| Henry Hunter - 1828 - 242 pages
...is equally inimical to religion, to good morals, to public spirit, and human comfort. He who says, or lives as if he thought, that it is " good for man to be alone," gives the lie to his Maker ; sins agains the constitution of his nature, dishonours his parents ; defrauds another of one of the... | |
| 1830 - 824 pages
...renders at once a pleasure and a duty ; for courtship is as much a duty as marriage : and he that says or lives as if he thought that it is good for man to be alone, gives the lie to his Maker, violates the first law of his nature, dishonours his parents, and deprives another of une of the j... | |
| Henry Hunter - 1834 - 618 pages
...which is equally inimical to religion, to good morals, to public spirit, and human comfort He who says, r a name in Israel, he will not perform the duty of my husband's brother. Then the elders of gins against the constitution of his nature, dishonours his parents ; defrauds another of one of the... | |
| Ammi Rogers - 1836 - 276 pages
...unfriendly to public spirit, and unfriendly to human comfort. He who says or lives as if he thought it were good for man to be alone gives the lie to his maker, he sins against the constitution of nature, dishonors his parents, defrauds another of one of the justest... | |
| John Morton (P.M.P.) - 1856 - 96 pages
...enjoyment of the great and ennobling privileges, honours, and blessings attendant upon it. He who says, or lives, as if he thought that it is good for man to be alone, gives the lie to his Maker, sins against the constitution of his nature, dishonours his parents, defrauds another of one of the... | |
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