| 1735 - 704 pages
...engaging, which inl'uires attechc<a without the cbjicty of love, is a much faler choice. Tîie graces lole not their influence like beauty : at the end of thirty...woman who makes an agreeable companion, charms her hulband more than at rirlr. The companion of love to fire holds gooJ in one reipecl, that the fiercer... | |
| 1781 - 800 pages
...engaging, which infpires affection without the cbriety of love, is a much fafer choice. The graces lofe not their influence like beauty. At the end of thirty years, a virtuous woman, who make* an agreeable companion, charms her hufband perhaps more than at firfl. The companion' of loxe... | |
| William M. Dunning - 1835 - 456 pages
...husband. A figure agreeable and engaging, which inspires affection without the ebriety of love, is a muck safer choice. The graces lose not their influence...who makes an agreeable companion, charms her husband perhaps more than at first. The comparison of love to fire holds good in one respect, that the fiercer... | |
| 1851 - 398 pages
...influence over the husband. A figure agreeable and engaging, which inspires affection without the ebriety of love, is a much safer choice. The graces lose not...fiercer it burns, the sooner it is extinguished." Unwise Men. rjlHE angry man, who sets his own I' house on fire, in order that he I may burn up that... | |
| 1854 - 394 pages
...affection without the ebriety of love, is a much safer choice. The graces do not lose their infiuence like beauty. At the end of thirty years a virtuous...the fiercer it burns the sooner it is extinguished. — Q. Use of Fond Mud. — Some three or four years ago, as an experiment, we drew out of the bottom... | |
| Congregational union of England and Wales - 1856 - 754 pages
...beauty. At the end of thirty, forty, nay, fifty years, a virtuous woman who makes an agreeable wife charms her husband more than at first. The comparison...the fiercer it burns the sooner it is extinguished." NOVELTY. It is not the worth of excellency, but the strangeness of a thing which draws the eye and... | |
| Henry Southgate - 1862 - 774 pages
...influence over the husband. A figure agreeablo and engaging, which inspires affection without the ebricty of love, is a much safer choice. The graces lose not...end of thirty years, a virtuous woman, who makes an agreeablo companion, charms her husband more than at first. Tho comparison of love to fire holds good... | |
| James Lee (M.A.) - 1867 - 508 pages
...influence over the husband. A figure agreeable and engaging, which inspires affection without the ebriety of love, is a much safer choice. The graces lose not their influence like beauty. At the end of SO years, a virtuous woman, who makes an agreeable companion, charms her husband more than at first.... | |
| James Comper Gray - 1880 - 416 pages
...influence over the husband. A figure agreeable and engaging, which inspires affection without the ebriety of love, is a much safer choice. The graces lose not...the fiercer it burns the sooner it is extinguished.' Compassion for maligned beauty. — Nought is there under heaven's wide hollowness That moves more... | |
| Maturin Murray Ballou - 1882 - 448 pages
...a physician who never comes until after the disorder is cured. — Mme. de la Tour. 1017 1O11 1018 The comparison of love to fire holds good in one respect,...the fiercer it burns the sooner it is extinguished. — Henry Home. 1019 Modesty is policy, no less than virtue. — Simms. 1020 A mother's love is indeed... | |
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