Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !

Updated: June 27, 2025


What shall be said to this heart-piercing, reason-bewildering fact? I can only answer, that either there is no Creator, or this living society of men is in a true sense discarded from His presence.

The effect of such acting was indeed that of lightning it appalled; the timid hid their eyes, and fashionable society shrank from such heart-piercing revelations of human passion.

"'For the first fortnight, she never quitted the spot, and for another week she visited it every morning and evening, uttering a few kindly and heart-piercing bleats each time, till at length every remnant of her offspring vanished, mixing with the soil, or wafted away by the winds of heaven." "There, Minnie, I think you have heard enough for to-night," said Mr.

A voice that struggled with a sob made thick reply 'No I he is dead! The accent of that last monosyllable was heart-piercing. It seemed to Harvey as though the word were new-minted, so full it sounded of dreadful meaning. 'Dead? Mrs. Abbott moved, and he could see her face better. She must have wept for hours. 'He has been taking morphia he couldn't sleep well and then his neuralgia.

YESTERDAY, from the time I received your kind, though heart-piercing letter, I kept my room,-for I was equally unable and unwilling to see Lord Orville; but this morning, finding I seemed destined to pass a few days longer here, I endeavoured to calm my spirits, and to appear as usual; though I determined to avoid him to the utmost of my power.

Whereupon the runner Pickles, standing with rigid, stony face beside his chum, took the bugle from his hands and there sounded forth that most beautiful and most poignant of all musical sounds known to British soldiers the world over, "The Last Post," ending with that last, high, long-drawn, heart-piercing note of farewell.

Luke, for instance, always calls him Simon up to the same point as Mark, except once where he uses the form 'Simon Peter, and thereafter always Peter, except in Christ's solemn warning, 'Simon, Simon, Satan hath desired to have you, and in the report of the tidings that met the disciples on their return from Emmaus, 'The Lord hath appeared to Simon. So Matthew calls him Simon in the story of the first miraculous draught of fishes, and in the catalogue of Apostles, and afterwards uniformly Peter, except in Christ's answer to the apostle's great confession, where He names him 'Simon Bar Jona, in order, as would appear, to bring into more solemn relief the significance of the immediately following words, 'Thou art Peter. In John's Gospel, again, we find the two forms 'Simon Peter' and the simple 'Peter' used throughout with almost equal frequency, while 'Simon' is only employed at the very beginning, and in the heart-piercing triple question at the end, 'Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me?

Word Of The Day

bagnio's

Others Looking