| SOLON ROBINSON - 1854 - 436 pages
...one of them a l'*,tle girl out of the street, and set the ball to rolling. Good bye, Mrs. May—good bye, Stella. We may never meet again, but we never...offered, they are quite mistaken. Although he may not be aole to do with his own purse, he has a way of procuring others to do a part that is so much needed... | |
| Solon Robinson - New York (N.Y.) - 1854 - 428 pages
...neither for time nor facts, so that the story is good. What next? Look in the next chapter CHAPTEK XIV. NEW SCENES AND NEW CHARACTERS. " There is some...offered, they are quite mistaken. Although he may not be aDle to do with his own purse, he has a way of procuring others to do a part that is so much needed... | |
| Carl Hermann Gildemeister - Authors, German - 1863 - 356 pages
...gefфrieben, ijl entweber allen Sinn ober eine 1афсгИфе 5lrt ju urteilen. ®e|)t ') There is some soul of goodness in things evil. Would man observingly distil it out. Shakespeare. bie Sonne im (Sommer für ben Sauer aïïem fo früíje auf, weil ber faule Sürger unb... | |
| 1884 - 292 pages
...bad as they are ; for to use a saying from our great national dramatist Shakespeare : " There is a soul of goodness in things evil, Would man observingly distil it out." Now it is1 strikingly true with regard to some points which Shakespeare himself has brought before... | |
| Hygiene - 1884 - 306 pages
...bad as they are ; for to use a saying from our great national dramatist Shakespeare : " There is a soul of goodness in things evil, Would man observingly distil it out." Now it is strikingly true with regard to some points which Shakespeare himself has brought before us.... | |
| Patrick Francis Quigley - Education, Compulsory - 1894 - 642 pages
...shown anything by this pamphlet and if so, what is it ? The Bard of Avon tells us that— " There is some soul of goodness in things evil, Would man observingly distil it out." Let us see what we can get from this pamphlet. PROF. BOUQUILLON'S MEANIXG. What, then, is the real... | |
| George Thomson Knight - Hypocrisy - 1906 - 96 pages
...Consciences. — A foolish God and a wise Satan 69-80 APPENDIX Diagnosis and Therapeutics .... 81-85 There is some soul of goodness in things evil, Would man observingly distil it out. (Shakespeare.) A lie is useless to the gods, but useful to men, — on occasion. (Plato.) .... For... | |
| Alfred Buchanan - Australia - 1907 - 336 pages
...forced ingenuity of distorted facts, the constant disparagement of the kindred nation over-sea. There is some soul of goodness in things evil Would man observingly distil it out. And the truth of this in the case of the Bulletin we would be the last to impugn. Although it must... | |
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