Part 32 (2/2)

2 The , and held office only at his pleasure

3 A society and institutions that had been growing up for years was overturned and swept away by the French Revolution

4 Galileo was summoned to Ro that the earth moved around the sun

5 He draws and sketches with tolerable skill, but paints abominably

6 Loose sentences may be clear; periodic sentences may not be clear

7 He rode up thethe ascent on foot

8 They visited the tohere their father had lived, and while there, procured the key to the house in which he had been born

9 His death caused great grief and extreme financial distress in the fari within its walls the scene of edy

11 Few ladly see hi in the sah the reformers find it a hard task to influence public opinion, and a far harder one to change the various laws prevalent in thewe call life, with all its troubles, pains, and woes, after all, worth living?

14 He read much, but advanced little intellectually, for all the facts and philosophy of his reading found no per home was very unexpected, because he had started on a trip that usually took ten days, and that he had said would take longer this ti the time of the National Convention that Napoleon first becaainst a roups of sentences into one well constructed long sentence:_

1 In highly developed commercial communities banks cannot afford space in their vaults for valuables Especially, they cannot afford it merely to accommodate their patrons Hence, in such co of places for safe deposit has become a separate business

2 History should be a part of the course in all schools It develops the memory It furnishes the explanation of many social phenoives culture as no other study can give it

3 He never desired a higher education This was possible because of the money bequeathed to hi capacity More likely, it was because of the inborn dulness and lethargy of his mind

4 New York is the pivotal state in all national elections Its great number of electors makes it always possible for it to throw the election either way Therefore, until one knows to which party New York will fall, he cannot tell how the election will result

5 Our forefathers were devout They were easily shocked in many ways However, they permitted many liberties in the application of sers would nowadays be strongly disapproved or resented

6 Man's life is divided into two parts by a constantlypoint This point is called the present It divides the past from the future

7 The Spartans were tormented by ten thousand absurd restraints

They were unable to please themselves in the choice of their wives

They were unable to please the They were compelled to assume a peculiar loried in their liberty

8 The h a forest of statistics This forest is formidable and complicated It causes one, in time, to doubt the truth of numbers