She was disposed to present herself to the artful girl, and soundly lecture her for the deceit and wickedness: but she wanted to see how the game was played.
I hope you will not attempt tolecture them as you did her.
An invitation from Cambridge to lecture there on Russian history during the Long Vacation of 1916 was a compliment to the value of the Russian chapters of his Memories, but it was another distraction.
In his Romanes lecture there was but one thing to be regretted: the restricted space which it offered for the full expansion of the theme.
It used to be such fun when the lecture was over, and we had waited for the principal part of the people to leave, so that the school could go out in a compact body.
He called up the Brown Lecture Bureau and made an appointment to see Captain Brown, the manager, at 3 p.
At that hour, to the minute, he was ushered into the private offices of the world-famous manager of the lecture bureau.
Merriwether delivered a long lecture on railroad strategy and railroad financing to his son, which brought them very close to each other.
I should have attended the sale myself but for an engagement to lecture at the Hieroglyphical on a recently inscribed cylinder.
Chief perhaps among our celebrities was Ruskin, who had lately been made Slade Professor of Fine Art, and whose Inaugural Lecture was incessantly on the lips of such undergraduates as cared for glorious declamation.
And therefore, worthy doctors, as there seems to be room for further discoveries, stand aside, and allow me to come forward and lecture on this matter.
In this work the author seizes every opportunity to lecture the king, to give him advice, and to rebuke him.
In the year 1396 he was made Master of Arts, and two years later began to lecture on philosophical and theological subjects.
So I am going to be true to my reputation andlecture you.
A day or two before the wedding he was asked to lecture on the night of February 2d.
If I can jerk a lecture in time I will go with you.
With the promise of speedy return, he left London, gave the lecture once in Liverpool, and with his party (October 21st) set sail for home.
I first met him when he reported a lecture of mine in St. Louis," he said once in a conversation where the name of Stanley was mentioned.
His lack of funds prompted a new plan for a lecture tour to the Pacific coast, this time with D.
He instructed Redpath not to make engagements for him to lecture in churches.
There is no such a condition to-day: lecturers are few, lecture bureaus obscure; there are no great reputations made on the platform.
His lecture was of no literary importance, and no echo of it now remains.
I never made a success of a lecture in a church yet.
In a single bed of rock not larger than a good sized lecture room, he found the remains of no less than one hundred and sixty mammals.
He admired, for different reasons, a lecture by Greeley that he once heard, into which so much knowledge of various kinds was crowded that he said he "made a reg'lar gobble of it.
A conspicuous agency of the period was the lecture platform, which did something in the spread and popularization of information, but much more in the stimulation of independent thought and the awakening of the mind to use its own powers.
He hears the Mistress tell the Parson that she believes he is trying to write a lecture on the Celtic Influence in Literature.
His was the only effort in the nature of a public lecture that we heard in the Provinces, and we could not judge of his ability without hearing a "course.
You just get up in anylecture assembly and propose three cheers for Socrates, and see where you'll be.
Whatever book you read, or sermon or lecture you hear, give yourself for the time absolutely to its influence.
From the fact I heard him in the same lecture deliver or produce remarks in his own particular way, that, if they had been published properly in print, a proper reader would have reproduced them again the same way.
It will be seen by the general table given in the last lecture that the latest of the Tertiary ages is that known as the Pleistocene or Post-Pliocene, and this, with the succeeding modern period, may be best arranged as follows: I.
In the last lecture we have noticed the general relations of agnostic speculations with natural science, and have exposed their failure to account for natural facts and laws.
In illustrating this, we may in the present lecture consider that form of sceptical philosophy which in our time is the most prevalent, and which has the most specious air of dependence on science.
In another lecture it has been intimated that the English Bible, by reason of its constant use, has tended to fix and confirm the English language.
These, then, are the two differences between this lecture and the preceding ones, that in this lecture we shall deal with judgments as well as facts, and that we shall deal with the Bible of to-day rather than the King James version.
While we must consider the facts, therefore, we will be compelled to pass some judgments also, and therein this lecture must differ from the others.
I prefer to be out of hearing of the people while you lecture me for today's mishap.
Nay, nay, no signs of impatience, for I intend to lecture you; and you must both hear and consider what I have to say.
Idem, “Lecture on the Nature and Causes of the Disease known as Rot in Sheep,” vol.
In the present lecture we approach the question of education again.
This meaning of [Hebrew: marpe], as was observed in Lecture XII.
The sense of the Authorised Version is here retained, but it will be seen in Lecture XII.
He took it from her, gave her a severe lecture for wasting her time in such frivolous reading, and cast the volume into the flames.
Illustration: Mr. BOOBY delivering his Lecture in and upon the New Costume for Males.
In the course of his lecture he adverted to the hostility of the clergy, and to the Papal censures of his work, which censures he declared to be in direct opposition to the rights of the civil power.
Well, the people down there persuaded Bob to give a lecture in Livingston, and I drove down the whole forty miles to hear it.
Yet it could not have been much earlier than this that Bob Ingersoll and Jim struck sparks, when the famous orator endeavoured to expound his atheistic doctrines on the lecture platform in Livingston.
When the lecture was over Bob came up to me in the Albermarle and asked me what I thought of it.
Patiently diverting her from her lecture platform delivery, I gradually drew from the strange old character much of intimate and colourful interest.
In consequence of which a public lecture was proposed to be set up at Dr.
I complied, and opened a lecture at six in the morning.
And when the time appointed for the lecture came, a number of the surrounding ministers were present, as well as some from a distance"--a proof of the prayerful interest felt on behalf of the town.
On Thursday, October 9, he preached the public lecture at the Old South church.
At seven in the morning we have a lecture in the fields, attended not only by the common people, but also by persons of rank.
On Thursday he preached the weekly lecture at Mr. Foxcroft's, the First church.