| 1901 - 436 pagine
...every other contract ; God commands me to keep it when I have made it. Marriage is a desperate thing. The frogs in ^Esop were extremely wise ; they had...into the well because they could not get out again. We single out particulars, and apply God's providence to them. Thus when two are married and have undone... | |
| Oliver Herbrand Gordon Leigh - 1901 - 432 pagine
...every other contract; God commands me to keep it when I have made it. Marriage is a desperate thing. The frogs in ./Esop were extremely wise; they had...into the well because they could not get out again. We single out particulars, and apply God's providence to them. Thus when two are married and have undone... | |
| 1901 - 440 pagine
...; God commands me to keep it when I have made it. Marriage is a desperate thing. The frogs in JEsop were extremely wise ; they had a great mind to some...into the well because they could not get out again. We single out particulars, and apply God's providence to them. Thus when two are married and have undone... | |
| Abram N. Coleman - 1903 - 310 pagine
...cares, but a bachelor no pleasures. Johnson. 57. Marriage is a desperate thing; the frogs in ^Esops were extremely wise ; they had a great mind to some...into the well, because they could not get out again. John Seldon. 58. Fathers their children and themselves abuse, that wealth a husband for their daughters... | |
| F. G. Tyrrell - 1904 - 440 pagine
...freely dissolved, and dissolutely. — Shakespeare. •Marriage is a desperate thing. The frogs in &sop were extremely wise; they had a great mind to some water; but they would not leap mto the well, because they could not get out again. — Sclden. Mothers who force their daughters into... | |
| Thomas Firminger Thiselton-Dyer - 1905 - 278 pagine
...everything." Selden looked upon marriage as " a desperate thing ;" and he tells us that "the frogs in JEsop were extremely wise, they had a great mind to some...into the well, because they could not get out again ; " and a humorous description of marriage, much to the same point, has been left us by Sir John Davies... | |
| Madison Clinton Peters - 1905 - 206 pagine
...for woman to be alone, for God knew many women would be better off alone. The frogs in ^Esop's fable were extremely wise. They had a great mind to some...into the well because they could not get out again. Sisters, look before you leap! CHAPTER IV. HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH MARRIED. THERE was published some... | |
| Thomas Firminger Thiselton Dyer - 1906 - 278 pagine
...everything." Selden looked upon marriage as " a desperate thing ; " and he tells us that " the frogs in ^sop were extremely wise, they had a great mind to some...into the well, because they could not get out again ; " and a humorous description of marriage, much to the same point, has been left us by Sir John Davies... | |
| H. Sant Martin Lanyon - 1906 - 368 pagine
...apprend aux anes a danser.'" "Marriage is a desperate thing," she returned. " The frogs in jEsop were wise. They had a great mind to some water, but they...leap into the well, because they could not get out again—wise, sensible With the lucidity of instinct he noticed something he had said had depressed... | |
| William S. Walsh - 1909 - 1116 pagine
...butt to get out again." " Marriage is a desperate thing," sap old Seiden : " the frogs in Жвор were extremely wise ; they had a great mind to some...into the well, because they could not get out again." The French say, " Wedlock rides in the saddle, and repentance on the croup," which recalls the joke... | |
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