Rosanne: Or, A Father's Labour Lost, Volume 3F. C. and J. Rivington, 1814 |
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Page 9
... feel convinced that we have done so , though I love them with all my heart , I cannot join them . We all , I hope and trust , mean the same thing ; but I have a great objec- tion to fanatical terms and mystical jargon ; and I set my ...
... feel convinced that we have done so , though I love them with all my heart , I cannot join them . We all , I hope and trust , mean the same thing ; but I have a great objec- tion to fanatical terms and mystical jargon ; and I set my ...
Page 10
... feel yourself , the impossibility of our meriting pardon for even our common transgressions , but through his atonement . Cultivate the temper of mind that is most favourable to receive the influence of that Holy Spirit which guides us ...
... feel yourself , the impossibility of our meriting pardon for even our common transgressions , but through his atonement . Cultivate the temper of mind that is most favourable to receive the influence of that Holy Spirit which guides us ...
Page 15
... feeling . It has been , Grant , my bane through life . A man ought to have educated his feeling very care- fully , before he presumes to let it guide him . Human nature , I doubt , is not to be trusted . I will not object to the church ...
... feeling . It has been , Grant , my bane through life . A man ought to have educated his feeling very care- fully , before he presumes to let it guide him . Human nature , I doubt , is not to be trusted . I will not object to the church ...
Page 16
... feeling perhaps peculiar to her- self . Like those who , having a medical friend , think no advice can be so salutary , no operation so gentle as his , she wished Mr. Grant could have officiated . She wanted a particularly sooth ing ...
... feeling perhaps peculiar to her- self . Like those who , having a medical friend , think no advice can be so salutary , no operation so gentle as his , she wished Mr. Grant could have officiated . She wanted a particularly sooth ing ...
Page 22
... feel , perhaps through their lives , that they have lost her . But come , my child , I did not mean to bedew thy eyes . How shall we settle this matter ? I could accept Mrs. Firmly's repeated invi tation : I really think she is good ...
... feel , perhaps through their lives , that they have lost her . But come , my child , I did not mean to bedew thy eyes . How shall we settle this matter ? I could accept Mrs. Firmly's repeated invi tation : I really think she is good ...
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Common terms and phrases
æther agreeable allow amuse anxiety Arthur Lynden asked attention Bellar Bellarmine's blessing Broseley Byram family called child comfort consider consolation daugh daughter dear father dear Sir dinner distress Ductile duty endeavours eyes fancy favour fear feel Firmly Firmly's Gass's gentleman girl give Grant happy hear heard heart Honoria honour hope indulgence interest kind knew Lady Agnes Lady Brentleigh Lady Cobby Lady Lucretia Lady Ormesden Lady Winselina ladyship larmine letter look Lord Brentleigh Lord Mont Lord Montry Lord Montrylas lordship marriage marry ment mind Miss Bellarmine Miss Pathos Montrylas's morning mother never painful perhaps persons physiognomist pleasure racter recollection replied Rosanne's sanne sanne's scrupulosity seemed sense sentiments Sir Puley Sir Tancred Sir Tancred's Southampton speak suffered suppose sure tell thankful ther thing thought tion told walk Westby Wiltshire wish woman
Popular passages
Page 16 - I WAS glad when they said unto me, We will go into the house of the Lord.
Page 350 - Then let the trial come ! and witness thou, If terror be upon me ; if I shrink To meet the storm, or falter in my strength When hardest it besets me.
Page 35 - And, touch'd by her fair tendance, gladlier grew. Yet went she not, as not with such discourse Delighted, or not capable her ear Of what was high: such pleasure she...