While we were takinginfinite satisfaction in this little history, we lost Jimmie.
2
All the more remarkable then his capacity for takinginfinite pains.
3
Isn't it Carlyle that says 'Genius is the capacity for takinginfinite pains.'
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Genius is the art of takinginfinite pains.
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In the end they found out what follows, but only by takinginfinite pains and employing much subterraneous spying.
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For the art of Mark Twain is the art of takinginfinite pains-theart of exactitude, precision and detail.
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From which we may conclude that he would not, like Carlyle, have defined genius as the power of takinginfinite pains.
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Lowry pecked away at the keys, slowly, one-fingered, takinginfinite agonies over the composition of his reports, on which his career might depend.
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The peculiarly French capacity for takinginfinite pains, of which a good example is this silkworm culture, has its drawbacks, when carried into administrative work.
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It was she, too, who always wrote the notes of acknowledgment and thanks, takinginfinite pains to make Emma Jane's quite different from her own.
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Paganini possessed the oft-quoted attribute of genius, "the power of takinginfinite pains," but behind this there lay superlative gifts of mind, physique, and temperament.
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Takinginfinite precautions, a section removed the cadavers.
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"Genius, Pollyooly-geniusis the art of takinginfinite pains."
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He even caused-takinginfinite trouble to secure secrecy in the matter-threegallons of British brandy to be ordered and paid for as the best French.
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"I don't altogether agree with the definition of it as the capacity for takinginfinite pains," Carroll, guessing his companion's thoughts, remarked with mock sententiousness.