| Epes Sargent - 1857 - 320 pages
...the predominant feeling. 9. A profligate young fellow seeing an aged hermit go barefoot by him, — "Father" says he, "you are in a very miserable condition,...said the hermit, " but what is thy condition if there be ? " 10. Idle and indecent applications of sentences taken from the Scriptures," is a mode of merriment... | |
| Epes Sargent - 1855 - 348 pages
...the predominant feeling. 9. A profligate young felloe seeing an aged hermit go barefoot by him, — " Father " says he, " you are in a very miserable condition,...said the hermit, " but what is thy condition if there be ? " 11. "Supineness and effeminacy," says Dr. Rush, "have ruined more constitutions than were eyer... | |
| John Frost - 1855 - 462 pages
...pleasing' to those* who come only for amusement', but prejudicial to him' who would reap the profit*. 3. Man is a creature designed for two different states of being, or, rather, for two different lives. The first' life is shorf" and transient'; his second*, permancnt', and lasting*. 4. The difference... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1856 - 1090 pages
...No room is left for death. DETDEN. A LEWD young fellow seeing an aged hermit go by him barefooted, ' Father, (says he), you are in a very miserable condition....different states of being, or rather, for two different live. His first life is short and transient ; his second, permanent aod lasting. The question we are... | |
| Epes Sargent - 1857 - 350 pages
...the predomiriant feeling. 9. A profligate young felloze seeing an aged hermit go barefoot by him, — "Father" says he, "you are in a very miserable condition,...said the hermit, " but what is thy condition if there be ? " 10. Idle and indecent applications of sentences taken from the Scriptures,EI is a mode of merriment... | |
| Thomas Ewing - 1857 - 428 pages
...pleasing1 to those* who come only for amusement', but prejudicial* to him' who would reap the profit*. 3. Man is a creature designed for two different states of being, or, rather, for two different lives. The Jirst' life is short* and transient' ; his second*, permanent1 and lasting*. 4. The difference... | |
| Louis Direy - 1858 - 186 pages
...presented as positive instead of as doubtful: A lewd young fellow seeing an aged hermit go by him barefoot, father, says he, you are in a very miserable condition,...the hermit, but what is thy condition if there is. Spectator. By this I know whether my translator be deficient, and whether my corrector merits his money... | |
| 1862 - 582 pages
..."Father," exclaimed a gay and thoughtless son of raillery, to an aged hermit who passed him barefoot, " you are in a very miserable condition, if there is not another world." " True, my son," replied the old man ; " but what is thy condition, if there is ? " EXPENSES, LITTLE. — "Beware,"... | |
| John Ella - 1869 - 388 pages
...anecdote for his reflection : — " A silly young fellow seeing an aged hermit go by him barefoot, ' Father,' says he, ' you are in a very miserable condition...hermit, ' but what is thy condition if there is?'" DEMONSTRATIVE AUDIENCES. Ut qui conduct! plorant in funere, dicunt Et iaciunt prope plura doleulibus... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1870 - 688 pages
...No room is loft for death. DRTDEN. A LEWD young fellow seeing an aged hermit go by him barefooted, ' Father, (says he), you are in a very miserable condition, if there is not another world.' — f True, son, (said the hermit) but what is thy condition if there is ? ' Man is a creature designed... | |
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