The Life of William Wilberforce, Volumen 1J. Murray, 1838 |
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Página viii
... able of the character of the individual in question , and this has more than once prevented me from writing the lives of persons whom I have highly respected and loved , but in whose instances there were reasons why a fair statement of ...
... able of the character of the individual in question , and this has more than once prevented me from writing the lives of persons whom I have highly respected and loved , but in whose instances there were reasons why a fair statement of ...
Página 27
... able to agree about Stormont . - 21st . Dined Pitt's . Fox's friends gave up the point of Lord Stormont ; and Coke did not make his motion , under- standing arrangement likely . Staid at Pitt's till late . -Sunday 23rd . All day at ...
... able to agree about Stormont . - 21st . Dined Pitt's . Fox's friends gave up the point of Lord Stormont ; and Coke did not make his motion , under- standing arrangement likely . Staid at Pitt's till late . -Sunday 23rd . All day at ...
Página 32
... able to resist temptations to vice , when one is out of the way of being exposed to them ; but in towns there is no leisure for thought or serious reflection , and we are apt to do that with regard to moral conduct , which we are in ...
... able to resist temptations to vice , when one is out of the way of being exposed to them ; but in towns there is no leisure for thought or serious reflection , and we are apt to do that with regard to moral conduct , which we are in ...
Página 33
... able to join in the conversation .. when one does at last see the human face divine , that it staggers the resolution to which I had come of taking a tower ; and my inclination is seconded by my reason , which suggests to me that I can ...
... able to join in the conversation .. when one does at last see the human face divine , that it staggers the resolution to which I had come of taking a tower ; and my inclination is seconded by my reason , which suggests to me that I can ...
Página 34
Robert Isaac Wilberforce, Samuel Wilberforce. able to speak in about three weeks , when I expect parliament will rise , and you must not then be surprised to receive a letter from me dated from any place in or out of his Majesty's ...
Robert Isaac Wilberforce, Samuel Wilberforce. able to speak in about three weeks , when I expect parliament will rise , and you must not then be surprised to receive a letter from me dated from any place in or out of his Majesty's ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
The Life of William Wilberforce, Volumen 1 Robert Isaac Wilberforce,Samuel Wilberforce Vista completa - 1839 |
The Life of William Wilberforce, Volumen 1 Robert Isaac Wilberforce,Samuel Wilberforce Vista completa - 1838 |
The Life of William Wilberforce, Volumen 1 Robert Isaac Wilberforce,Samuel Wilberforce Vista completa - 1838 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abolition acquainted affected afterwards amongst April Babington Bath Bishop bless breakfast called cause character Christian church Clarkson committee conduct connexions conversation Cowslip Green dear Wilberforce debate Diary diligence Dined dinner Dundas election Eliot endeavour evidence favour feel friends Gisborne give God's Granville Sharpe Grenville heard heart Henry Thornton Holwood hope House of Commons Hull Isaac Milner Journal King's labour Lady late letter live London Lord Camden Lord Muncaster Lord Thurlow meeting ment Milner mind morning never night object parliament parliamentary party Pitt Pitt's prayer Ramsay religion religious resolved returned Rothley Temple says serious session Sierra Leone Sierra Leone Company sister slave business Slave Trade society soon speech spirit staid Sunday talk Teston things thought Thurlow tion town West Indian whilst Wilberfoss WILLIAM WILBERFORCE Wimbledon writes wrote Wyvill Yorkshire Yoxall Lodge
Pasajes populares
Página 363 - And he called him, and said unto him, How is it that I hear this of thee? give an account of thy stewardship; for thou mayest be no longer steward.
Página 105 - Finally, thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength, and thy neighbour as thyself ; for this is the whole of the law and the prophets, and none other commandment is greater than these.
Página 38 - That the influence of the Crown had increased, was increasing, and ought to be diminished:
Página 54 - what seemed a mere shrimp, mount upon the table, but, as I listened, he grew and grew, until the shrimp became a whale.
Página 89 - It was not so much the fear of punishment by which I was affected, as a sense of my great sinfulness in having so long neglected the unspeakable mercies of my God and Saviour ; and such was the effect which this thought produced, that for months I was in a state of the deepest depression, from strong convictions of my guilt. Indeed nothing which I have ever read in the accounts of others exceeded what I then felt.
Página 151 - I well remember, after a conversation in the open air at the root of an old tree at Pitt's, at Holwood, just above the steep descent into the vale of Keston, I resolved to give notice on a fit occasion in the House of Commons of my intention to bring the subject forward.
Página 219 - Europe, were under great and serious obligations to the hon. gentleman for having brought forward the subject in a manner the most masterly, impressive, and eloquent. The principles," he said, " were so well laid down, and supported with so much force and order, that it equalled any thing he had heard in modern times, and was not perhaps to be surpassed in the remains of Grecian eloquence.
Página 149 - God Almighty has set before me two great objects, the suppression of the slave trade and the reformation of manners.
Página 11 - there was always a great Yorkshire pie in his rooms, and all were welcome to partake of it. My rooms and his," says Mr. Gisborne, " were back to back, and often -when I was raking out my fire at ten o'clock, I heard his melodious voice calling aloud to me to come and sit with him before I went to bed. It was a dangerous thing to do, for his amusing conversation was sure to keep me up so late that I was behind-hand the next morning.
Página 11 - Their object seemed to be, to make and keep me idle. If ever I appeared studious, they would say to me, ' Why in the world should a man of your fortune trouble himself with fagging ? ' I was a good classic, and acquitted myself well in the college examinations ; but mathematics, which my mind greatly needed, I almost entirely neglected, and was told that I was too clever to require them. Whilst my companions were reading hard and attending lectures, card parties and idle amusements consumed my time....