| John Aikin - Literature, Modern - 1807 - 706 pages
...number imposed on any estate is regulated by an old assessment, which, though now glaringly ynjust-. the magistracy do not exert themselves to correct;...can only be applied by persons of local knowledge. T« a stranger, the most obvious means appear to be the abolition of compnlsatory apprenticing ; the... | |
| Hannah More - English literature - 1827 - 542 pages
...plucking up the wheat with the tares, and are rather apt, with a spirit of hopeless resignation, \ ' To bear the ills they have, ' Than fly to others that they know not of.' While sober- minded and considerate men, t herefore, sat mourning over this complicated mass of error,... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1827 - 624 pages
...infidel and unclean foreigners for another? or, would they not rather wish ' to bear the (supposed) ills they have, than fly to others that they know not of?' Persia, however, is probably die last route which Russia would take if disposed to try her hand at... | |
| English periodicals - 1833 - 598 pages
...such a catastrophe, any remained faithful. History is full of instances that show how much rather men bear " the ills they have, Than fly to others that they know not off." After the defeat of the Danes and the peace of Lubeck, in 1629, protestant Germany was left at... | |
| Military art and science - 1831 - 610 pages
...absurdities, which preserves for them their individual independence ; content rather to bear those ills they have than fly to others that they know not of, they gladly suffer a veil of most impenetrable mystery to be cast over the whole system. Even the sentimentalists,... | |
| Thomas Dick - Future life - 1829 - 308 pages
...a certain degree of hope, to a termination of their sorrows. — " They rather choose to bear those ills they have Than fly to others that they know not of." There is, I presume, no individual in a sound state of mind, who can entirely throw aside all concern... | |
| Hannah More - Children - 1830 - 448 pages
...plucking up the wheat with the tares, and are rather apt, with a spirit of hopeless resignation, " To bear the ills they have, Than fly to others that they know not of." While sober-minded and considerate men, therefore, sat mourning over this complicated mass of error,... | |
| Hannah More - 1832 - 530 pages
...plucking up the wheat with the tares, and are rather apt, with a spirit of hopeless resignation, ' To nts his lost, or woos his living love. of.1 While sober-minded and considerate men. therefore, sat mourning over this complicated mass of... | |
| Military art and science - 1833 - 598 pages
...such a catastrophe, any remained faithful. Histpry is full of instances that show how much rather men bear " the ills they have, Than fly to others that they know not off." After the defeat of the Danes and the peace of Lubeck, in 1629, protestant Germany was left at... | |
| Hannah More - 1834 - 456 pages
...plucking up the wheat with the tares, and are rather apt, with a spirit of hopeless resignation, " To bear the ills they have, Than fly to others that they know not of." While sober-minded and considerate men, therefore, sat mourning over this complicated mass of error,... | |
| |