J.S.F. FOOTNOTES a See page x .
— from The Choise of Valentines; Or the Merie Ballad of Nash His Dildo by Thomas Nash
Our Adventurer is made acquainted with a new Scene of Life XL He contemplates Majesty and its Satellites in Eclipse XLI One Quarrel is compromised, and another decided by unusual Arms XLII An unexpected Rencontre, and a happy Revolution in the Affairs of our Adventurer XLIII Fathom justifies the Proverb, “What's bred in the Bone will never come out of the Flesh” XLIV Anecdotes of Poverty, and Experiments for the Benefit of those whom it may concern XLV Renaldo's Distress deepens, and Fathom's Plot thickens XLVI Our Adventurer becomes absolute in his Power over the Passions of his Friend, and effects one half of his Aim XLVII The Art of Borrowing further explained, and an Account of a Strange Phenomenon XLVIII Count Fathom unmasks his Battery; is repulsed; and varies his Operations without effect XLIX Monimia's Honour is protected by the Interposition of Heaven L Fathom shifts the Scene, and appears in a new Character LI Triumphs over a Medical Rival LII Repairs to the Metropolis, and enrols himself among the Sons of Paean LIII Acquires Employment in consequence of a lucky Miscarriage LIV His Eclipse, and gradual Declination LV
— from The Adventures of Ferdinand Count Fathom — Complete by T. (Tobias) Smollett
Written by the hand of that secretary, who in heart, body, and will, is, Your loyal and most assured Servant, [Pg xiii] T O MY MISTRESS.
— from The Love Letters of Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn; With Notes by King of England Henry VIII
I saw them wash and smear themselves and perform the successive stages of native, festive adornment (see Plate XLIX ).
— from Argonauts of the Western Pacific An Account of Native Enterprise and Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea by Bronislaw Malinowski
It was found in the Roman Camp at Sandy ( Pl. XXI, fig. 5 ).
— from Surgical Instruments in Greek and Roman Times by John Stewart Milne
The shield displays the arms of Courtenay and in each of the outer circles is a sexfoil (pl. X B ).
— from Heraldry for Craftsmen & Designers by Hope, W. H. St. John (William Henry St. John), Sir
The land was described as rising, in a succession of low hills, from what had been the ancient margin of the lake; on the north and south sides were the raths of Shancloon and Cloneygonnell, as shown ( plate XLVII.
— from The Lake Dwellings of Ireland Or ancient lacustrine habitations of Erin, commonly called crannogs. by W. G. (William Gregory) Wood-Martin
At Shumopavi ( Pl. XXXV ), however, most of the walls are smoothly plastered.
— from A Study of Pueblo Architecture: Tusayan and Cibola Eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1886-1887, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1891, pages 3-228 by Victor Mindeleff
In those cases in which a genus includes only a single [Pg x] species, I have followed the practice of some botanists, and given only the generic character, believing it to be impossible, before a second species is discovered, to know which characters will prove of specific, in contradistinction to generic, value.
— from A Monograph on the Sub-class Cirripedia (Volume 1 of 2) The Lepadidae; Or, Pedunculated Cirripedes by Charles Darwin
Our rivers do not return from the North Atlantic—All storms [Pg xvi] and showers move from the westward to the eastward—Seeming clouds seen moving from the eastward to the westward are scud—They are incidents of the storm, and not a necessary part of it—The storm clouds are above them, moving to the eastward—Occasions when this may be seen—Admitted facts prove it—Investigations prove it—May be known from analogy—From the fact that there is an aerial current pursuing the same course in which the storms originate—Character of this current—Its influence upon our country—Importance of a knowledge of its origin, cause, and the reciprocal action between it and the earth—To this end necessary to go down “to the chambers of the South” 43 CHAPTER IV.
— from The Philosophy of the Weather. And a Guide to Its Changes by T. B. (Thomas Belden) Butler
[Pg 284] OCTOBER The Tenth OUR REFUGE AND STRENGTH Psalm xlvi.
— from My Daily Meditation for the Circling Year by John Henry Jowett
A Manual of Catholic Theology, Wilhelm and Scannell, p. xvii, et seq.
— from The Clergyman's Hand-book of Law: The Law of Church and Grave by Charles Martin Scanlan
It is equally idle to suppose that not one of them should have brought forward a serious argument against me, if there were any such [Pg x] argument to bring.
— from The Authoress of the Odyssey Where and when she wrote, who she was, the use she made of the Iliad, and how the poem grew under her hands by Samuel Butler
[25] See in Domesday , out of many instances, Esselei and Suei, p. xxix.
— from The New Forest: Its History and Its Scenery by John R. (John Richard) Wise
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