Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 21, 2025
He prays, he fasts, he approaches the sacraments, he does penance, all in proper season as prescribed by Mother Church; he abominates sin and lack of faith particularly in others; he has drenched Flanders in blood that he might wash it clean of the heresy of thinking differently from himself in spiritual matters, and he would have done the same by England but that God Who cannot, after all, be quite of Philip's way of thinking willed otherwise.
I have the reputation of 'independent, a manner of 'Oh! no, we never mention it, sir, in the official catalogue, and the one unpardonable Chinese Gordon has been sacked for being 'eccentric, which Society abominates. England is now ruled by irresponsible clerks, mostly snobs. My misfortunes in life began with not being a Frenchman.
Yet it is good, for it marks a step in the way home, and in the father's arms the prodigal forgets the self he abominates. Once with his father, he is to himself of no more account. It will be so with her." She went nearer and said, "Will you restore that which you have wrongfully taken?"
There's a name for this sort, perverted coquettes, 'teasers. The man of the world abominates them, they're beneath contempt; but Jerry No," he remarked with a shake of the head, "he wouldn't understand that." "And when he does?" "H m!" His manner added no encouragement. "It would serve her jolly well right," he muttered cryptically in a moment. "What?" I asked.
Not, indeed, that a curious blindness is absent. Hume was a typical child of one aspect of the eighteenth century in his hatred of enthusiasm, and the form in which he most abominates it is religious. Why people's religious opinions should lead to antagonism he could no more understand than why people should refuse to pass one another on a road.
C. requires a good deal of critical scholarship, Mr. D quarrels with this as unsuitable to a rustic congregation. Mrs. Mrs. Y., an aristocratic lady, who cannot bear to be mixed up in any common charge together with low people, abominates such words as 'sin, and wills that the parson should confine his 'observations' to the 'shocking demoralization of the lower orders.
'That is the last link of the chain, if we omit the husband of the Delville, whoever he may be. Let me consider. The Bents and the Delvilles inhabit the same hotel; and the Delville is detested by the Waddy do you know the Waddy? who is almost as big a dowd. The Waddy also abominates the male Bent, for which, if her other sins do not weigh too heavily, she will eventually go to Heaven.
The origin of this, the principal part of their ceremonial, is that very practice which Job abominates when he solemnly clears himself of all offences before God and says to Him: 'Lord, all these punishments and even greater burdens would I have deserved had I done that which the blind Gentiles do when the sun rises resplendent or the moon shines clear and they exult in their hearts and extend their hands toward the sun and throw kisses to it, an act of very grave iniquity which is equivalent to denying the true God."
One of them said to me: "Earl Russell has no especial love for your Union, but he abominates negro slavery, and is very reluctant to acknowledge a new slave-owning government. Prince Albert and the Queen are friendly to you, but you must emancipate the slaves." My return passage from Liverpool was on board the Asia, and Captain Anderson commanded her for that voyage.
It is convinced of the importance of success and prosperity; it abominates what is disreputable; contemplation seems to it idleness, solitude selfishness, and poverty a sort of dishonourable punishment.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking