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" 84. They that marry for money, cannot have the true satisfaction of marriage ; the requisite means being wanting. 85. Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs, than of their children. 86. Those must be of the best sort, for... "
The Life of William Penn: The Settler of Pennsylvania, the Founder of ...
by Mason Locke Weems - 1852 - 282 pages
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The Select Works of William Penn....

William Penn - Society of Friends - 1782 - 506 pages
...permanent. 84. They that marry for money, cannot have the true fatisfadtion of marriage j the requifue means being wanting. 85. Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horfes and dogs, than of their children. Jkin, gives a fweet breath, repairs honours, makes young y...
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Marriage Customs and Modes of Courtship of the Various Nations of the ...

Theophilus Moore - Marriage customs and rites - 1820 - 374 pages
...different families. One is inward and deep, the other superficial; one is permanent, the other transient. They that marry for money cannot have the true satisfaction of marriage, the more essential requisite being wanting. Men are frequently more careful in breeding their horses and...
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The Select Works of William Penn, Volume 3

William Penn - Society of Friends - 1825 - 632 pages
...affection : it being the basest of passions to like, when we have not, what we slight when we possess. 84. They that marry for money, cannot have the true...satisfaction of marriage; the requisite means being wanting. 83. They have divers originals, and so are of different families : that inward and deep; this superficial:...
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The Early Days of Thomas Whittemore: An Autobiography: Extending from A.D ...

Thomas Whittemore - Clergy - 1859 - 388 pages
...augment affection. It is the difference between love and passion, that this is fixed, that is volatile. They that marry for money cannot have the true satisfaction of marriage, the requisite means being wanting. 0, how sordid is man grown 1 Man, the noblest creature in the world I — as a god on earth, and the...
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The Early Days of Thomas Whittemore: An Autobiography: Extending from A.D ...

Thomas Whittemore - Clergy - 1859 - 362 pages
...augment affection. It is the difference between love and passion, that this is fixed, that is volatile. They that marry for money cannot have the true satisfaction of marriage, the requisite means being wanting. 0, how sordid is man grown ! Man, the noblest creature in the world ! — as a god on earth, and the...
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Reflections and maxims relating to the conduct of human life

William Penn - 1875 - 146 pages
...of different families ; that inward and deep, this superficial; this transient, and that permanent. They that marry for money, cannot have the true satisfaction of marriage ; the requisite means being wanting. Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs, than of their children. Those...
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Pennsylvania School Journal, Volume 30

Education - 1881 - 618 pages
...they gained over freemen, in the prejudices they overcame, and in the passions which they subdued. MEN are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children. Those must be the best sort for shape, strength, courage, and good conditions ; but as for these, their...
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The Child and Childhood in Folk Thought: (The Child in Primative Culture)

Alexander Francis Chamberlain - Literary Criticism - 1896 - 484 pages
...Maxima debetur pueris reverentia. [The greatest respect is due to boys (youth).] — Juvenal. 102. Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children. — William Penn. 103. Mony a ane kisses the bairn for love of the nurice. — Scotch. v 104. More...
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The Child and Childhood in Folk Thought: (The Child in Primative Culture)

Alexander Francis Chamberlain - Child development - 1896 - 490 pages
...Maxima debetur pueris reverentia. [The greatest respect is due to boys (youth).] — Juvenal. 102. Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children. — William Penn. 103. Mony a ane kisses the bairn for love of the nurice.—Scotch. 104. More children,...
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Dictionary of Quotations from Ancient and Modern: English and Foreign ...

Quotations - 1899 - 704 pages
...mi maker, and dispraiser). Ruskin. Men are everything, measures are comparatively nothing. Canning. Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children. lr*. Penn, Men are happy in proportion as their range of vision, their sphere of action, and their...
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