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Moveable Holidays (Easter Date Based) (X)

       
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The Path of Splitness

By: Indrek Pringi

...o admit that Einstein’s famous prediction of the lunar eclipse of the sun was based upon a completely false premise. Here is a crude representation... ... for Everythingness to exist at all. Our Trialistic Universe came into being based upon pre-existing Dualistic Conditions which had to exist before... ...ism may mark the similarity between what I have written here, and the ancient Eastern teachings of Dualism, or Daoism. However: the ancient teachin... ...complex mathematical model and idea ever invented; as being completely out of date, obsolete and useless. Why? Because our system of mathematic... ...complex mathematical model and idea ever invented; as being completely out of date, obsolete and useless. Why? Because our system of mathematic... ...ed. Climates of the world became drier: trees began slowly disappearing. In Eastern Africa, this change of weather patterns was magnified by the R... ...nsider that you have earned your money? Would you go off on their junkets and holidays called business trips? To hob-nob with your fellow cronies a... ...vicariously entertained, or it inspires us to escape it temporarily by having holidays or vacations. It inspires us either to be active or non-activ... ...ation. What most people do not understand is that your inner-observer is a moveable balance-point…and that it becomes more or less effective and ...

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Life of John Coleridge Patteson : Missionary Bishop of the Melanesian Islands

By: Charlotte Mary Yonge

...Finis, Amen, and ending with the uncompleted sheets, bearing as their last date September 19, 1871. The boy’s first school was at Ottery St. Mary, in ... ...amend it, if the birching did not do, he should not let me go home for the holidays; but I will not catch the birching... —‘So believe me your dear So... ...838—1845. ON. 1838—1845. ON. 1838—1845. ON. 1838—1845. AFTER the Christmas holidays of 1837-8, when Coley Patteson was nearly eleven years old, he was... ...he long vacations were spent some- times with the Judge’s relations in the Eastern counties, some- times with Lady Patteson’s in the West. Landwith Re... ...d in the public examination for the Newcastle scholarship, just before the Easter holidays, and it is a great testimony to a boy’s ability 26 Life of... ... Here are letters showing a good deal of his state of mind: the first only dated ‘Saturday evening,’ but evidently written about this time, in reply t... ...nto his heart by God’s Holy Spirit, and that all his impulses for good are based on the firm foun- dation of trust in God, and a due appreciation of h... ...rophecy of a future one. It is much a matter of exegesis; but exegesis not based on gram- mar is worth very little. ‘Really the time is not inherent i... ...folk Islanders, and quietly fall into a less responsible position and be a moveable clergyman in Fiji or anywhere else, as long as my strength lasts. ...

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Beauchamp's Career

By: George Meredith

...esought him to give way for Piety’s sake. He, courteous, colossal, and im- moveable, waved them homeward. They returned and were hooted for belying th... ...sly. Roland shrugged. ‘Note this, my sister,’ he said; ‘an anticipation of dates in paying visits precludes the ripeness of the sentiment of welcome. ... ...Address to Everard Romfrey without comment. Next day the following letter, dated from Itchincope, the house of Mr. Grancey Lespel, on the borders of B... ...inter with- out seeing him. She returned to Mount Laurels from Lon- don at Easter, and went on a visit to Steynham, and back to 245 George Meredith L... ...e of Beauchamp, which was a shadowed avowal of the state of her heart, was based on his desire to read to her the conclusion of Dr. Shrapnel’s letter ... ...k to no absolution of evil acts.’ The school was a hard one. It denied him holidays; it cut him off from dreams. It ran him in heavy harness on a roug... ... hour that was long past mid- night. Her method for inducing him to go was based on her intimate knowledge of him: she made as if to soothe and kiss h... ...ore than in what you do. They are now in Wales. They will be in town after Easter. Then you must expect that her feeling for you will be tried, unless... ... or a galvanized (sweet to the writer, either of them, as to the reader—so moveable they are!) would have seen her business at this point, and have gl...

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The Adventures of Harry Richmond

By: George Meredith

...t (the book) was put together. At my suggestion, he fixed the trees to the date of the Heptarchy, a period of heavy ploughing. Thus begirt by Saxon ti... ... father’s princely reputation in the school. At times, especially when the holidays arrived and I was left alone with Julia, I had fits of mournfulnes... ...citing and consolatory dreams of him. We had at last a real letter of his, dated from a foreign city; but he mentioned nothing of coming to me. I unde... ...hat Heriot would have to shoot 51 George Meredith or scourge him when the holidays came. Mr. Rippenger con- cluded his observations by remarking that... ...pliments. Her face was like an Egyptian sky fronting night. The strong old Eastern blood put ruddy flame for the red colour; tawny olive edged from th... ... his accustomed forethought. ‘House and town and fortress provisioned, and moveable at will!’ the margravine interjected repeatedly. The princess was ... ...wife for not having been at home to wel- come him, with the singular plea, based on his knowledge of the sex, that the nearer she knew him to be the l... ... I was on her side, not on his. Her estimation of the princess was soundly based. She discerned exactly the nature of Ottilia’s entanglement, and her ... ...un and dodge for shelter from him, like a fever-patient pursued by a North-easter, accom- panied by dozens of quaint similes full of his mental laugh-...

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The French Revolution a History

By: Thomas Carlyle

.......................................................... 266 Chapter 2.4.I. Easter at Saint-Cloud. ....................................................... ......................................................... 266 Chapter 2.4.II. Easter at Paris. ............................................................. ...Letter: Condorcet, Vie de Turgot (Oeuvres de Condorcet, t. v.), p. 67. The date is 29 Thomas Carlyle 24th August, 1774.) It is true, as King Louis ob... ...us Blackness, lighted on by an Era of Hope? It has been well said: ‘Man is based on Hope; he has properly no other possession but Hope; this habitatio... ... world, as Minister’s Madame, and ‘Necker not jealous!’ (Gibbon’s Letters: date, 16th June, 1777, &c.) A new young Demoiselle, one day to be famed as ... ...t, least blessed fact one knows of, on which necessitous mortals have ever based themselves, seems to be the primitive one of Canni- balism: That I ca... ... defend it. They are heaping tabourets (stools of honour), benches and all moveables, against the door; at which the axe of Insurrection thunders.— Bu... ...ing: “Sire, these are your faithful Lorrainers.” Cheerier verily, in these holidays, is this ‘skyblue faced with red’ of a National Guardsman, than th...

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