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17. Is it not our own fault when, ina illness, or at an exterior bruise, we do not immediately d seek assistance, but wait until it is too late?

18. But a few people, and only those who are bad payers, have their work done by an unskilful master.

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19. In everything one must look to the end.

20. Our affection for a human being often then begins when he is departed from us.

d

a

21. Often dies with a man the hatred against him, but never the affection for him.

22. Among these papers there was found a letter, which will be of great importanced to us.

23. I addressed a the next to me.

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C

24. He had kepta her to the piano, and at this opportunityd she saw herself obliged to acquire some knowledgef of the Italian language.

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25. They went home in the evening, just when the sun was inclining to set.d

26. Since the remotest a times the serpent has been considered the symbol of cunning, acuteness falsehood.

18.

a nur.

and

17. abei. båußer. Schaden, m. dunmittelbar. e Hülfe. bwenige. ceinzig. dschlecht bezahlen to bo a bad e arbeiten lassen to have one's work done. fbei. ungeschickt. a bei.

payer.

19.

b auf.

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20. a Liebe. Mensch.c erst dann. gehen.

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24.

b bei.

cpon is of when implying a

anhalten. b zu, and the piano express by the playing. bei. d Gelegenheit. sich erwerben. fuse the plural of Kenntniß. sin. 25. a an. b da eben. e sich neigen zu. d Untergang.

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ansehen als. d Sinnbild, n. e List,

27. Man can alleviate a many evils, when making b proper use of his reason and of his bodily strength.

23. That is learneda of itself, and does not require the assistance of a master.

29. You needa not ask him, he will do it of his own accord.b

30. As a Solon did not speak to the pleasure of Croesus, nor seemed to cared fore him, he was dismissed.f 31. And Croesus thought him to be a foolish man, because he did not value the advantages of the present moment, but said, one must wait for the end of every

thing.

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32. Out of love to your old mother you will be obliged to make many a sacrifice.d

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33. To please your poet, you wished to become an actor.c

34. For appearance' sakea, Caesar refused the profferred royal title.d

35. The inhabitants of many countries neither want buildings nor dress as protection against cold.

27. avermindern.

e Leibeskraft, f.

28.

29.

30.

31.

b

c

say, when he makes. gehörig.

c

d von.

take the reflective form, b von selber. bedürfen, with Gen. a brauchen. b von selbst.

a da. b zum Willen. ©noch.

d sich kehren. ean. ffortschicken.

D

a halten für to think to be. unverständig. cachten. Gut, which must be neuter, since it is the Adjective form without termination. e Gegenwart, f. fsondern. 8 auf, to wait for is either warten auf, or abwarten without Preposition.

32. a aus. bzu, but mark, you can also say, deiner alten Mutter zu Liebe. bringen.

a

c

33. gefallen, Dat.

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Dichter, but you can also express it by out of pleasure for your poet deinem Dichter zu Gefallen. Schauspieler34. say, out of appearance, zu and Schein with the Art. bab= lehnen. anbieten.

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35. a bedürfen. bmark, when a Substantive like protection is the predicate to another, like dress, it has generally the Preposition zu prefixed. Sauß, m.

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36. The distress was great, since all the wisdom of the learned, all ingenuity of the artist, and all the power of kings were confounded.c

37. Heaven has given us pain, as it werea, asb a watch c and ward of our life and health.

38. Conflagrationsa in great cities are very soon extinguished by good fire-regulations.c

39. It is only by means of speech that slumbering b reason is awakened.c

40. Solon considered a Tellus, a citizen of Athens, as the happiest man, because he had lived in prosperity, and had attained the end of lifed in the fulness of honour and esteem.f

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41. Nature creates nothing without particulara purposes; there is always in her creations and giftsd a well calculated connexion between them and other things, although the human eye, from weak inattention1, does not everywhere and immediately recognise it.

42. A practiseda ear would recognise most trees from b the rustling of their foliage.

C

b

43. The German emperora, Rodolph the Second, had the greatest delight ind antique works of art, in statues, intagliosh, and in pictures, and spenti great sums of money on them.

36. a

werden.

a

b

c

Noth,f. Fertigkeit. say, became to shame zu Schanden

c

d

37. a gleichsam. bcf. Note 35 b. Wächter. a Hüter. 38. Feuersbrunst, from brennen, with the termination st, and therefore Feminine. bauslöschen. Feueranstalt.

c

с

• erreichen.

d Le=

39. a omit it is-that. bschlummern. erwecken. 40. a halten für to consider as. b Glück, n. bensende, n. eFülle. Achtung. 41. a besonder. Zusammenhang.

* erkennen.

&

b

Absicht. obgleich.

42. geübt. baus.

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43. Kaiser. Rudolf. Freude, f.

dan. ealt. Kunstwerk, n. 8 Bildsåule, f. geschnittener Stein. verwenden. Ifür or auf.

44. But as strongly he was attracted by his alchymistic laboratory, where gold was to be made.

45. Those who had to converse with him on weighty public affairs, often were obliged to seek him there or in his stables, in which he used to pass many hours of the day. 46. Charles the Fourth did not make the people of Frankfort atone ford their adherence tof his noble antiemperors Günther von Schwarzburg.

a

e

47. Luther is a phenomenon in history, to which no other of similar kind can be compared.d

48. The Athenians buried a Tellus, atb public expense, ind the same place where he had fallen, and showed him great honour.

49. Practice makes man accomplished in body and mind.e

d

50. Many countries are rich in a provisions which nature without assistance of man freely produces, in sound and flavoury fruit, in plants, rootsh, and in animals which. always find their foodi in plenty.j

d

51. He who in society makes greater claims than he ought, is wanting in modesty; and he who mixes or steals into a society to which he does not belong, is intruding.h

44.

d

eben so sehr. banziehen. calchymistisch. & Werkstätte, f. 45. a reden. büter. wichtig. dpflegen. ezubringen.

46. a Karl. blaffen.

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Frankfurter. dentgelten.
dentgelten. e Anhẳng-

lichkeit. fan. * Gegenkaiser. 47. a Erscheinung.

an die Seite seßen.

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48. begraben. bauf. Kosten, only used in pl. dan. erweisen. 49. Uebung. bvollkommen. can. d Leib, m. eSeele, f.

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50. an. Nahrungsmittel, n. Zuthun, n. dfreiwillig. ehervorbringen. gesund. & wohlschmeckend. Wurzel, f. Futter, n.

Jvollauf in plenty.

51. Anspruch). b sollen. schleichen.

d sich mischen.

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52. Do not meddlea with the affairs of other people. 53. History has preserved us several notices concerning the introduction of silk-weaving into Italy during the Crusades.f

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54. King Roger the Second of Sicily having, in 1148, conquered Corinth, Thebes, and Athens, conducted the Greek artificers d to his residence of Palermo, and had instruction given by them to his subjects in the weaving of silk.

55. Human beings who got among animals, did not only lose speech itself, but also partially the capacity for it. 56. Under the animating a sound of song brave warriors have often rushed into battle.f

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57. To the cherished plans of Schiller also belonged a journey to the sea shore, that he had never seen, but after which he always had a great longing.f

e

e

58. Condors are found throughout the whole range of the Cordilleras, along the south-west coast of South America, from the Straits of Magellan to1 the Rio Negro.

59. Their habitations are almost invariably on overhanging ledges of high and perpendicular cliffs.

52. a sich mischen. bin. cAngelegenheit.

53. &

erhalten.

weberei. Kreuzzug.

e

d b Nachricht. über. Einführung. e Seiden

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c

Ruf. Gesang, m.

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zum Theil. Fähigkeit.

d Streiter. e sich stürzen.

57. unter. Lieblingsplan, m. ( pl.—plåne). © Meer, n. dzu.

von jeher. Sehnsucht, f.

58. a Condor, m. (pl.-e). bauf.

Kette, f. dlångs.

e süd

westlich. Küste, f. & Meerenge, f. hbis zu.

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59. say, without exception Ausnahme. büberhangen. © Felsen=

rand, m. (pl.—rånder). asenkrecht. e Klippe, f.

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