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quarrel and with
Steele lost his seat in Parliament, and his personal quarrel with Swift, by now a public issue, thus reached its climax.
but there is much here also which bears directly on his personal quarrel with Swift.
When the negotiations began, his quarrel with the king of France was temporarily in abeyance, and he had no intention of reviving it so long as there was hope that French money would come to pay the troops who, under Charles of Valois, the papal vicar of Tuscany, were so valuable in the crusade against the Colonna cardinals and their Sicilian allies.
Few will quarrel with the aim of the schools or with the wording of their curriculum.
This is an assumption with which few would be disposed to quarrel.
The contention needs to be formulated with much greater precision than it ever was during the campaign, but once that has been done, I fail to see how any serious student of world affairs can quarrel with it.
`` Sometimes we'd have trouble persuading her to make tax-exempt charitable contributions, and I've known her to quarrel with a plumber over a bill for fixing a faucet ; ;
As he left the bus with his money bag, Robinson added, the largest youth accosted him, a quarrel ensued, and the youth knocked him down.
The trouble with them was that they almost never worked, and in fact an agreement `` in principle '' historically turned out to be a sure sign that neither party really wanted the quarrel settled.
Osiander's divergence from Luther's doctrine of justification by faith involved him in a violent quarrel with Philip Melanchthon, who had adherents in Königsberg, and these theological disputes soon created an uproar in the town.
His quarrel with Congress prevented the readmission into the Union on generous terms of the members of the late Confederacy .... He sacrificed two important objects to petty considerations.
Some believe that this appeal “ thereby shows Christian ’ s of Luke ’ s day both that their predecessors were innocent before the state and that Paul had no political quarrel with Rome ” but rather with the Jews who were accusing him.
Bayezid II's overriding concern was the quarrel with his brother Cem, who claimed the throne and sought military backing from the Mamluks in Egypt.
Some time later, Telemachus had a quarrel with his mother-in-law and killed her ; Cassiphone then killed Telemachus to avenge her mother's death.
:" Clemens never had any quarrel with the theory of Christian Science or mental healing, or with any of the empiric practices.
... His quarrel with Mrs. Eddy lay in the belief that she herself, as he expressed it, was " a very unsound Christian Scientist.
Tradition asserts that, sometime around 560, he became involved in a quarrel with Saint Finnian of Movilla Abbey over a psalter.
Crossbow bolts can be fitted with a variety of heads, some with sickle-shaped heads to cut rope or rigging ; but the most common today is a four-sided point called a quarrel.
De Pizan ’ s participation in a literary quarrel, in 1401 – 1402, allowed her to move beyond the courtly circles, and ultimately to establish her status as a writer concerned with the position of women in society.
" However, despite this positive change, Munch's self-destructive and erratic behavior involved him first with a violent quarrel with another artist, then with an accidental shooting in the presence of Tulla Larsen, who had returned for a brief reconciliation, which injured two of his fingers.

quarrel and Garrick
In 1765 appeared his metrical translation of the plays of Terence ; and in 1766, he produced The Clandestine Marriage, jointly with Garrick, whose refusal to take the part of Lord Ogleby led to a quarrel between the two authors.

quarrel and led
In the Italian Peninsula, the defiant attitude of Popes Gregory II and Gregory III on behalf of image-veneration led to a fierce quarrel with the Emperor.
Layamon added to the story when he adapted Wace's work into the Middle English Brut in the early 13th century, saying that the quarrel between Arthur's vassals led to violence at a Yuletide feast.
During the feast, Eris produced the Apple of Discord, which started the quarrel that led to the Judgement of Paris and eventually to the Trojan War.
He seemed at first inclined to press a quarrel with the Kingdom of France over the Burgundian frontier, but the refusal of Pope Boniface VIII to recognize his election led him to change his policy, and, in 1299, he made a treaty with King Philip IV, by which his son Rudolph was to marry Blanche, a daughter of the French king.
The quarrel led to civil war, and in 20 May 1449, D. Pedro was defeated and killed at the Battle of Alfarrobeira.
If the assault only led to injury and was unintentional, the assailant in a quarrel had to pay the doctor's fees.
Boniface's quarrel with Aymer de Valence over the a hospital in Southwark led to the archbishop's palace at Lambeth being plundered and one of Boniface's functionaries being kidnapped.
() The quarrel led to Abner's defection to David, () who was then king of the breakaway Kingdom of Judah.
A brawl in which Eustace and his servants became involved with the citizens of Dover led to a serious quarrel between the king and Godwin.
This eventually led to a quarrel between Perseus and Demetrius which forced Philip to decide reluctantly to execute Demetrius for treason in 180 BC.
He had married Æthelthryth, a daughter of Anna of East Anglia, in 660 ; however, she took the veil shortly after Ecgfrith's accession, a step which possibly led to his long quarrel with Wilfrid, Archbishop of York.
One account records that the quarrel between Wulfred and Coenwulf led to Wulfred's being deprived of his office for six years, with no baptisms taking place during that time, but this may have been an exaggeration, with four years being the more likely term of the suspension.
In the mid-1750s, Rameau criticised Rousseau's contributions to the musical articles in the Encyclopédie, which led to a quarrel with the leading philosophes d ' Alembert and Diderot.
A quarrel between the moderate and the more advanced sections of the Catholic Committee led, in December 1791, to the secession of sixty-eight of the former, led by Lord Kenmare ; and the direction of the committee then passed to more violent leaders, of whom the most prominent was John Keogh, a Dublin tradesman, known as ' Gog '.
Voyager convinces 8472, led by an individual posing as Boothby, that the Federation has no quarrel with them – it had in fact long been known that the Borg themselves started the war between the two species by invading fluidic space to assimilate the superior technology of Species 8472.
A quarrel between Wade Hampton and one of his lieutenants — Johnson Hapgood — led to the defeat of Wade Hampton as governor in 1880 and the election of Hapgood.
But his senseless quarrel with Frederick William III of Prussia detained him in Pomerania ; and when at last in December 1805 he led his 6, 000 men towards the Elbe district the third coalition had already been dissipated by the victories of Ulm and Austerlitz.
His connection with the anonymously-published Court Poems in 1716 led to the long quarrel with Alexander Pope.
He alleged that a violent quarrel with Trotsky had led to him wanting to murder Trotsky.
This step possibly led to Ecgfrith's long quarrel with Wilfrid bishop of York.
His increasing ill-health and a certain moral laxity ( as shown in his judgment on Sappho ) led to a quarrel with the consistory, as a result of which he resigned his professorship.
The affair led to a quarrel with his father in which Landor expressed his intention of leaving home for ever.

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