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References
*“Études sur la Littérature et les Mœurs de l'Angleterre au xix. Siècle.”1850.Google Scholar
*“One day, some years ago, two of my female relations were looking out of a window in Greenwich just opposite the hospital, and both thought they saw me pass and look in. One of them ran immediately to the door, but to her astonishment could see no one either up or down the street. At this time I was not expected, being, as all my family supposed, in Paris. But within a quarter of an hour I arrived at Greenwich. When I did enter I was called to account for the practical joke I was supposed to have played upon my relations by peeping in at the window and then concealing myself, and it was with some difficulty I convinced them that I had come straight into the house.Google Scholar
“Some years after this my wife and daughter (not the relations referred to previously) were sitting in the dining-room, when they both saw an old lady enter at the gate and walk up to the steps leading to the front door of the house. My wife said to her daughter, ‘What can bring old Mrs. C— out in such a flood of rain? Run and open the door, that she may not have to wait for the servant to answer the bell.’ On opening the door there was no one there, nor in the garden.” (A physician's narrative, April, 1880.)Google Scholar
*“The Song Celestial or Bhagavad-gitâ.”Translated by Edwin Arnold, M.A. 2nd Edit., p. 160.Google Scholar
†“Buddhaghosha's Parables,”by Captain Rogers, with introduction by Max Müller, 1870.Google Scholar
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