| Charles William Colby - 1899 - 398 pages
...with whose interests you have sordidly united your own, and for whom you have sacrificed everything that ought to be dear to a man of honour. They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth. As... | |
| James Morgan Hart - 1901 - 186 pages
...danger; and, though you cannot be safe, you may cease to be ridiculous. — JUNIUs. They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth. — JUNIUs. Worth makes the man, the want of it the fellow. — POPE. In peace,... | |
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1902 - 450 pages
...for whom you have sacrificed everything that ought to be dear to a man of honor. They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth. As little acquainted with the rules of decorum as with the laws of morality, they... | |
| Charles Carroll Bombaugh - 1905 - 666 pages
...for whom you have sacrificed everything that ought to be dear to a man of honor. They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth. As little acquainted with the rules of decorum as with the laws of morality, they... | |
| Junius - 1907 - 172 pages
...friends, •with whose interests you have sordidly united your own, and for whom you have sacrificed every thing •that ought to be dear to a man of honour. They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth. As... | |
| George Lansing Raymond, Post Wheeler - 1911 - 236 pages
...field of danger; and, though you cannot be safe, you may cease to be ridiculous." " They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth." " Even now they tell you, that as you lived without virtue you should die without... | |
| Alfred Slater West - 1912 - 364 pages
...adjective is the enemy of the noun.' Let us illustrate the point. Junius writes : ' They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth." This is effective. But many a modern journalist, having read the sentence, would... | |
| Robert Maynard Leonard - 1912 - 788 pages
...with whose interest you have sordidly united your own, and for whom you have sacrificed everything that ought to be dear to a man of honour. They are still base enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth. As... | |
| 1769 - 750 pages
...thofe pernicious friends, with whofe intetefU you have fordidly united your own, and for whom you hare facrificed every thing that ought to be dear to a man of honour. They are ftill bale enough to encourage the follies of your age, as they once did the vices of your youth. As little... | |
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