Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: July 9, 2025
I wonder that topish hat had not undone the whole Puritan church in Holland. In settling all these and many other disputes, in translating, commentating, and versifying, did Henry Ainsworth pass his days; until, worn out by hard labor, and succumbing to long continued weakness, he died in 1623. This romantic story of his death is told by Neal.
"We'll get right down to business, Mr. Wingate. You will sell?" "Sure thing. I'll sell anything I have except my wife and the bull pup." "Good! I reckoned that was about the size of it," chuckled Ainsworth, passing a hand across his face to hide his expression of satisfaction. "What's your figger?" "Half a million." "Feet?" "No. Dollars." "Are you crazy?" "Yes." "Ha, ha! I see.
What magnificent events may ensue, it would be useless now to think of determining. Mr. Ainsworth has not attempted to account for this phenomenon, which, however, is quite susceptible of explanation. But the 25,000 feet of altitude is little or nothing, in comparison with the extent of the prospect.
Stephen Aylmore, M.P. for the Brookminster Division, as the ci-devant Stephen Ainsworth, ex-convict, once upon a time founder and secretary of the Hearth and Home Mutual Benefit Society, the headquarters of which had been at Cloudhampton, in Daleshire; the fall of which had involved thousands of honest working folk in terrible distress if not in absolute ruin.
To his surprise Shargar was gone, and for a moment he doubted whether he had not been dreaming all that had passed between them the night before. His plaid was folded up and laid upon a chair, as if it had been there all night, and his Ainsworth was on the table. But beside it was the money Shargar had drawn from his pockets. About nine o'clock Dr.
Johnson, the new church in Holland; and when it was divided by dissension, he became the pastor of the "Ainsworthian Brownists" and so remained for twelve years. He was a most accomplished scholar, and was called the "rabbi of his age." Governor Bradford, in his "Dialogue," written in 1648, says of Ainsworth, "He had not his better for the Hebrew tongue in the University nor scarce in Europe."
There were also, "for the use and edification of the saints," printed above each psalm the airs of appropriate tunes. Ainsworth, in his preface, says, "Tunes for the Psalms I find none set of God: so that ech people is to use the most grave decent and comfortable manner that they know how, according to the general rule. Easy the tunes certainly are, to the utmost degree of simplicity.
If he has taken up some collection of dogmas merely to please his wife who seems a very sweet, quiet body that is of course against him; but if he believes it, I don't see why we should object." "Believes it!" sniffed Ainsworth, in great contempt. "That is worse than any thing I've said. I don't think Fenton is quite such an idiot as that comes to. The idea of his believing in Puritanism!
Ainsworth, travelling at the expense of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge and the Royal Geographical Society. The statements of this gentleman and of his companion, Mr. Rassam, to Mar Shimon, so resembled those made by the Papists, that the Patriarch suspected them of being Jesuits in disguise, and they actually left the mountains without removing that suspicion.
Hook your canthook on the other side and stop the log from rolling before it mashes you flat," advised Hippy. "I got ter talk now, and then I'll quit and git out fer good. I took money fer ter do ye an inj'ry. I took it from that houn' Ainsworth. I was to tell him 'bout things that was goin' on here and "
Word Of The Day
Others Looking