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... Home Life: What it Is, and what it Needs - 42. oldalszerző: John Fothergill Waterhouse Ware - 1864 - 180 oldalTeljes nézet - Információ erről a könyvről
| 1845 - 572 oldal
...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...patience, and cowardly spirits that want comforting." " Yes ! but all this is known beforehand." " Perhaps so ; but it is not thought of. Commonly marriages... | |
| William Mountford - 1845 - 384 oldal
...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...patience, and cowardly spirits that want comforting." " Yes ! but all this is known beforehand." " Perhaps so ; but it is not thought of. Commonly marriages... | |
| Anna Cabot Lowell - 1856 - 330 oldal
...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...patience, and cowardly spirits that want comforting." Mountford. Siebenkiis could never inspire Lenette with a lyrical enthusiasm of love, in which she could... | |
| 1870 - 930 oldal
...herself united to a man of warm affections, noble thoughts, and great protective power, — one of whose head the church roof is scarcely holy cover...that wants bearing with, passions that want patience, :ind cowardly spirits that want comforting." The ideal of motherhood too vanishes with equal rapidity... | |
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