THE WORLD'S SAVIORS SAVED FROM DESTRUCTION IN INFANCY CHAPTER XIII.
— from The World's Sixteen Crucified Saviors; Or, Christianity Before Christ by Kersey Graves
So the equation (as it is called) x 2 - 7 x + 12 = 0 expresses the fact that if a certain number x is multiplied by itself, and this result made less by seven times the number and greater by twelve, the result is 0.
— from The New Gresham Encyclopedia. A to Amide Vol. 1 Part 1 by Various
[26] The Abd-al-Kâdir manuscript is described and illustrated in chapter XXXII.
— from All About Coffee by William H. (William Harrison) Ukers
In this Project Gutenberg edition the pertinent information is in Chapter XXX, paragraph 90 .
— from Bleak House by Charles Dickens
The poet appears to have forgotten that Śuka and Sáraṇ were dismissed with ignominy in Canto XXIX, and have not been reinstated.
— from The Rámáyan of Válmíki, translated into English verse by Valmiki
A Caller—A Talk about Old Times—The Fox Hunt—An Accurate Judgment of an Idiot—How We Passed the Custom Officers in Italy CHAPTER XXI .
— from Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World by Mark Twain
I must also express my obligation to him for having suggested through his Oxford lectures a good share of the important material interwoven into chapter xii touching the vitalistic view of evolution.
— from The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries by W. Y. (Walter Yeeling) Evans-Wentz
The answer to my abstract problem could then be obtained by drawing a general inference from all the cases, and the procedure is illustrated in Chapters XVII and XVIII .
— from Argonauts of the Western Pacific An Account of Native Enterprise and Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea by Bronislaw Malinowski
CHAPTER VIII—VERY MYSTERIOUS CHAPTER IX—A FRUITLESS SEARCH CHAPTER X—CONJECTURES AND ABSURDITIES CHAPTER XI—THE MAJOR ENCOUNTERS THE GHOST CHAPTER XII—ANOTHER DISAPPEARANCE CHAPTER XIII—THE WAY IT HAPPENED CHAPTER XIV—PRISONERS OF THE WALL CHAPTER XV—MILDRED CONFIDES IN INEZ CHAPTER XVI—AN UNEXPECTED ARRIVAL CHAPTER XVII—THE PRODIGAL SON CHAPTER XVIII—LACES AND GOLD CHAPTER XIX—INEZ AND MIGUEL CHAPTER XX—MR.
— from Aunt Jane's Nieces on the Ranch by L. Frank (Lyman Frank) Baum
Is—is Lady Eleanor in it?" CHAPTER XXVI.
— from Leslie's Loyalty by Charles Garvice
The last time this great vision is mentioned is in chapter xliii.
— from The Prophet Ezekiel: An Analytical Exposition by Arno Clemens Gaebelein
BURR By Alfred Henry Lewis 1908 CONTENTS AN AMERICAN PATRICIAN CHAPTER I—FROM THEOLOGY TO LAW CHAPTER II—THE GENTLEMAN VOLUNTEER CHAPTER III—COLONEL BENEDICT ARNOLD EXPLAINS CHAPTER IV—THE YOUNG FRENCH PRIEST CHAPTER V—THE WRATH OF WASHINGTON CHAPTER VI—POOR PEGGY MONCRIEFFE CHAPTER VII—THE CONQUERING THEODOSIA CHAPTER VIII—MARRIAGE AND THE LAW CHAPTER IX—SON-IN-LAW HAMILTON CHAPTER X—THAT SEAT IN THE SENATE CHAPTER XI—THE STATESMAN FROM NEW YORK CHAPTER XII—IDLENESS AND BLACK RESOLVES CHAPTER XIII—THE GRINDING OF AARON’S MILL CHAPTER XIV—THE TRIUMPH OF AARON CHAPTER XV—THE INTRIGUE OF THE TIE CHAPTER XVI—THE SWEETNESS OF REVENGE CHAPTER XVII—AARON I, EMPEROR OF MEXICO CHAPTER XVIII—THE TREASON OF WILKINSON CHAPTER XIX—HOW AARON IS INDICTED CHAPTER XX—HOW AARON IS FOUND INNOCENT CHAPTER XXI—THE SAILING AWAY OF AARON.
— from Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Alfred Henry Lewis by Alfred Henry Lewis
398 sq. ; the ritual of, in initiatory ceremonies, xi. 225 sqq.
— from The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion (Third Edition, Vol. 12 of 12) by James George Frazer
The literature of the Moors of Spain would doubtless have exhibited a similar decadence and peculiarity of character; but on these points we have not the means of judging, the fanatic destroyer of the celebrated library of the Ptolemies having, seven centuries afterwards, found an unworthy imitator in Cardinal Ximenes—at whose instigation every scrap of Mohammedan literature found within the captured city of Granada was, with intolerant fury, committed to the flames.
— from Excursions in the mountains of Ronda and Granada, with characteristic sketches of the inhabitants of southern Spain, vol. 1/2 by C. Rochfort (Charles Rochfort) Scott
"That Boy" is Ill CHAPTER X. A Scene in the Sierras CHAPTER XI.
— from First Fam'lies of the Sierras by Joaquin Miller
Vast numbers of musicians were employed in the greater temple service, 4,000 being mentioned in I Chronicles xxiii, 5, as praising God with the kinds of instruments appointed by David.
— from A Popular History of the Art of Music From the Earliest Times Until the Present by W. S. B. (William Smythe Babcock) Mathews
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