... warranting such a punishment. He was glad to see that these tales affected the house. Would they then sanction enormities, the bare recital of which made them shudder ? Let them remember that humanity did not consist in a squeamish ear. It did not... The Yale Literary Magazine - Página 1631852Visualização completa - Sobre este livro
| St. Clyde (fict.name.) - 1816 - 286 páginas
...shoot in unrestrained licentiousness: humanity ! humanity does not consist in a squeamish ear, nor in shrinking and starting at tales of woe ; but in...disposition of the heart to remedy the evils they unfold : humanity belongs rather to the mind than to the nerves; and if so, it should prompt men to charitable... | |
| Julius Rubens Ames - 1837 - 716 páginas
...not consist in a squeamish ear. It did not consist in shrinking and starting at such tales as these ; but in a disposition of the heart to remedy the evils they unfolded. Humanity belonged rather to the mind than to the nerves. But, if so, it should prompt men... | |
| Julius Rubens Ames - 1837 - 244 páginas
...not consist in a squeamish ear. It did not consist in shrinking and starting at such tales as these ; but in a disposition of the heart to remedy the evils they unfolded. Humanity belonged rather to the mind than to the nerves. But, if so, it should prompt men... | |
| W. O. Blake - 1857 - 934 páginas
...not consist in a squeamish ear. It did not consist in shrinking and starting at such tales as these ; but in a disposition of the heart to remedy the evils they unfolded. Humanity belonged rather to the mind than to the nerves. But if so, it should prompt men... | |
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