The Quarterly Review, Volume 72J. Murray, 1843 |
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Page 48
... equally unfavourable to all kinds of mental improvement or domestic duty ? And it is worse than idle to allege the love of Christ , or take in vain the name of God , as exclusive motives for that abstinence which , in His moral ...
... equally unfavourable to all kinds of mental improvement or domestic duty ? And it is worse than idle to allege the love of Christ , or take in vain the name of God , as exclusive motives for that abstinence which , in His moral ...
Page 99
... equally a theatrical one - a sphere to which , as a habitual one , he was admitted only as a player ; and he understood this too quite as perfectly as the other - understood his own fated part in it too - rebelled in spirit against the ...
... equally a theatrical one - a sphere to which , as a habitual one , he was admitted only as a player ; and he understood this too quite as perfectly as the other - understood his own fated part in it too - rebelled in spirit against the ...
Page 180
... equally absurd and disgraceful Stirling case ) , the scales do not fall from the eyes of the wretched victims on whose resources the claimant lives , but who have this excuse for their infatuation , that , by the time exposure takes ...
... equally absurd and disgraceful Stirling case ) , the scales do not fall from the eyes of the wretched victims on whose resources the claimant lives , but who have this excuse for their infatuation , that , by the time exposure takes ...
Contents
The Lady of the Manor Being a Series of Conversations | 25 |
Peregrine Bunce By the Author of Sayings | 53 |
25 | 72 |
Copyright | |
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