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Updated: June 5, 2025
That only which finds a place in works worthy to endure, and of standard value, is sure of perpetual preservation. Hutchinson's History of Massachusetts is a work of this description. Whatever is committed to its custody will stand the test of time.
'The little volumes entitled Respublicæ, which are very well done, were a bookseller's work. 'There is much talk of the misery which we cause to the brute creation; but they are recompensed by existence . If they were not useful to man, and therefore protected by him, they would not be nearly so numerous. This argument is to be found in the able and benignant Hutchinson's Moral Philosophy.
The sentiment prevailing in Hutchinson's mind seemed to verge on indignation. "Thee th' master of Temple Barholm! " he ejaculated. "Why, it stood for seventy thousand pound' a year!" "It did and it does," said Mr. Palford, curtly. He had less and less taste for the situation. There was neither dignity nor proper sentiment in it.
This task the Government, now for the first time effectively controlled by the king, was quite willing to undertake, all the more so on account of the recent burning of the Gaspée and the dishonorable publication of Hutchinson's letters.
He took both her elbows and looked at her closely, feeling a somewhat awed conviction. " I believe you have," he said. And here the sound of Mr. Hutchinson's loud and stertorous breathing ceased, and he waked up, and came to the door to find out what Ann was doing. "What are you two talking about?" he asked.
Hutchinson's a darned sight smarter fellow than I am, and he knows it and he's Lancashire, you bet." He stopped a minute and flushed. "As to Little Ann," he said "me make that sort of a break with HER! Well, I should be a fool." Palford was a cold-blooded and unimaginative person, but a long legal experience had built up within him a certain shrewdness of perception.
An uneducated, blustering, obstinate man of one idea, having resentfully borne discouragement and wounded egotism for years, and suddenly confronting immense promise of success, is not unlikely to be prey easily harpooned. Joseph Hutchinson's rebound from despair to high and well- founded hope made of him exactly what such a man is always made by such rebound.
"Grandfather, was it positively this very chair?" demanded Clara, laying her hand upon its carved elbow. "Why not, my dear Clara?" said Grandfather. "Well, Mrs. Hutchinson's lectures soon caused a great disturbance; for the ministers of Boston did not think it safe and proper that a woman should publicly instruct the people in religious doctrines.
See Hutchinson's History, vol. i. p. 455. Ibid, p. 40. Code of 1650, p. 90. Mather's Magnalia Christi Americana, vol. ii., p. 13.
"But you've got one like your own. And it's a good head when you try to think steady. Yours is a man's head, and mine's only a woman's." "It's Little Ann Hutchinson's, by gee!" said Tembarom, with feeling. "Listen here, Mr. Tem Temple Barholm," she went on, as nearly disturbed as he had ever seen her outwardly. "It's a wonderful thing that's happened to you. It's like a novel.
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