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**************** INPUT ****************
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They saw him distinctly, as with the naked eye; a word, a turn of
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the pen, or a word unsaid, offered the picture of him in America,
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Japan, China, Australia , nay, the continent of Europe, holding an
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English review of his Maker's grotesques. Vernon seemed a
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sheepish fellow, without stature abroad, glad of a compliment
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, grateful for a dinner, endeavouring sadly to digest all he saw
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and heard. But one was a Patterne; tbe other a Whitford. One had
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genius; the other pottered after him to he a student. One was the
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English gent1eman wherever he went; the other was a new kind of
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thing, nondescript, produced in England of late, and not likely
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to come to much good himself, or do much good to the country.
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Vernon's dancing in America was capitally described by Willoughby.
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"Adieu to our cousins!" the latter wrote on his voyage to Japan.
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"I may possibly have had some vogue in their ball-rooms, and in
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showing them an English seat on horseback: 1 must resign myself if
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I have not been popular among them. I could not sing their
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national song--if a congery of states be a nation-- and I must
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confess I listened with frigid politeness to their singing of it.
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A great people, no doubt. Adieu to them. I have had to tear old
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Vernon away. He had serious thoughts of settling, means to
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correspond with some of them. On the whole, forgetting two or
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more "traits of insolence~ on the part of his hosts, which he
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cited, Willoughby escaped pretty comfortably. The President had
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been, consciously or not,uncivil, but one knew his origin! Upon
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these interjections, placable flicks of the lionly tail addressed
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to Britannia the Ruler, who expected him in some mildish way to
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lash terga cauda in retiring, Sir WilIoughby Patterne passed from
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a land of alien manners,; and ever after he spoke of America
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respectfully aud pensively, with a tail tucked in, as it were. His
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travels were profitable to himself. The fact is, that tbere are
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cousins who come to greatness and rnust be pacified, or they will
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prove annoying. Heaven forefend a collision between cousins!
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**************** EXPECTED ****************
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Japan, China, Australia , nay, the continent of Europe, holding an
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Line 3 column 25 - Spaced punctuation?
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, grateful for a dinner, endeavouring sadly to digest all he saw
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Line 6 column 1 - Begins with punctuation?
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and heard. But one was a Patterne; tbe other a Whitford. One had
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Line 7 column 34 - Query word tbe - not reporting duplicates
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genius; the other pottered after him to he a student. One was the
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Line 8 column 37 - Query he/be error?
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English gent1eman wherever he went; the other was a new kind of
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Line 9 column 8 - Query digit in gent1eman
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showing them an English seat on horseback: 1 must resign myself if
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Line 16 column 43 - Query standalone 1
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national song--if a congery of states be a nation-- and I must
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Line 18 column 50 - Spaced em-dash?
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Vernon away. He had serious thoughts of settling, means to
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Line 21 column 58 - No punctuation at para end?
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Vernon's dancing in America was capitally described by Willoughby.
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Line 22 - Mismatched quotes
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correspond with some of them. On the whole, forgetting two or
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Line 23 column 1 - Paragraph starts with lower-case
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more "traits of insolence~ on the part of his hosts, which he
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Line 24 column 26 - Tilde character?
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been, consciously or not,uncivil, but one knew his origin! Upon
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Line 26 column 25 - Missing space?
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lash terga cauda in retiring, Sir WilIoughby Patterne passed from
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Line 29 column 34 - Query word WilIoughby - not reporting duplicates
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a land of alien manners,; and ever after he spoke of America
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Line 30 column 24 - Double punctuation?
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respectfully aud pensively, with a tail tucked in, as it were. His
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Line 31 column 13 - Query word aud - not reporting duplicates
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travels were profitable to himself. The fact is, that tbere are
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Line 32 column 54 - Query word tbere - not reporting duplicates
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cousins who come to greatness and rnust be pacified, or they will
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Line 33 column 34 - Query word rnust - not reporting duplicates
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