Love and a spirit of self-forgetfulness took complete possession of my heart, and thenceforward I was perfectly happy. |
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In 1863 he visited Pompeii and thenceforward daily life in Greece and Rome became his preoccupation. |
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The alliteration and dramatic significance of the term had caught the public imagination, and thenceforward there was no escape from its use. |
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The father's empire then ceases, and he can from thenceforward no more dispose of the liberty of his son than that of any other man. |
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Three Essays, Moral and Political, which appeared in February 1748, was the first of Hume's books to which he put his own name, a practice he was thenceforward to continue. |
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Moving to Denver, Colorado, in 1906, she married Charles J. Walker, and thenceforward she was known as Madam C. J. Walker. |
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The Collective Bargaining Agreement set out the standard terms and conditions on which all seafarers serving on the vessels were thenceforward to be employed. |
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It may even be that not a little of this effect is due to the writer's enabling us thenceforward to enjoy our own day-dreams without self-reproach or shame. |
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On the contrary, patients' reports of magnetic sensations were thenceforward written off as being among the odd things that hysterical patients sometimes say. |
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If ever he made the slightest change in a dish, he vaunted the variation as an original idea, and thenceforward set up as the sovereign creator of the dainty. |
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These dictated the concentric patterns of his Discs and Cosmic Circular Forms, which occupied him and his wife, Sonia, thenceforward. |
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And yet it is quite clear that after his return to Europe, in 1665, Radisson became a full-fledged European in regard to the values and objectives that would count for him thenceforward. |
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Within that period there were notable changes, not least the transfer of ownership of the work to the United States, but the seventh edition fixed the basic form of the encyclopaedia thenceforward. |
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In 1718, after the success of Oedipe, the first of his tragedies, he was acclaimed as the successor of the great classical dramatist Jean Racine and thenceforward adopted the name of Voltaire. |
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The British, though they had broken through the German defenses by October 5 and thenceforward had open country in front of them, could not pursue the Germans fast enough to endanger their withdrawal. |
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