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71

Page 57, line 4, cf. "The Ballad of the Twa Brothers":

"'O when will you come hame again?Dear Willie, tell to me!''When the sun and moon dance on yon green;And that will never be.'"

Page 61, line 4, cf. Henry James, The Ambassadors: Whether or no he had a grand idea of the lucid, he held that nothing ever was in fact—for anyone else—explained. One went through the vain motions, but it was mostly a waste of life."

Page 61, lines 9-12, cf. note on page 9, lines 3-8.

Page 62, line 21, cf. page 12, line 1.

Page 65, line 25, the refrain of a song sung by Miss Sophie Tucker.

Page 66, line 12, cf. page 9, line 15.

Page 66, lines 20-23, cf. Spinoza, De intell. emend. "Finally, perception is that wherein a thing is perceived through its essence alone. . . . A thing is said to be perceived through its essence alone when from the fact that I know something, I know what it is to know anything. . . ."


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