... because it adds and ministers to that covetousness, that hardness of heart, which furnishes us with an excuse — which we are all too ready to make — of not giving once, lest we might once be deceived. To a man living on the shady side of life,... Ida Craven - Página 1por Jessie Ellen Cadell - 1876Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith - 1844 - 676 páginas
...deceived. To a man living on the shady side of life, whose poverty compels him to walk with his own feet, hear with his own ears, and see with his own eyes, the contrasted conditions of London Life afford much matter of painful contemplation. These contrasts are... | |
| 1853 - 394 páginas
...deceived. To a man living on the shady side of life, whose poverty compels him to walk with his own feet, hear with his own ears, and see with his own eyes, the contrasted conditions of London Life, afford much matter for painful contemplation. These contrasts... | |
| 1854 - 786 páginas
...The 'mere fact, also, that he had undertaken a toilsome journey at an inconvenient season, in order to hear with his own ears, and see with his own eyes, was greatly in favour of his character for impartiality. If his verriict had been favourable, it would... | |
| 1915 - 980 páginas
...know what is wrong with casual labor, he mixes with the crowd at the dock-gates in the early morning, to hear with his own ears and see with his own eyes. It is this directness and actuality, this independence of all theory and doctrine, that give him his... | |
| Joseph Charles Parkinson - 1870 - 418 páginas
...that Mr John Fender, the chairman of the British-Indian Company, has been prevented coming to India to hear with his own ears, and see with his own eyes, how great are the benefits his spirited enterprise, and that of those associated with him, are certain... | |
| Charles Kendall Adams - 1874 - 664 páginas
...August, 1792. The king put on his uniform, and presented himself to the National Guard ; but it was only to hear with his own ears and see with his own eyes that all was lost. As he re-entered the royal apartments with pale visage, he may have remembered that... | |
| Alfred George Gardiner - 1915 - 378 páginas
...know what is wrong with casual labour he mixes with the crowd at the dock gates in the early morning to hear with his own ears and see with his own eyes. It is this directness and actuality, this independence of all theory and doctrine, that give him his... | |
| 1915 - 880 páginas
...know what is wrong with casual labor, he mixes with the crowd at the dock-gates in the early morning, to hear with his own ears and see with his own eyes. It is this directness and actuality, this independence of all theory and doctrine, that give him his... | |
| 1844 - 584 páginas
...deceived. To a man living on the shady side of life, whose poverty compels him to walk with his own feet, hear with his own ears, and see with his own eyes, the contrasted conditions of London life afford much matter of painful contemplation. These contrasts are... | |
| Julian Aguon - 2006 - 89 páginas
...grassroots activist then as a Senator, professed his deep and unrelenting love of us. A man who hastened to hear with his own ears and see with his own eyes the deeper truths about revolution, the politics of social change, and the burning after justice and God,... | |
| |