The Works of Hannah More ...: Including Several Pieces Never Before Published, Volume 4 |
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Page 28
Yes , Sir , but if they are so distant that they cannot reach them , or so vast that he
cannot grasp them , he may let a thousand little , fnug , kind , good actions flip
through his fingers in the meanwhile : and so between the great things that he ...
Yes , Sir , but if they are so distant that they cannot reach them , or so vast that he
cannot grasp them , he may let a thousand little , fnug , kind , good actions flip
through his fingers in the meanwhile : and so between the great things that he ...
Page 38
Sir , I was contriving 6 to put out a fire too ; a conflagration 66 of a far more
dreadful kind , - a fire , 6 Sir , in the extinction of which universal “ man is
concerned : - I was contriving a « scheme to extinguish the fires of the “ inquifition
. ” — “ Why ...
Sir , I was contriving 6 to put out a fire too ; a conflagration 66 of a far more
dreadful kind , - a fire , 6 Sir , in the extinction of which universal “ man is
concerned : - I was contriving a « scheme to extinguish the fires of the “ inquifition
. ” — “ Why ...
Page 39
s engines which the devil ever invented “ to disgrace religion and plague man5
kind , that inquisition was the very worft . “ But I do not believe ' popery has ven6
tured at these diabolical tricks fince the 66 earthquake at Lisbon . So that a
bucket ...
s engines which the devil ever invented “ to disgrace religion and plague man5
kind , that inquisition was the very worft . “ But I do not believe ' popery has ven6
tured at these diabolical tricks fince the 66 earthquake at Lisbon . So that a
bucket ...
Page 74
to her daughters as the persons who were to raise the family of the Bragwells ;
and in this hope she foolishly submitted to any drudgery for their fakes , and bore
every kind of impertinence from them . The first wish of her heart was to fet them ...
to her daughters as the persons who were to raise the family of the Bragwells ;
and in this hope she foolishly submitted to any drudgery for their fakes , and bore
every kind of impertinence from them . The first wish of her heart was to fet them ...
Page 85
The tarts were so excellent , that Bragwell felt a secret kind of regret that his own
daughters were too genteel to do any thing so very useful . Indeed he had been
always unwilling to believe that any thing which was very proper and very ...
The tarts were so excellent , that Bragwell felt a secret kind of regret that his own
daughters were too genteel to do any thing so very useful . Indeed he had been
always unwilling to believe that any thing which was very proper and very ...
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againſt alſo aſk becauſe believe beſt better Betty Bragwell bring brought buſineſs carry cauſe child Chriſtian church comfort daughters deſire duty eyes Fantom farmer father feel felt firſt gave girls give hand happy hard heart himſelf hope houſe huſband inſtead Jones juſt keep kind knew land laſt leſs light live look Lord maſter mean mind moſt muſt myſelf natural never night obſerved once pariſh Parley perſon pleaſure poor pray prayer reaſon religion reſt rich ſaid ſame ſaw ſay ſee ſeemed ſervants ſet ſhall ſhe ſhould Simpſon ſome ſoon ſtill ſuch Sunday ſure talk tell themſelves theſe thing thoſe thought told took travellers true Trueman turned uſe vanity whole wife woman Worthy young
Popular passages
Page 89 - ... all. You and I, master Worthy, have worked hard many years, and think it very well to have scraped a trifle of money together ; you a few hundreds I suppose, and I a few thousands. But one would think every man in these books had the bank of England in his 'scrutore.
Page 418 - For it is impoflible for thofe who " were once enlightened, and have tafted of the heavenly " gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghoft, and " have tafted the good word of God and the powers of " the world to come, if they fhall fall away, to renew them " again unto repentance ; feeing they crucify to themfelves " the Son of God afrefh, and put him to an open fhame.
Page 295 - Whether pity for us, or fear for themselves, wrought strongest, God knoweth ; probably the latter ; for the mob were wrought up to such a pitch of fury, that their...
Page 27 - Saunders to freedom, as a Pole or a South American, though I should be very glad to help them too. But one must begin to love somewhere, and to do good somewhere ; and I think it is as natural to love one's own family, and to do good in one's own neighborhood, as to any body else.
Page 1 - WILLIAM. MR. FANTOM was a retail trader in the city of London. As he had no turn to any expensive vices, he was reckoned a sober decent man, but he was covetous and proud, selfish and conceited. As soon as he got forward in the world, his vanity began to display itself, though not in the ordinary method, that of making a figure and living away ; but still he was tormented with a longing...
Page 114 - he that hateth his brother " is a murderer ;" and again, " love your " enemies, blefs them that curfe you, and ' ?' pray for them that defpitefully ufe you *
Page 398 - Blefled are the poor in fpirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Page 398 - ... our light affliction which is but for a moment, worketh out for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory...