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" A sort of men of whom we have heard much, and are sufficiently ashamed ; who spend their time in taverns, tippling-houses and debauches : giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health... "
Of Drinking in Remembrance of the Dead: Being the Substance of a Discourse ... - Page 90
by Peter Browne - 1715 - 40 pages
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Memoirs of Mr. William Veitch, and George Brysson

William Veitch, Thomas M'Crie - Bothwell Bridge, Battle of, 1679 - 1825 - 564 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed, who spend their time in taverns, tipling-houses and debauches, giving no other evidence of their affection to us, but in drinking our health, and inveighing against all others who are not of their own dissolute temper ; and who, in truth, have more discredited...
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Memoirs of mr. William Veitch and George Brysson, written by themselves ...

William Veitch - Scotland - 1825 - 562 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed, who spend their time in taverns, tipling- houses and debauches, giving no other evidence of their affection to us, but in drinking our health, and inveighing against all others who are not of their own dissolute temper ; and who, in truth, have more discredited...
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Curiosities of Literature, Volume 6

Isaac Disraeli - English literature - 1834 - 406 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed ; who spend their time in taverns, tippling-houses and debauches : giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health, and inveighing against all others who are not of their own dissolute temper ; and who, in truth, have more discredited...
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The works of Isaac Disraeli (ed. by B. Disraeli).

Isaac Disraeli - 1859 - 566 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed ; who spend their time in taverns, tippling-houses and debauches ; giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health, and inveighing against all others who are not of their own dissolute temper ; and who, in truth, have more discredited...
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Curiosities of Literature, Volume 3

Isaac Disraeli - Authors - 1863 - 558 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed; who spend their time in taverns, tippling-houses and debauches ; giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health, and inveighing against all others who are not of their own dissolute temper ; and who, in truth, have more discredited...
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Nineteen Centuries of Drink in England: A History

Richard Valpy French - Alcoholism - 1884 - 442 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed, who spend their time in taverns, tippling-houses, and debauches, giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health, and inveighing against all others who are not of their own dissolute temper ; and who in truth have more discredited...
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All the Year Round, Volume 35; Volume 55

1885 - 692 pages
...of whom we are sufficiently ashamed, who spend their time in taverns and tippling-honses, giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health," Such Acts could not do much good while men like Rochester and Sedley set the tone of society ; and...
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The Early History of the Tories: From the Accession of Charles the Second to ...

Clement Boulton Roylance Kent - Great Britain - 1908 - 512 pages
...injury that was likely to be done to his cause by ' those riotous cavaliers ' who were ' giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health.' ' We are all commanded to be plaguey godly ' is the significant comment of one of those at whom the...
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Standard Encyclopedia of the Alcohol Problem, Volume 3

Ernest Hurst Cherrington - Alcohol - 1926 - 692 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed, who spend their time in taverns, tlppllng-houses, and debauches, giving no other evidence of their affection to us but in drinking our health, and inveighing against all others who are not of their own dissolute temper ; and who In truth have more discredited...
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English Literature & Printing from the 15th to the 18th Century, Part 1

Maggs Bros - Early printed books - 1928 - 1024 pages
...are sufficiently ashamed, who spend their time in Taverns, Tipling-Hpuses, and Debauches, giving no other evidence of their Affection to Us, but in drinking Our Health, and Inveigling, against all others, who are not of their own dissolute temper- and who, in truth, have...
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