His illness was long, but borne with a mild and cheerful fortitude, without the least mixture of any thing irritable or querulous, agreeably to the placid and even tenor of his whole life. He had, from the beginning of his malady, a distinct view of his... Blackwood's Magazine - Página 6021843Visualização completa - Sobre este livro
| Lord Ronald Sutherland Gower - 1902 - 362 páginas
...anything irritable or querulous, agreeably to the placid and even tenure of his whole life. He had from the beginning of his malady a distinct view of...submission to the will of Providence, could bestow. In this situation he had every consolation from family tenderness, which his own kindness had, indeed,... | |
| Sir Joshua Reynolds - 1909 - 518 páginas
...of any thing Irritable or querulous, agreeaMy to the placid and eren tenor of his whole life. He had from the beginning of his malady a distinct view of...submission to the will of Providence could bestow. In this situation he had every consolation from family tenderness, which his own kindness had, indeed,... | |
| William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1866 - 556 páginas
...placid and even tenor of his whole life. He had from the beginning of his malady, a distinct view of bis dissolution, and he contemplated it with that entire...submission to the will of Providence could bestow. In this situation he had every consolation from family tenderness, which his own kindness had indeed... | |
| 1880 - 668 páginas
...of anything irritable or querulous, agreeably to the placid and even tenor of his whole life. He had from the beginning of his malady a distinct view of...submission to the will of Providence could bestow." He was followed to his last resting place, In one of the crypts of St. Paul's Cathedral, by many of... | |
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