| 1852 - 196 pages
...receives from begging. i MEMOIRS OF THE FAMOUS Sir JOHN DINELY, Baronet, One of the knights of Windsor. "Take him for all in all, " We ne'er shall look upon his like again." SIR JOHN DINELY is descended from a very illustrious family, which continued to flourish in great repute... | |
| G. H. Wood - 1853 - 302 pages
...condemn ; I rather now would write his epitaph, And let his faults lie buried in his grave. " He was a man, take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again." Yet would I dare to speak in boundless praise, And eulogize the wondrous works of God ; And of the... | |
| Samuel Strickland - 1853 - 692 pages
...happy to say that he overcame his only failing, but not in time to save his valuable life. However, " Take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again." Therefore farewell, kind, amiable, witty, Dunlop, but not for ever ! CHAPTER II. UTILITY OF THE LAKES.... | |
| Samuel Strickland - 1853 - 686 pages
...happy to say that he overcame his only failing, but not in time to save his valuable life. However, "Take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again." Therefore farewell, kind, amiable, witty, Dunlop, but not for ever ! CHAPTER II. UTILITY OF THE LAKES.... | |
| Stories - 1854 - 188 pages
...excited not the least regret. And if, in mock heroics, a mischievous, laughter-loving boy did exclaim, " Take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again," the quotation was well understood, and correctly interpreted. It was a busy day, and an exciting one,... | |
| William Blatch - 1855 - 404 pages
...imperfect, of the venerable patriarch of our Church, concerning whom we may emphatically assert, that, " Take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again." I am perfectly conscious of my inability to do justice to the subject. I have not, of course, being... | |
| William Blatch - 1855 - 434 pages
...imperfect, of the venerable patriarch of our Church, concerning whom we may emphatically assert, that, " Take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again." I am perfectly conscious of my inability to do justice to the subject. I have not, of course, being... | |
| John B. Dyson - 1856 - 198 pages
...was deeply affecting, and the sentiment of the poet seemed to actuate every spectator, — ' He was a man, take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again.' " There is a circumstance connected with Mr. Wesley's next call at Congleton, which illustrates his... | |
| Robert Southey - 1856 - 444 pages
...I do not look on with any great pleasure to her arrival at the Island. I like the Imperial well : " Take him for all in all, We ne'er shall look upon his like again ;" especially, Senhora, when you remember the cymbals ! But I should not think him a likely sort of... | |
| Arthur Hallam Elton - 1857 - 352 pages
...on safe ground again).—" Precisely what I should have expected, Mr. Rector—precisely I He was a man, take him for all in all, we ne'er shall look upon his like again! He was emphatically a man! Ay, sir, a man. One of nature's noblemen. What is it Burns says? Let me... | |
| |