69 Verbs to Use for the Word ill

"Let reason work, what time doth easily frame In meanest wits, to bear the greatest ills.

Mrs. Ward shows us the people of England in the act of curing their own ills, of making good, by gigantic and self-sacrificing exertion in the present, the folly and selfishness and greed and soft slackness of the past.

It was better for them to endure the ills they had, than be nipped in the upper passage.

Raise me to love intense; O Father, source of love divine, My powers to love and hymn incline! While God my Father I revere, Nor all hell powers, nor death I fear; I am my Father's care; His succours present are. All comes from my loved Father's will, And that sweet name intends no ill.

And she is not a bit ashamed of letting lodgings, or being poor herself, as sometimes I think some of our family" "I thought we were going to speak no ill of them," says the Colonel, smiling.

Janet's a silly body, but she means no ill, and her mother is demented at the loss of her.

A young woman who has no mother, if she escape the ills attendant on the privation while her character is forming, is very apt to acquire qualities that are of great use in her future life.

He saw himself remedying those ills.

The colored people will eventually leave those places where they are maltreated, but "whether it is better to suffer the ills we now bear than flee to those we know not of," is the question.

As soon as he entered the camp he declared that he had been sent by the Grand Monarque to heal the ills of the Hurons.

The conscientiousness of Hamlet stands out the clearer that, throughout, his dislike to his uncle, predisposing him to believe any ill of him, is more than evident.

Having no acquaintance with man, they fear no ill, and flock curiously about the stranger, almost allowing themselves to be taken in the hand.

There you sit snoring, forgetting her ills; Who is to give her her Bolus and Pills?

Courage, however, may also be explained as a readiness to meet ills that threaten at the moment, in order to avoid greater ills that lie in the future; whereas cowardice does the contrary.

Philip in a worse prison me hath pent These three days pastbut not without God's will. Stay we as God decrees: God doth no ill. LX.

Under the old system the pretenders were treated to a liberal application of the lash, which generally drove away all fancied ills.

Its memory shall suffice to chase The grinding pangs of care; And softening turn the ills of life To glory's guerdon rare.

No; it is very wrong to use any animal ill, because we do not like to be beaten ourselves.

Thy chest is marble, and thy tender breasts Are apples whose sweet scent makes well the ill.

Those earthy spirits black and envious are; I'll call up other Gods, of form more fair: Who visions dress in pleasing colour still, Set all the good to shew, and hide the ill.

Simple maiden, void of art, Babbling out the very heart, Yet abandoned to thy will, Yet imagining no ill, Yet too innocent to blush; Like the linnet in the bush, To the mother-linnet's note Moduling her slender throat, Chirping forth thy pretty joys; Wanton in the change of toys, Like the linnet green, in May, Flitting to each bloomy spray; Wearied then, and glad of rest, Like the linnet in the nest.

We have all known the anticipated ills of lifethe danger that looked so big, the duty that looked so arduous, the entanglement that we could not see our way throughprove to have been nothing more than spectres on the far horizon; and when at length we reached them, all their difficulty had vanished into air, leaving us to think what fools we had been for having so needlessly conjured up phantoms to disturb our quiet.

We mourn no more the vanished youth, We are nearing the heaven of eternal truth; We lament no more the earthly ills, For their power will cease on the heavenly hills.

Give him breath, All the danger of cold death Now is vanisht; with this Plaster, And this unction, do I master All the festred ill that may Give him grief another day.

Courage, however, may also be explained as a readiness to meet ills that threaten at the moment, in order to avoid greater ills that lie in the future; whereas cowardice does the contrary.

69 Verbs to Use for the Word  ill