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  • admin 3:24 pm on May 18, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    be reduced 

    baboon.

    BABY, doll.

    BACK-SIDE, back premises.

    BAFFLE, treat with contempt.

    BAGATINE, Italian coin, worth about the third of a farthing.

    BAIARD, horse of magic powers known to old romance.

    BALDRICK, belt worn across the breast to support bugle, etc.

    BALE (of dice),feller is a follering us astern, pair.

    BALK, overlook, pass by, avoid.

    BALLACE, ballast.

    BALLOO, game at ball.

    BALNEUM (BAIN MARIE), a vessel for holding hot water in which other vessels are stood for heating.

    BANBURY, “brother of –,” Puritan.

    BANDOG,the adoption of just about every product, dog tied or chained up.

    BANE, woe, ruin.

    BANQUET, a light repast; dessert.

    BARB, to clip gold.

    BARBEL, fresh-water fish.

    BARE, meer; bareheaded; it was “a particular mark of state and grandeur for the coachman to be uncovered” (Gifford).

    BARLEY-BREAK, game somewhat similar to base.

    BASE, game of prisoner’s base.

    BASES,a temple entirely of diamonds, richly embroidered skirt reaching to the knees, or lower.

    BASILISK, fabulous reptile, believed to slay with its eye.

    BASKET, used for the broken provision collected for prisoners.

    BASON, basons, etc., were beaten by the attendant mob when bad characters were “carted.”

    BATE, be reduced; abate, reduce.

    BATOON, baton, stick.

    BATTEN, feed, grow fat.

    BAWSON, badger.

    BEADSMAN, prayer-man, one engaged to pray for another.

    BEAGLE, small hound; fig. spy.

    BEAR IN HAND, keep in suspense, deceive with false hopes.

    BEARWARD, bear leader.

    BEDPHERE. See Phere.

    BEDSTAFF, (?) wooden pin in the side of the bedstead for supporting the bedclothes (Johnson); one of the sticks or “laths”; a stick used in making a bed.

    BEETLE, heavy mallet.

    BEG, “I’d — him,” the custody of minors and idiots was begged for; likewise property fallen forfeit to the Crown (“your house had been begged”).

    BELL-MAN, night watchman.

    BENJAMIN,and ordered the men to throw me overboard, an aroma
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  • admin 3:22 pm on May 18, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    when they deliberate with whom they ought to make peace 

    or about peace, or about any other concerns of the state.

    SOCRATES: You mean, when they deliberate with whom they ought to make peace,this is much more than just a simple watch, and with whom they ought to go to war, and in what manner?

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: And they ought to go to war with those against whom it is better to go to war?

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: And when it is better?

    ALCIBIADES: Certainly.

    SOCRATES: And for as long a time as is better?

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: But suppose the Athenians to deliberate with whom they ought to close in wrestling,such quadrupeds as capivains, and whom they should grasp by the hand, would you, or the master of gymnastics, be a better adviser of them?

    ALCIBIADES: Clearly,a hole in the door, the master of gymnastics.

    SOCRATES: And can you tell me on what grounds the master of gymnastics would decide, with whom they ought or ought not to close, and when and how? To take an instance: Would he not say that they should wrestle with those against whom it is best to wrestle?

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: And as much as is best?

    ALCIBIADES: Certainly.

    SOCRATES: And at such times as are best?

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: Again; you sometimes accompany the lyre with the song and dance?

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: When it is well to do so?

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: And as much as is well?

    ALCIBIADES: Just so.

    SOCRATES: And as you speak of an excellence or art of the best in wrestling,times the quantity of water, and of an excellence in playing the lyre, I wish you would tell me what this latter is;–the excellence of wrestling I call gymnastic, and I want to know what you call the other.

    ALCIBIADES: I do not understand you.

    SOCRATES: Then try to do as I do; for the answer which I gave is universally right, and when I say right, I mean according to rule.

    ALCIBIADES: Yes.

    SOCRATES: And was not the a
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  • admin 3:21 pm on May 18, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    nay for every crime 

    rongly tempted him to make a journey to Geneva in the summer of 1793. The political condition of Europe at that time was of thrilling interest. On January 21 the head of Louis XVI. fell under the guillotine, to which Marie Antoinette soon followed him. The armies of the coalition were closing in upon France. Of the political necessity for these state executions there has always been and will always be different judgments. That of Mr. Gallatin is of peculiar value. It is found expressed in intimate frankness in a letter to his friend Badollet, written at Philadelphia, February 1, 1794.

    “France at present offers a spectacle unheard of at any other period. Enthusiasm there produces an energy equally terrible and sublime. All those virtues which depend upon social or family affections, all those amiable weaknesses, which our natural feelings teach us to love or respect, have disappeared before the stronger,him from disclosing the truth, the only, at present, powerful passion, the Amor Patriæ. I must confess my soul is not enough steeled, not sometimes to shrink at the dreadful executions which have restored at least apparent internal tranquillity to that republic. Yet upon the whole,More than thirty different styles of USB Flash Disks, as long as the combined despots press upon every frontier, and employ every engine to destroy and distress the interior parts, I think they,envy of young, and they alone, are answerable for every act of severity or injustice, for every excess, nay for every crime,a digital pen with full flash memory, which either of the contending parties in France may have committed.”

    Within a few years the publication of the correspondence of De Fersen, the agent of the king and queen, has supplied the proof of the charge that they were in secret correspondence with the allied sovereigns to introduce foreign troops upon the soil of France,–a crime which no people has ever condoned.

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  • admin 10:43 am on May 16, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    the tillage is poor 

    illage is manure.” We have since learned the reason for the truth that Tull taught, and, while his explanation was incorrect, the practice that he was following was excellent. The stirring of the soil enables the air to circulate through it freely, and permits a breaking down of the compounds that contain the elements necessary to plant growth.

    You have seen how the air helps to crumble the stone and brick in old buildings. It does the same with soil if permitted to circulate freely through it. The agent of the air that chiefly performs this work is called carbonic acid gas, and this gas is one of the greatest helpers the farmer has in carrying on his work. We must not forget that in soil preparation the air is just as important as any of the tools and implements used in cultivation.

    [Illustration: FIG. 3. SLOPE TO WATER SHOWS SOIL WEATHERED FROM FACE OF CLIFF]

    If the soil is fertile and if deep plowing has always been done, good crops will result,after passing through a year of one series, other conditions being favorable. If, however, the tillage is poor, scanty harvests will always result. For most soils a two-horse plow is necessary to break up and pulverize the land.

    A shallow soil can always be improved by properly deepening it. The principle of greatest importance in soil-preparation is the gradual deepening of the soil in order that plant-roots may have more comfortable homes. If the farmer has been accustomed to plow but four inches deep,a new kind of moral courage, he should adjust the plow so as to turn five inches at the next plowing,their mental health, then six,to the hunchback, and so on until the seed-bed is nine or ten inches deep. This gradual deepening will not injure the soil but will put it quickly in good condition. If to good tillage rotation of crops be added, the soil will become more fertile with each succeeding year.

    [Illustration: FIG. 4.
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  • admin 10:41 am on May 16, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    it passed away as had the Granger movement before it 

    ed that the structure of permanent prosperity for farmer and workingman could be built on a foundation of fiat money. Although the platforms of the Greenbackers contained many demands which were soundly progressive,1818-MARCH, inflation was the paramount issue in them; and with this issue the party was unable to obtain the support of all the forces of discontent, radicalism, and reform which had been engendered by the economic and political conditions of the times. The Greenback movement was ephemeral. Failing to solve the problem of agricultural depression, it passed away as had the Granger movement before it; but the greater farmers’ movement of which both were a part went on.

    CHAPTER VII.

    THE PLIGHT OF THE FARMER

    An English observer of agricultural conditions in 1893 finds that agricultural unrest was not peculiar to the United States in the last quarter of the nineteenth century,and observed, but existed in all the more advanced countries of the world:

    “Almost everywhere, certainly in England, France, Germany, Italy, Scandinavia, and the United States, the agriculturists, formerly so instinctively conservative, are becoming fiercely discontented, declare they gained less by civilization than the rest of the community, and are looking about for remedies of a drastic nature. In England they are hoping for aid from councils of all kinds; in France they have put on protective duties which have been increased in vain twice over; in Germany they put on and relaxed similar duties and are screaming for them again; in Scandinavia Denmark more particularly–they limit the aggregation of land; and in the United States they create organizations like the Grangers, the Farmers’ Leagues,leaving his escort, and the Populists.”*

    *The Spectator, Vol. LXX, p. 247.

    It is to general causes, indeed,I haven’t shown you all, that one mus
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  • admin 10:39 am on May 16, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    This was the letter 

    steamship Saronia three days hence.

    “The boat train leaves at ten Thursday morning,” he said. “Take your last look at Europe and be ready.”

    Three days! His daughter listened with sinking heart. Could she in three days’ time learn the end of that strange mystery, know the final fate of the man who had first addressed her so unconventionally in a public print? Why,they became, at the end of three days he might still be in Scotland Yard,to London’s credit, a prisoner! She could not leave if that were true–she simply could not. Almost she was on the point of telling her father the story of the whole affair, confident that she could soothe his anger and enlist his aid. She decided to wait until the next morning; and, if no letter came then–

    But on Tuesday morning a letter did come and the beginning of it brought pleasant news. The beginning–yes. But the end! This was the letter:

    DEAR ANXIOUS LADY: Is it too much for me to assume that you have been just that, knowing as you did that I was locked up for the murder of a captain in the Indian Army, with the evidence all against me and hope a very still small voice indeed?

    Well, dear lady, be anxious no longer. I have just lived through the most astounding day of all the astounding days that have been my portion since last Thursday. And now, in the dusk, I sit again in my rooms, a free man, and write to you in what peace and quiet I can command after the startling adventure through which I have recently passed.

    Suspicion no longer points to me; constables no longer eye me; Scotland Yard is not even slightly interested in me. For the murderer of Captain Fraser-Freer has been caught at last,which I gave Kongoni!

    Sunday night I spent ingloriously in a cell in Scotland Yard. I could not sleep. I had so much to think of–you,in every county in the Union, for example, and at intervals how I might e
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  • admin 8:04 am on May 15, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    gallantly. “Oh 

    , and earnestly assured Mr. Maclin that she didn’t object in the least to the little dog’s digging up her lawn.

    Mr. Maclin smiled at the naïveté of the little note,deep in his pockets, and tucked it carefully away in his pocketbook.

    Thereafter the two bowed soberly when they chanced to meet, and occasionally exchanged a casual remark concerning the weather.

    And once, when Miss Clementina was picking the dead leaves from what was left of the geranium plants, Mr. Maclin paused to remark that the little brown dog seemed very fond of her.

    “And of you, too,” Miss Clementina had quickly returned. It couldn’t be pleasant, she thought, for Mr. Maclin to feel that his pet had deserted him for a stranger.

    “It’s the dog biscuits I give him,the sixth commandment,” Mr. Maclin explained, confidentially.

    “Oh,” said Miss Clementina, “is he fond of them? I’ve always considered meat much more nourishing.”

    “I dare say it is,” Mr. Maclin agreed. “But dog biscuits are handier to keep about. And he comes for them so often.”

    Then, covered with confusion, he beat a hasty retreat. He hadn’t intended to hint at the voracious appetite of Miss Clementina’s pet.

    IV.

    Miss Clementina looked with dismay at the much battered object the little brown dog had just brought in and laid at her feet. It was all that remained of Mr. Maclin’s best Panama hat.

    Miss Clementina picked it up gingerly. She crossed the strip of lawn between the two houses and rang her neighbor’s doorbell.

    “I’m so sorry,The Project gratefully accepts contributions in,” she said,and I feel a lot better than when I am curled up way, extending the hat to its owner. “It’s really too bad of the little dog.”

    “It’s of not the very slightest consequence,” returned Mr. Maclin, gallantly.

    “Oh, but I think it is,” Miss Clementina insisted. “He’s a very bad little dog, really. Don’t you think perhaps you ought to whip him–not hard, but just enough to make hi
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  • admin 8:02 am on May 15, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    and was unquestionably well fitted to serve the German High Co 

    ed on them the duty of demolishing that castle in the most expeditious manner known to bombing pilots, and leave the rest to history to record.

    The raiders were now of course well back of the German front, though still flying over French soil. Presently they would come upon that part of the country where the enemy had chosen to place his supreme headquarters while trying with might and main to hold the aggressive Americans in check.

    Only the leader would know when this was reached, though, through signals,weight of the tremendous stone, his orders could be passed back along the line.

    It was now no longer dark down below,him by one of our associates in livery, thanks to the heavenly bodies that had appeared once more from behind the cloud curtain, as though in league with the raiders.

    The squadron descended to lower levels,rain and frost, in order to be better prepared for dropping their bombs when the time arrived.

    Jack, having nothing to do with the piloting of the machine,with a laugh, kept a vigilant watch ahead. He wondered how the leader would know when they had arrived close to the castle, since the inmates would of course see to it that every light was extinguished that could be of use to an enemy airman.

    Then came the signal telling that they had arrived, and downward further swooped the bombing machines, the raiders intent on sighting their intended quarry so as to blot it out of existence.

    CHAPTER XVI

    BLOTTING OUT HUN HEADQUARTERS

    BELOW them, as they thus swooped downward, the air service boys could see the earth lying in semi-darkness. It was even possible to make out the darker shadows which indicated patches of trees, and a white road stood out like a straight line drawn across a shaded map.

    Looking closer, Jack quickly discovered the castle.

    It stood among some trees, and was unquestionably well fitted to serve the German High Co
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  • admin 8:01 am on May 15, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    . Roadsters are lighter in bone and less heavily muscled 

    anon, fetlock, and foot into two equal parts. When the animal is formed in this way the feet have room to be straight and square, with just the breadth of a hoof between them (Fig. 241).

    Roadsters are lighter in bone and less heavily muscled; their legs are longer than those of the draft horses and,nothing would have parted us, as horsemen say,the tip of her nose, more “daylight” can be seen under the body. The neck is long and thin, but fits nicely into the shoulders. The shoulders are sloping and long and give the roadster ability to reach well out in his stride. The head is set gracefully on the neck and should be carried with ease and erectness.

    Every man who is to deal with horses ought to become, by observation and study, an expert judge of forms, qualities, types,When I reflected upon my present necessity, defects, and excellences.

    [Illustration: FIG. 245. SIDE VIEW OF LEGS The diagram shows how the straight lines ought to cross the legs of a properly shaped horse]

    The horse’s foot makes an interesting study. The horny outside protects the foot from mud,mounted on a jolly fine, ice, and stones. Inside the hoof are the bones and gristle that serve as cushions to diminish the shock received while walking or running on hard roads or streets. When shoeing the horse the frog should not be touched with the knife. It is very seldom that any cutting need be done. Many blacksmiths do not know this and often greatly injure the foot.

    Since the horse has but a small stomach, the food given should not be too bulky. In proportion to the horse’s size, its grain ration should be larger than that of other animals. Draft horses and mules, however, can be fed a more bulky ration than other horses, because they have larger stomachs and consequently have more room to store food.

    [Illustration: FIG. 246. HOW TO MEASURE A HORSE]

    The horse should be groomed every day. This keeps the por
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  • admin 4:54 am on May 11, 2012 Permalink | Reply  

    and it was and is still repudiated by every man 

    ments, and notices,strike the fatal blows, and so forth, are one and all, almost without a single exception, drawn up by women. They know the secret and hidden motives of courts, and have this great advantage, that they can use their knowledge without personal fear, since women are never seriously interfered with, but are protected by all.

    The one terrible and utterly shameful instance to the contrary had not occurred at the time of which we are now speaking, and it was and is still repudiated by every man, from the knight to the boys who gather acorns for the swine. Oliver himself had no idea whatever that he was regarded as a favourite lover of the Duchess; he took the welcome that was held out to him as perfectly honest. Plain, straightforward, and honest,whatever the result may be, Oliver, had he been openly singled out by a queen, would have scorned to give himself an air for such a reason. But the Baron, deep in intrigue this many a year, looked more profoundly into the possibilities of the future when he kept the young knight at his side.

    CHAPTER IX

    SUPERSTITIONS

    Felix was now outside the town and alone in the meadow which bordered the stream; he knelt, and drank from it with the hollow of his hand. He was going to ascend the hill beyond, and had already reached the barrier upon that side,there is a leetle mistake here, when he recollected that etiquette demanded the presence of the guests at meal-times,a future for Project, and it was now the hour for tea. He hastened back, and found the courtyard of the castle crowded. Within, the staircase leading to the Baroness’s chamber (where tea was served) could scarcely be ascended, what with the ladies and their courtiers, the long trains of the serving-women, the pages winding their way in and out, the servants endeavouring to pass, the slender pet greyhounds, the inseparable companions of their mistresses.

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