of the
lever. Never had he expected to run a real, snorting locomotive,
dragging a long line of cars, and the realization that he was actually
controlling the speed, set him a-tingle with delight.




'And I can"t,' said Bob



'And I can"t,' said Bob. 'I will be more than half an hour late in
getting back to the store, and I know Mr. Dardus will be very angry. I
most wish I hadn"t said I"d wait. It just shows that Mr. Dardus is right
when he says there is no pleasure in having money that isn"t earned
honestly, and getting a dollar for just holding this money isn"t really
honest work.'




When the conductor came along collecting the tickets, Bob proudly drew



forth his pass and presented it
When the conductor came along collecting the tickets, Bob proudly drew
forth his pass and presented it. As though unable to reconcile the bit
of paper with the poorly-clad boy, the conductor scrutinized the
official transportation closely, from time to time glancing at Bob.




'The kid was just up here trying to get a pass he said Mr



'The kid was just up here trying to get a pass he said Mr. Perkins had
told him to call for,' returned the man who had dismissed Bob so
abruptly.




'I think you have chosen the wisest course, Bob,' he finally said



'I think you have chosen the wisest course, Bob,' he finally said. 'The
West is a great country, and you have qualities about you that I think
will bring you success. Of course, you will probably be obliged to stand
a good many hard knocks, but they won"t hurt you, my boy. Hard knocks
are good for any man. The only thing to be careful about is that they do
not sour you and cause you to feel anger and hatred against your
fellows.




This confidence in his squareness appealed more to the ranchman than



anything else Bob could have said or done
This confidence in his squareness appealed more to the ranchman than
anything else Bob could have said or done.




'If courage alone were wanting, I have that,' the young man



replied;--'but I am wholly unknown in town
'If courage alone were wanting, I have that,' the young man
replied;--'but I am wholly unknown in town. How then shall I accomplish
an introduction at Court, when I know not even its humblest attendant?'




After an hour or more of riding, they came to the herd, spread out over



a quarter of a mile of plain, and rode round it till they came to where
four cowboys were lolling on the grass, smoking
After an hour or more of riding, they came to the herd, spread out over
a quarter of a mile of plain, and rode round it till they came to where
four cowboys were lolling on the grass, smoking.




'Sure, we can do it! I"ve got the papers all ready, old Sam Ford"s



signature and all
'Sure, we can do it! I"ve got the papers all ready, old Sam Ford"s
signature and all. Just pass over that two thousand five hundred
dollars, and I"ll give them to you.'




And satisfied with the effect produced by this menace, she departed with



her daughter, before Lord Roos could utter a reply
And satisfied with the effect produced by this menace, she departed with
her daughter, before Lord Roos could utter a reply.




'One other question, and I ask no more,' said the Countess, scarcely



able to syllable her words
'One other question, and I ask no more,' said the Countess, scarcely
able to syllable her words. 'Who is to administer the deadly draught?'




'En verdad!' he exclaimed, 'that is the loveliest piece of rusticity I



have seen since I came to England
'En verdad!' he exclaimed, 'that is the loveliest piece of rusticity I
have seen since I came to England. I thought mine eyes did not deceive
me, as to her beauty, when I caught sight of her from the Lord
Chamberlain"s gallery.'




After an hour or more of riding, they came to the herd, spread out over



a quarter of a mile of plain, and rode round it till they came to where
four cowboys were lolling on the grass, smoking
After an hour or more of riding, they came to the herd, spread out over
a quarter of a mile of plain, and rode round it till they came to where
four cowboys were lolling on the grass, smoking.




'Sure, we can do it! I"ve got the papers all ready, old Sam Ford"s



signature and all
'Sure, we can do it! I"ve got the papers all ready, old Sam Ford"s
signature and all. Just pass over that two thousand five hundred
dollars, and I"ll give them to you.'




Some little time had elapsed since Aveline"s departure on her sorrowful



errand, and Sir Thomas Lake was still alone, and once more deeply
engrossed in the consideration of the document, which, it will be
recollected, had occasioned him so much disquietude; and the feeling by
no means diminished when the usher entered and announced Lady Lake
Some little time had elapsed since Aveline"s departure on her sorrowful
errand, and Sir Thomas Lake was still alone, and once more deeply
engrossed in the consideration of the document, which, it will be
recollected, had occasioned him so much disquietude; and the feeling by
no means diminished when the usher entered and announced Lady Lake.
Severe and inflexible as we have described him, the Secretary of State
was generally yielding enough towards his lady, of whom he stood in
great awe, and whom he treated with the utmost deference; but on this
occasion, contrary to habitude, he received her very coldly, and without
rising motioned her to a seat beside him. Disregarding the want of
attention, which, under other circumstances, she would have resented,
Lady Lake took the seat indicated without remark, and continued silent
till the usher had retired. Then turning quickly towards her husband,
and fixing an inquiring look upon him, she said in a low voice--




Entering one of the doors, he beheld several handsomely polished desks,



at which busy men were seated
Entering one of the doors, he beheld several handsomely polished desks,
at which busy men were seated.




'When you"ve been doing police stations longer, Foster, you will learn



that you can"t judge criminals by their faces,' snarled the sergeant,
and as the other reporters heard this caustic comment, they laughed
uproariously
'When you"ve been doing police stations longer, Foster, you will learn
that you can"t judge criminals by their faces,' snarled the sergeant,
and as the other reporters heard this caustic comment, they laughed
uproariously.




'Not that I was in any real peril, my fair young Sir,' she continued,



'though I feigned to be so, for I have powerful protectors, as you
perceive; and indeed this was all a preconcerted scheme between my Lord
Roos and his noble friends to turn the tables on the two extortioners
'Not that I was in any real peril, my fair young Sir,' she continued,
'though I feigned to be so, for I have powerful protectors, as you
perceive; and indeed this was all a preconcerted scheme between my Lord
Roos and his noble friends to turn the tables on the two extortioners.
But that does not lessen my gratitude to you; and I shall try to prove
it. You are in more danger than, perchance, you wot of; and I feel quite
sure Sir Giles means to carry his threat into execution, and to cause
your arrest.'




'I should be very grateful if some of you _gentlemen_ would tell me of a



ranch where I can apply for a job
'I should be very grateful if some of you _gentlemen_ would tell me of a
ranch where I can apply for a job. I"d rather like to get one without
Mr. Thomas" assistance.'




Never stopping to notice in what direction he was going, Bob dashed



along the street, fearful only lest his guardian would pursue him, and
expecting every moment to hear his voice shouting at him to stop
Never stopping to notice in what direction he was going, Bob dashed
along the street, fearful only lest his guardian would pursue him, and
expecting every moment to hear his voice shouting at him to stop. But as
the moments wore by without any sign of excitement or alarm, Bob gained
confidence, finally slackening his pace to a walk, and began to think of
what he should do, now that he had taken matters into his own hands, and
severed the ties of years that had bound him to his guardian.




Elated by the capture and identification of the would-be train-robbers,



the officers made much of Bob, praising him for remaining to listen
until he had heard the dastardly plot, and commenting on the good
fortune which had placed him just where the tramps were
Elated by the capture and identification of the would-be train-robbers,
the officers made much of Bob, praising him for remaining to listen
until he had heard the dastardly plot, and commenting on the good
fortune which had placed him just where the tramps were.




'Now,' said Nell, addressing the whole party, 'let us all be ready



to-morrow, while the whole town"s preparin" for the fight, to slip away
as well disguised as we can, out of the place; by that time you"ll have
your business done, an" your trifle o" money earned;' she directed the
last words to the red-haired stranger
'Now,' said Nell, addressing the whole party, 'let us all be ready
to-morrow, while the whole town"s preparin" for the fight, to slip away
as well disguised as we can, out of the place; by that time you"ll have
your business done, an" your trifle o" money earned;' she directed the
last words to the red-haired stranger.




'Out, insolent fellow!' cried Sir Giles; 'thou wilt alter thy tune when



thou art scourged at the cart"s-tail
'Out, insolent fellow!' cried Sir Giles; 'thou wilt alter thy tune when
thou art scourged at the cart"s-tail.'




'That"s hard,' replied Lamh Laudher, drawing his breath tightly; 'but



I know where it comes from
'That"s hard,' replied Lamh Laudher, drawing his breath tightly; 'but
I know where it comes from. I think your father might be softened a
little, ay, a great deal, if it wasn"t for your brother Meehaul.'




'I"ll direct you, of course,' returned the agent, 'and you can"t very



well miss it because it"s the only one in town
'I"ll direct you, of course,' returned the agent, 'and you can"t very
well miss it because it"s the only one in town. But if you don"t mind,
I"d like to have you put up here with me.' Then he added in a low voice:
'The Red Indian isn"t the sort of place you"re used to and I"d feel
safer to have you here.'




Very different was Lady Roos"s conduct



Very different was Lady Roos"s conduct. This unhappy lady, whom we have
already mentioned as the daughter of Sir Thomas Lake, Secretary of
State, had the misfortune to be sincerely attached to her handsome but
profligate husband, whose neglect and frequent irregularities she had
pardoned, until the utter estrangement, occasioned by his passion for
the Countess of Exeter, filled her with such trouble, that, overpowered
at length by anguish, she complained to her mother Lady Lake,--an
ambitious and imperious woman, whose vanity had prompted her to bring
about this unfortunate match. Expressing the greatest indignation at the
treatment her daughter had experienced, Lady Lake counselled her to
resent it, undertaking herself to open the eyes of the injured Earl of
Exeter to his wife"s infidelity; but she was dissuaded from her purpose
by Sir Thomas Lake. Though generally governed by his wife, Sir Thomas
succeeded, in this instance, in over-ruling her design of proceeding at
once to extremities with the guilty pair, recommending that, in the
first instance, Lord Roos should be strongly remonstrated with by Lady
Lake and her daughter, when perhaps his fears might be aroused, if his
sense of duty could not be awakened.




'Heavens above! Aunt, she"s turned! Do I forgive you, my heart"s own



treasure? How did you ever offend me, my darling? You
'Heavens above! Aunt, she"s turned! Do I forgive you, my heart"s own
treasure? How did you ever offend me, my darling? You. know you never
did. But if you ever did, my own Ellen, I do forgive you.'




In the fear that his guardian might follow him to the room and discover



him as he was procuring his money, Bob worked with feverish haste to
lift the board, and so excited was he that it seemed as though he could
never raise it
In the fear that his guardian might follow him to the room and discover
him as he was procuring his money, Bob worked with feverish haste to
lift the board, and so excited was he that it seemed as though he could
never raise it. But at last he did so, secured possession of his
treasures, and then put the board back, just as the grocer called to him
from the doorway:




Perhaps there was not one among his nearest friends who felt more



profound regret for having been the occasion of his disgrace, and
consequently of the fate to which he had exposed him, than Meehaul Neil
Perhaps there was not one among his nearest friends who felt more
profound regret for having been the occasion of his disgrace, and
consequently of the fate to which he had exposed him, than Meehaul Neil.
In the course of that day he sent his father to old Lamh Laudher, to
know if young O"Rorke would grant him an interview, the object of which
was to dissuade him from the battle.




After the lapse of a short interval, in which Lamh Laudher"s daughter



received back her money, the certificate, and the gospel, her brother
discovered that Rody was the person who had, through Ellen Neil,
communicated to him the secret that assisted him in vanquishing the
Dead Boxer, a piece of information which saved him from prosecution
After the lapse of a short interval, in which Lamh Laudher"s daughter
received back her money, the certificate, and the gospel, her brother
discovered that Rody was the person who had, through Ellen Neil,
communicated to him the secret that assisted him in vanquishing the
Dead Boxer, a piece of information which saved him from prosecution. The
family now returned home, where they found Meehaul Neil awaiting their
arrival, for the purpose of offering his sister"s hand and dowry to
our hero. This offer, we need scarcely say, was accepted with no sullen
spirit. But Lamh Laudher was not so much her inferior in wealth as our
readers may suppose. His affectionate sister divided her money between
him and her parents, with whom she spent the remainder of her days in
peace and tranquility. Our great-grandfather remembered the wedding,
and from him came down to ourselves, as an authentic tradition, the fact
that it was an unrivalled one, but that it would never have taken place
were it not for the terrible challenge of the Dead Boxer.




These words suggested a new train of thought to the reporter, and,



judging from the remark that his informant had some knowledge of the
boy"s antecedents, he determined to learn what he could about them
These words suggested a new train of thought to the reporter, and,
judging from the remark that his informant had some knowledge of the
boy"s antecedents, he determined to learn what he could about them.




'Bear with him, good Master Jocelyn,' Aveline said in a low tone



'Bear with him, good Master Jocelyn,' Aveline said in a low tone. 'He
hath been unjustly treated by the King, and as you see can ill brook the
usage. Bear with him, I pray of you.'




As the prisoner exhibited no violence, the thongs with which his hands



were bound were removed on his entrance to the vault, and he was allowed
the free use of his limbs
As the prisoner exhibited no violence, the thongs with which his hands
were bound were removed on his entrance to the vault, and he was allowed
the free use of his limbs. The breast-plate in which he was clad was
taken from him, and his vesture was again closely searched, but no
further discovery was made either of concealed weapon, or of any paper
or letter tending to show that he had accomplices in his dread design.
The only thing found upon him, indeed, was a small Bible, and this,
after it had been examined, he was permitted to retain. To the
interrogatories put to him by Master Dendy, the serjeant-at-arms, he
returned the briefest answers; and when he had said as much as he
thought fit, he obstinately refused to make further reply.




'You will have an opportunity of revisiting that fine city, Madame; for



you will no longer be able to carry on your calling here
'You will have an opportunity of revisiting that fine city, Madame; for
you will no longer be able to carry on your calling here.'




'You have guessed right, Sire,' he said



'You have guessed right, Sire,' he said. 'This is Sir Ferdinando"s son;
and, if I may be permitted to say so, your Majesty owes him some
reparation for the wrongs done his father.'




'Why, she says she--_will_ come, for all that, if she can; but she



bid me take your stick from you, for a rason she has, that she"ll tell
yourself when she sees you
'Why, she says she--_will_ come, for all that, if she can; but she
bid me take your stick from you, for a rason she has, that she"ll tell
yourself when she sees you.'




'And now we"ll forget all trouble and have a good time,' announced Mr



'And now we"ll forget all trouble and have a good time,' announced Mr.
Nichols. 'Give this note to the cashier, chief. Take Bob"s pass from the
messenger and meet us at the limited at eleven. Bob and I are going to
the theatre.'




'Don"t forget that address: "South 101st Street, on the left-hand



corner, in a big, yellow brick building
'Don"t forget that address: "South 101st Street, on the left-hand
corner, in a big, yellow brick building." It"s on the side of the
street nearest New York, and the name is Mrs. John Cameron.'




The enamoured knight seized the hand she extended towards him, but in



the attempt to kiss it fell to the ground, amid the laughter of the
company
The enamoured knight seized the hand she extended towards him, but in
the attempt to kiss it fell to the ground, amid the laughter of the
company.




'He told me himself, however, that when he had accumulated that amount



he was going to find a man
'He told me himself, however, that when he had accumulated that amount
he was going to find a man. But more than that he wouldn"t say.




'Why should this be so, O friend of my father?' exclaimed Sir Jocelyn



'Why should this be so, O friend of my father?' exclaimed Sir Jocelyn.
'And why should my presence be hateful to you? There is no man living
whom I would less willingly offend than yourself; and in all I have
done, where you have been concerned, I have had no free agency. Judge me
not then too harshly. I commiserate your situation from the depths of my
heart, and would relieve it were it possible.'




Without incident the hours of darkness passed and the two days that



Merry Dick was with him, and, on the third, Ford rode over to see how
they were getting along
Without incident the hours of darkness passed and the two days that
Merry Dick was with him, and, on the third, Ford rode over to see how
they were getting along.




'I must wait, your worship, till I hear fully what it is first,' replied



Lamh Laudher, 'afther that I"m not afraid of clearin" myself from it
'I must wait, your worship, till I hear fully what it is first,' replied
Lamh Laudher, 'afther that I"m not afraid of clearin" myself from it.'




'Let the door be opened,' the same authoritative voice exclaimed, which



had before ordered its closure
'Let the door be opened,' the same authoritative voice exclaimed, which
had before ordered its closure.




e hënë, 2 korrik 2007

Among those who had heard the story of the swindling of the countryman



were several reporters for the great metropolitan afternoon papers, and
as the burly policeman dragged the pathetic figure of the grocer"s boy
to the cell, one of these, a particularly clean-cut, wide-awake young
fellow, exclaimed:




Loud and reiterated shouts broke from the assemblage on the



satisfactory completion of the ceremony, the church bells pealed
merrily, and the minstrels played their most enlivening strains
Loud and reiterated shouts broke from the assemblage on the
satisfactory completion of the ceremony, the church bells pealed
merrily, and the minstrels played their most enlivening strains. The
rushes were strewn on the ground at the foot of the May-pole, and
arbours were formed, with marvellous celerity, in different parts of the
green, with the branches of the trees. At the same time, the ancient
Cross was decorated with boughs and garlands. The whole scene offered as
pretty and cheerful a sight as could be desired; but there was one
beholder, as will presently appear, who viewed it in a different light.




Having set his heart upon Theobalds, James offered the Earl of



Salisbury, in exchange for it, the palace and domains of Hatfield; and
the proposal being accepted (it could not very well be refused), the
delivery of the much-coveted place was made on the 22nd May, 1607; the
Prince Joinville, brother to the Duke de Guise, being present on the
occasion, where fresh festivities were held, accompanied by an
indifferent Masque from Ben Jonson
Having set his heart upon Theobalds, James offered the Earl of
Salisbury, in exchange for it, the palace and domains of Hatfield; and
the proposal being accepted (it could not very well be refused), the
delivery of the much-coveted place was made on the 22nd May, 1607; the
Prince Joinville, brother to the Duke de Guise, being present on the
occasion, where fresh festivities were held, accompanied by an
indifferent Masque from Ben Jonson. Whether the King or the Earl had the
best of the bargain, we are not prepared to decide.




'What means this disturbance?' thundered Sir Giles; 'and why do you



offer to molest me in the execution of my duty? Know you not that
assemblages like yours are unlawful, and that you are liable to severe
punishment, unless you immediately disperse yourselves, and peaceably
depart to your own habitations? About your business, I say, and trouble
me no longer! But first, I command you to deliver up your ringleaders,
and especially those who, as I am told, have perpetrated the gross
outrage and violence upon the person of Sir Francis Mitchell
'What means this disturbance?' thundered Sir Giles; 'and why do you
offer to molest me in the execution of my duty? Know you not that
assemblages like yours are unlawful, and that you are liable to severe
punishment, unless you immediately disperse yourselves, and peaceably
depart to your own habitations? About your business, I say, and trouble
me no longer! But first, I command you to deliver up your ringleaders,
and especially those who, as I am told, have perpetrated the gross
outrage and violence upon the person of Sir Francis Mitchell. An example
shall be made of them.'




'Put this with your ten dollars,' he continued



'Put this with your ten dollars,' he continued. 'It will help some
toward getting you out West, and now you go back to Mr. Dardus, and tell
him that Judge Bristol said that your arrest was an outrage. Clerk, call
the next case.'




'I b"lieve you forget that I"m Ellen Neil"s brother: now, Lamh Laudher,



as her brother, I choose to insist on your answering me
'I b"lieve you forget that I"m Ellen Neil"s brother: now, Lamh Laudher,
as her brother, I choose to insist on your answering me.'




'It should, honourable Sir



'It should, honourable Sir. But I did not profit by it. I knew and felt
that he was no longer under the dominion of reason--that he was
labouring under some terrible delusion that approached its crisis; but I
did not check him. I yielded passive obedience to his injunction, that I
should depart instantly with an old servant to London; and I agreed to
tarry at a house, which he mentioned, till I heard from him. I had sad
forebodings that I should never hear from him again--or if I _did_, that
the tidings would be worse than none at all; but I obeyed. I could not,
indeed, resist his will. I set forth with my attendant, and my father
parted with us at the door. He placed money in my hand, and bade me
farewell! but in such a tone, and with such a look, that I felt his
senses were gone, and I would have stayed him, but it was then too late.
Breaking from my embrace, he sprang upon his horse, which was ready
saddled, and rode off, taking the direction of Edmonton; while I, with a
heart full of distress and misgiving, pursued my way to London. Ere
midnight, my sad presentiments were verified. A messenger traced me out,
bringing intelligence of the direful event that had happened, and
informing me that my father was a prisoner at Theobalds. As soon as I
could procure means of reaching the palace, I set forth, and arrived
here about an hour ago, when, failing in my efforts to obtain an
interview with my father, who is closely confined, and none suffered to
come near him save with authority from the Secretary of State, I sought
an audience of you, honourable Sir, in the hope that you would grant me
permission to see him.'




As the conductor announced this alternative, he watched Bob closely, and



the start the latter gave at the mention of the possibility of arrest,
only confirmed the man in his suspicion that there was something
irregular about the boy"s having the free transportation
As the conductor announced this alternative, he watched Bob closely, and
the start the latter gave at the mention of the possibility of arrest,
only confirmed the man in his suspicion that there was something
irregular about the boy"s having the free transportation. But as the
reader knows, it was no thought of the pass being spurious that
disturbed Bob. The word 'jail' had brought to his mind his unpleasant
experience in New York.




'I have positively lost so much,' replied the woman, 'together with the



certificate of my marriage
'I have positively lost so much,' replied the woman, 'together with the
certificate of my marriage.'




'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?'




'Ay,' said the man, 'robbery, no less--an" what is more, I"m afraid



there"s little doubt of his guilt
'Ay,' said the man, 'robbery, no less--an" what is more, I"m afraid
there"s little doubt of his guilt. Why did he lave his hat at the place
where the attempt was first made? He must come with us.'




'I"m glad of that



'I"m glad of that. Now, you sit here a few minutes, and I"ll put up a
lunch for you, and then you won"t have to buy any food while you are on
the train. They always charge a lot more on trains or in station
restaurants than they ought to.'




'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.'




One evening in the beginning of the eighteenth century--as nearly as we



can conjecture, the year might be that of 1720--some time about the end
of April, a young man named _Lamh Laudher_ O"Rorke, or Strong-handed
O"Eorke, was proceeding from his father"s house, with a stout oaken
cudgel in his hand, towards an orchard that stood at the skirt of a
country town, in a part of the kingdom which, for the present, shall be
nameless
One evening in the beginning of the eighteenth century--as nearly as we
can conjecture, the year might be that of 1720--some time about the end
of April, a young man named _Lamh Laudher_ O"Rorke, or Strong-handed
O"Eorke, was proceeding from his father"s house, with a stout oaken
cudgel in his hand, towards an orchard that stood at the skirt of a
country town, in a part of the kingdom which, for the present, shall be
nameless. Though known by the epithet of _Lamh Laudher_, his Christian
name was John; but in those time(s) Irish families of the same name
were distinguished from each other by some indicative of their natural
position, physical power, complexion, or figure. One, for instance,
was called _Parra Ghastha_, or swift Paddy, from his fleetness of foot;
another, _Shaun Buie_, or yellow Jack, from his bilious look; a third,
_Micaul More_, or big Michael, from his uncommon size; and a fourth,
_Sheemus Ruah_, or red James, from the color of his hair. These
epithets, to be sure, still occur in Ireland, but far less frequently
now than in the times of which we write, when Irish was almost the
vernacular language of the country. It was for a reason similar to those
just alleged, that John O"Rorke was known as _Lamh Laudher_ O"Rorke;
he, as well as his forefathers for two or three generations, having been
remarkable for prodigious bodily strength and courage. The evening was
far advanced as O"Rorke bent his steps to the orchard. The pale, but
cloudless sun hung over the western hills, and sun upon the quiet gray
fields that kind of tranquil radiance which, in the opening of summer,
causes many a silent impulse of delight to steal into the heart. Lamh
Laudher felt this; his step was slow, like that of a man who, without
being capable of tracing those sources of enjoyment which the spirit
absorbs from the beauties of external nature, has yet enough of
uneducated taste and feeling within him, to partake of the varied feast
which she presents.