1709 Metaphors for whats

BUT WHAT IS MOST NOBLE AND GENEROUS.PRES. EDWARDS.

When we know every Person that is spoken of is represented by one who has no ill Will, and every thing that is mentioned described by one that is apt to set it in the best Light, the Entertainment must be delicate; because the Cook has nothing brought to his Hand but what is the most excellent in its Kind.

If he was less single-minded in his aims than his brother, he could hardly help being so; and, having to reconcile so many conflicting interests, he may have swerved from what would have been his own ideal.

Undoing the silver clasps, he opened the volume, and took from among its black-letter pages a rose, or what was once a rose, though now the green leaves and crimson petals had assumed one brownish hue, and the ancient flower seemed ready to crumble to dust in the doctor's hands.

It is not from lack of proper materials,for heaps of butter and mountains of rolls are to be seen on every side; it is not from lack of taste,for the people which has invented the grisini, and delights in the white truffle, shows too keen a sense of what is dainty not to exclude the charge of want of taste.

And ye, toiling men of business, what is really your highest joy,your piles of gold, your marble palaces; or the pleasures of your homes, the approbation of your consciences, your hopes of future bliss?

Unwillingly the doctor walked through into what was certainly a very pleasant, indeed a luxurious room.

" "What would be the good of that?" said Paul awkwardly.

We might then possibly see Learning become a Pleasure, and Children delighting themselves in that which now they abhor for coming upon such hard Terms to them: What would be a still greater Happiness arising from the Care of such Instructors, would be, that we should have no more Pedants, nor any bred to Learning who had not Genius for it.

The entrance gateway, close to the churchyard, leads to what are now the stables of Hatfield House, a fine red-brick structure, once the banqueting-hall of the Bishop's Palace.

This what of things is not their sensuous qualities; the latter belong rather to the mere phenomenon.

In 1769 Daniel Boone, one of the grandest figures in frontier history, began his exploits in what is now Kentucky, and before 1777

Thus Methodism passed through what might have been its first great crisis.

Not capable of begetting great work itself, it consists in a capacity of reception, that is to say, of recognizing as such what is right, fit, beautiful, or the reverse; in other words, of discriminating the good from the bad, of discovering and appreciating the one and condemning the other.

He looked at what must be his last deed as a soldier.

In like mannerif we leave out of view some wholly harmless jestswe meet hardly any trace of invectives levelled at communities (invectives which, owing to the lively municipal spirit of the Italians, would have been specially dangerous), except the significant scoff at the unfortunate Capuans and Atellans (18) and, what is remarkable, various sarcasms on the arrogance and the bad Latin of the Praenestines.(19)

He and old Anazeh glared at each other, barely moving their heads in what might have been an unspoken threat and retort or a nod of natural recognition.

"What's Yorkshire like?" "Not a patch on this place.

"Here's what's probably the last photo ever taken of James.

As a descendant of Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, he was Lord of the Low Countries (what is now Holland and Belgium).

What has been finishedthe Banqueting Houseis one of the triumphs of Inigo Jones, but like all human works, is sadly dilapidated; although this is attributable to the bad material, rather than to the interval since its erection.

but I have often wondered what could be the size of the ark to contain so many living creatures.

But either the Britons of those days did not, after all, seem to afford sufficient interest for poem or history, or for some other reason this joint literary undertaking, which seems once to have been contemplated, was never carried out, and we have missed what would beyond doubt have been a highly interesting volume of Sketches in Britain by the brothers Cicero.

A splendid imposition!which cheats the planter of his gains, cheats the British nation of its money, and robs the world of what else might have been a glorious example of immediate and entire emancipation.

There is no other reason that will bear discussion to be given for what, without it, is a great moral and political wrong.

1709 Metaphors for  whats