Chapter 58

Transcriber’s Notes:Minor changes have been made to correct obvious typesetters’ errors and to regularize hyphenation; variant spellings have been retained.In chapter XXIV, page 146, the sentence that was typeset as “By the time William and Melia turned down Saint James his street,” has been changed to “By the time William and Melia turned down Saint James’s street,” to make sense grammatically.In several places, Josiah Munt refers to himself or others as “prattical” in conversation. In chapter XXXVI, page 241, he is musing about education for women as not being “prattical”; the Transcriber has chosen to retain this spelling as fitting the author's style and intent.In four instances in the book, the author refers to a “pickelet”, and in one place to a “pikelet”. Because of the frequency of pickelet, the Transcriber has chosen to retain the variant spelling.

Transcriber’s Notes:Minor changes have been made to correct obvious typesetters’ errors and to regularize hyphenation; variant spellings have been retained.In chapter XXIV, page 146, the sentence that was typeset as “By the time William and Melia turned down Saint James his street,” has been changed to “By the time William and Melia turned down Saint James’s street,” to make sense grammatically.In several places, Josiah Munt refers to himself or others as “prattical” in conversation. In chapter XXXVI, page 241, he is musing about education for women as not being “prattical”; the Transcriber has chosen to retain this spelling as fitting the author's style and intent.In four instances in the book, the author refers to a “pickelet”, and in one place to a “pikelet”. Because of the frequency of pickelet, the Transcriber has chosen to retain the variant spelling.

Transcriber’s Notes:

Minor changes have been made to correct obvious typesetters’ errors and to regularize hyphenation; variant spellings have been retained.

In chapter XXIV, page 146, the sentence that was typeset as “By the time William and Melia turned down Saint James his street,” has been changed to “By the time William and Melia turned down Saint James’s street,” to make sense grammatically.

In several places, Josiah Munt refers to himself or others as “prattical” in conversation. In chapter XXXVI, page 241, he is musing about education for women as not being “prattical”; the Transcriber has chosen to retain this spelling as fitting the author's style and intent.

In four instances in the book, the author refers to a “pickelet”, and in one place to a “pikelet”. Because of the frequency of pickelet, the Transcriber has chosen to retain the variant spelling.


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