I venture to prophesy that within six months you will come to consult me whether or not — for there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question — you can make up your mind to sacrifice your own wishes and marry Walter Lester. Essays Written in the Intervals of Business - Page 146by Sir Arthur Helps - 1843 - 148 pagesFull view - About this book
| M A Scargill - 1827 - 396 pages
...bigots than he seems to be. And he is by no means morose, but rather cheerful; and certainly there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the quesVOL. II. 9. tion. And it is very certain that he bears no resentments." Thus reasoned and meditated... | |
| 1832 - 496 pages
...venture to prophesy that within six mouths you will come to consult me whether or not, — for there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question, — you can make up your mind to sacrifice your own wishes, and marry Walter Lester. Ah !... | |
| 1851 - 752 pages
...peculiarly a contract which a jury are competent to deal with. And seeing unquestionably, that there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question as matter of contract, and the difficulties arising in a great degree from the custom of merchants... | |
| Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton - 1832 - 232 pages
...venture to prophesy that within six months you will come to consult me whether or not, — for there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question, — you can make up your mind to sacrifice your own wishes, and marry .Walter Lester. Ah... | |
| Sir Arthur Helps - 1841 - 144 pages
...and like madmen, we take our jailors for a guard of honour. I do not mean to suggest that truth and right are always to be found in middle courses ; or...in the wrong," and " that there is a great deal to be said on both " sides of the question," — phrases which may belong to indolence as well as to charity... | |
| Sir Arthur Helps - 1851 - 150 pages
...and, like madmen, we take our jailors for a guard of honor. I do not mean to suggest that truth and right are always to be found in middle courses ; or that there is any thing particularly philosophic in concluding that "both parties are in the wrong," and " that there... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Chancery, Frederick James Hall, Philip Twells - 1851 - 566 pages
...peculiarly a contract which a jury are competent to deal with. And seeing, unquestionably, that there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question as a matter of contract, and the difficulties arising in a great degree from the custom of... | |
| Anna Cabot Lowell - 1856 - 330 pages
...coarse, in thought undisciplined, in all unchastened. Ruskin. I do not mean to suggest that truth and right are always to be found in middle courses ; or that there is any thing particularly philosophic in concluding that " both parties are in the wrong," and that there... | |
| 1860 - 656 pages
...the "gentle craft;" and we turn away from them, with Sir Roger de Coverley's conviction that there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question. But not Mr. Wyndham himself, who found a great deal now? we have left the prejudices of both... | |
| Andrew Archibald Paton - 1861 - 536 pages
...rendered secure by traversing lines from the Gulf of Salona to the outer Adriatic. In short, there is a great deal to be said on both sides of the question. Slaavic literature is not so much cultivated in Zara as elsewhere in Dalmatia. One literary... | |
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