Home Life: What it Is, and what it NeedsW. V. Spencer, 1864 - 180 oldal |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 29 találatból.
xviii. oldal
... religious faith is the shallow thing it too much is , and religious obligation the easily shifted garment many make it , this may be no question at all ; where one is very strenuous , and the other good - naturedly indiffer- ent , it ...
... religious faith is the shallow thing it too much is , and religious obligation the easily shifted garment many make it , this may be no question at all ; where one is very strenuous , and the other good - naturedly indiffer- ent , it ...
xix. oldal
... Religion is a thing of more importance to a woman , therefore the husband should yield . Some say , Neither should yield — religious convic- tion is as dear to the man , and as important as to the woman -each has a right to the exercise ...
... Religion is a thing of more importance to a woman , therefore the husband should yield . Some say , Neither should yield — religious convic- tion is as dear to the man , and as important as to the woman -each has a right to the exercise ...
xxi. oldal
... religious subjects . Where from indifference or from conflicting faiths that cannot be , is a lack for which nothing can make amends . There will ... religion are to be considered the laws of the house ? In which faith INTRODUCTORY . xxi.
... religious subjects . Where from indifference or from conflicting faiths that cannot be , is a lack for which nothing can make amends . There will ... religion are to be considered the laws of the house ? In which faith INTRODUCTORY . xxi.
xxii. oldal
... religious educator of his child , which no true parent can without exquisite pain . He must stand tamely by and submit to have his child trained in what he considers error , or he must risk the family harmony in his effort to counteract ...
... religious educator of his child , which no true parent can without exquisite pain . He must stand tamely by and submit to have his child trained in what he considers error , or he must risk the family harmony in his effort to counteract ...
xxiii. oldal
... religion be one of them , that which is in itself gravest of all , since it shapes and controls all life , while its influence extends beyond it ? It is no narrowness , no bigotry , but rather the broadest prudence and the truest wisdom ...
... religion be one of them , that which is in itself gravest of all , since it shapes and controls all life , while its influence extends beyond it ? It is no narrowness , no bigotry , but rather the broadest prudence and the truest wisdom ...
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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
abode amusements Anglo-Saxon asso become believe better blessing boys brothers centre cern character Charles Kemble chil child childhood church comes comfort compromise daughters domestic dren duty ence England home experience faith father and mother feel fetlock girls give grow happy harmony heart holy home influence home intercourse hospitality house we live household husband idea of home indolence inevitably influ intercourse of home leave less live marriage means memory ment merely mind mistake moral nature necessity neglect never New-Englander niggardly old Christ Church old home parents pleasant pleasure Puritan religion religious rest rience Sabbath sacred selfish sentiment sister soul Southern hospitality spirit stand stranger street Sunday school teach thing thought thrift tion toil true home truest turb usury utter virtue weary well-ordered wife wisdom wise woman word young
Népszerű szakaszok
149. oldal - ... times of their privacy, forbid the access of all suitors. Prayer, meditation, reading, hearing, preaching, singing, good conference, are the businesses of this day ; which I dare not bestow on any work or pleasure but heavenly. I hate superstition on the one side, and looseness on the other : but I find it hard to offend in too much devotion ; easy, in profaneness. The whole week is ,sanctified by this day ; and, according to my care of this, is my blessing on the rest.
60. oldal - The happiness of life, on the contrary, is made up of minute fractions— the little, soon-forgotten charities of a kiss, a smile, a kind look, a heartfelt compliment in the disguise of playful raillery, and the countless other infinitesimals of pleasurable thought and genial feeling. Kath. "Well, Sir; you have said quite enough to make me despair of finding a " John Anderson, my Jo, John...
xvii. oldal - ... being, for what we know, infinite) : but still we become familiar with the upper views, tastes, and tempers of our associates. And it is hardly in man to estimate justly what is familiar to him. In travelling along at night, as Hazlitt says, we catch a glimpse into cheerful-looking rooms with light blazing in them, and we conclude, involuntarily, how happy the inmates must be.
93. oldal - Look, the world's comforter, with weary gait, His day's hot task has ended in the west : The owl, night's herald, shrieks, — 'tis very late ; The sheep are gone to fold, birds to their nest ; And coal-hlack clouds that shadow heaven's light Do summon us to part, and bid good night.
72. oldal - that the fate of the child is always the work of his mother,' and the corroborations of it in the case of John Wesley, the Napier family, and many others — much remains to be said for the other side of the question, and examples, such as the second Pitt and the second Peel, may be urged to show that -not seldom it is from the male parent that ability, energy...
112. oldal - Where there is the ability and the taste, I regard music — as combining in happiest proportions instruction and pleasure — as standing at the head of the home evening enjoyments. What a never-failing resource have those homes which God has blessed with this gift ! How many pleasant family circles gather nightly about the piano, how many a home is vocal with the voice of song or psalm ! In other days, in how many village homes the father's viol led the domestic harmony, and sons with clarinet...
112. oldal - In other days, in how many village homes the father's viol led the domestic harmony, and sons with clarinet or flute or manly voice, and daughters sweetly and clearly filling in the intervals of sound, made a joyful noise ! There was then no piano, to the homes of this generation the great, the universal boon and comforter. One pauses and blesses it, as he hears it through the open farmhouse window, or detects its sweetness stealing out amid the jargons of the city, — an angel's benison upon...
42. oldal - And have women no disappointments ?" " Oh yes, Willoughby, plenty ! The mistress, when the Church has made her a wife, is as often, and as much, and more deceived. At the altar she imagines herself united to a man of warm affections, noble thoughts, and great protective power, one for whose head the church roof is scarcely holy cover enough ; but she finds herself at home instead of all this, to have married a craving body of wants ; shirts that want washing, hose that want mending, whims that want...
144. oldal - ... propensity to be at something, without the power to gratify it. I was not singular in my antipathy. The whole herd of us, great and small, learned and unlearned, were parties to it. We were utter antisabbatists ; gladly would we have repudiated the property of the long day so heavily bestowed upon us. Of all the painful inflictions of boyhood, I know hardly any worse than that of wading through the slough of Sunday.
113. oldal - ... upon a wilderness of discord, soothing the weary brain, lifting the troubled spirit, pouring fresh strength into the tired body, waking to worship, lulling to rest. Touched by the hand we love, a mother, sister, wife, — say, is it not a ministrant of love to child, to man, — a household deity, — now meeting our moods, answering to our needs, sinking to depths we cannot fathom, rising to heights we...