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" I am afraid my uncle will think himself justified by them on this occasion, when he asserts, that it is one of the most difficult things in the world to put a woman right, when she sets out wrong. "
Letters on Clerical Manners and Habits: Addressed to a Student in the ... - Page 304
by Samuel Miller - 1852 - 376 pages
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The Works of Samuel Richardson

The Rev. Edward Mangin, M.A. - 1811 - 414 pages
...? I am afraid my uncle will think himself justified by them on this occasion, when he asserts, that it is one of the most difficult things in the world to put a woman right, when she sets out wrong. If it be generally so with us, I am sure we ought to be...
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Roll of a tennis ball, through the moral world, a ser. of contemplations, by ...

John Stewart - 1812 - 520 pages
...thy last agonies. THE MERIT OF PUBLIC OPINION CONSIDERED. There is nothing more certain, than that it is one of the most difficult things in the world, to ascertain the exact degree of merit or demerit that attaches to the actions of our fellow-creatures,...
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The history of sir Charles Grandison, Volume 2

Samuel Richardson - 1812 - 410 pages
...I am afraid my uncle will think himself justified by them on this occasion, 'when he asserts, that it is one of the most difficult things in the world to put a woman right, when she sets out wrong. If it be generally 'so with HB» I am sure we ought to...
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The history of sir Charles Grandison, Volume 2

Samuel Richardson - 1820 - 394 pages
...? I am afraid my uncle will think himself justified by them on this occasion, when he asserts, that it is one of the most difficult things in the world to put a woman right, when she sets out wrong. If it be generally so with us, I am sure we ought to be...
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Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of ..., Volume 1

Edward Jacob, Great Britain. Court of Chancery, John Walker - Equity - 1821 - 714 pages
...enabled him to obtain relief on it. April 25. The LORD CHANCELLOR. Considering what has taken place, it is one of the most difficult things in the world to support this plen. I find by an affidavit of PW JVood, filed when the motion to set aside the attachment...
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Scotch novel reading; or, Modern quackery, by a Cockney [S. Green].

Sarah Green - 1824 - 756 pages
...being, like Miss Southgate, that she has been attending. And give me leave to tell you, my good friend, it is one of the most difficult things in the world, to make a present to a gentlewoman, and such Mrs. Rivers certainly is, that may be useful to her, without...
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The Novels of Samuel Richardson, Esq. Viz. Pamela, Clarissa ..., Volume 3

Samuel Richardson - 1824 - 976 pages
...? I am afraid my uncle will think himself justified by them on this occasion, when he asserts, that it is one of the most difficult things in the world to put a woman right, when she sets out wrong. If it be generally so with us, I am sure we ought to be...
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The novels of Samuel Richardson, esq. To which is prefixed, a memoir of the ...

Samuel Richardson - 1824 - 824 pages
...? I am afraid my uncle will think himself justified by them on this occasion, when he asserts, that it is one of the most difficult things in the world to put a woman right, when she sets out wrong. If it be generally so with us, I am sure we ought to be...
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Letters on Clerical Manners and Habits: Addressed to a Student in the ...

Samuel Miller - Education - 1827 - 488 pages
...having read over the foregoing counsels, DO NOT IMAGINE THAT rr WILL BE AN BAST THING TO FOLLOW THEM. 1 no doubt that the substance of them will readily commend...deliberate and act with a number of others. In a large assemhly many feelings are excited, which in solitude lie dormant. Pride, vanity, ambition, envy, jealousy,...
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Letters on Clerical Manners and Habits: Addressed to a Student in the ...

Samuel Miller - Education - 1827 - 490 pages
...resolve to bear the whole code in mind, whenever, in future, you enter an ecclesiastical judicatnry. But be not too sanguine of success in this matter....and a thousand unfortunate sensibilities, which your fellow member-> will either d^signedly or inadvertently atiack, may, when you are off your guard, as...
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