| Arthur Conolly - Asia - 1834 - 452 pages
...me the entrte of their bath, which was heated twice a week. There are about one hundred families of Jews in Meshed. They are chiefly engaged in petty...return abuse, much less a blow given by a Mohummudan ; children throw stones and dirt at them in the streets, unchecked by their parents, who think it a... | |
| Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Board of Publication - 1840 - 512 pages
...within the college squares in which good men are buried; on their * Jer. xxiv. 9. t Lieut Conolly. clothes, however new, they must wear a patch at the...dare not return abuse, much less a blow, given by a Mahometan, so that even children of the faithful race throw stones and dirt at them in the streets,... | |
| Church of Scotland. General Assembly. Committee on the conversion of the Jews - Jews - 1840 - 514 pages
...college squares in which good men are buried ; on their * Jet. xxiv. 9. t Lieut Conolly. clothes, hqwever new, they must wear a patch at the breast; their caps...dare not return abuse, much less a blow, given by a Mahometan, so that even children of the faithful race throw stones and dirt at. them in the streets,... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1845 - 540 pages
...The Jews may not pass the pale of the sanctuary, neither may they put foot within the college squares in which good men are buried ; on their clothes, however...dare not return abuse, much less a blow, given by a Mahometan, so that even children of the faithful race throw stones and dirt at them in the streets,... | |
| Raphael Patai - Jews - 1997 - 358 pages
...and exchanging old garments; but they are not without a share of the indignities that are entailed to their race. They may not pass the pale of the sanctuary,...return abuse, much less a blow given by a Mohummudan; children throw stones and dirt at them in the street unchecked by their parents, who think it a very... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1845 - 534 pages
...The Jews may not pass the pale of the sanctuary, neither may they put foot within the college squares in which good men are buried ; on their clothes, however...dare not return abuse, much less a blow, given by a Mahometan, so that even children of the faithful race throw stones and dirt at them in the streets,... | |
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