| Thomas Fuller - 1840 - 348 pages
...have such a crick in his neck that he cannot look backward ! yet no better is he who cannot see behind him the actions which long since were performed. History maketh a young man f to be old, without either wrinkles or gray hairs ; privileging him with the experience of age, without... | |
| Douglas Jerrold - 1845 - 604 pages
...have such a crick in his neck that he cannot look backward ! Yet no better is he who cannot see behind him the actions which long since were performed. History maketh a young man to be old, without either wrinkles or grey hairs ; privileging him with the experience of age, without either the infirmities... | |
| Douglas Jerrold - 1845 - 606 pages
...have suoh a crick in lua neck that he cannot look backward. Yet no better is he who cannot 8ec behind him the actions which long since were performed. History maketh a young man to bo old, without either wrinkles or grey hairs ; privileging him with the experience of age, without... | |
| John Hill Wheeler - 1851 - 610 pages
...CO. + ^«^ ------ ~^_, ^PERSV^ HISTORY maketh a young man to be ola, without either wrinkles or gray hairs ; privileging him with the experience of age, without either the infirmities or inconvenience thereof. FULLER'S Holy War. Ill fun s it with a State, whose history is written by others... | |
| Samuel G. Drake - 1851 - 780 pages
...DISCOVERY. History maketh a young man to be old, without either wrinkles or gray hairs ; privllledging him with the experience of age, without either the infirmities or inconveniences thereof. FLLLEH'J Hilly Wer. They waste us ; ay, like April snow In the warm noon we shrink away ; And fast... | |
| Henry Southgate - 1862 - 774 pages
...Knowledge of. History maketh a young man to be old, without either wrinkles or grey hairs, privi^'•¿^ at hold« The sweetest vintage of the vine of life Taste bitter at Fuller. KISTOBY-Diflerent Phases at To be entirely just in our estimate of other xj-is U Dot only difficult... | |
| Egerton Ryerson - 1866 - 80 pages
...Geography." Illustrated by Seventy-Two Engravings. " History ni'iMh a young man to be old, without either wrinkles or grey hairs, privileging him with the experience of age without Ш infirmities."— FULLER. Opinions of the Press on the School History of Canada. We have had on our... | |
| James Hain Friswell - 1869 - 498 pages
...author, Thomas Fuller, in his " History of the Church," " maketh a young man to be old without either wrinkles or grey hairs, privileging him with the experience of age without either the infirmities or the inconveniences thereof." This estimate of history is hardly sufficient : it takes only one view.... | |
| Charles Henry Stanley Davis - 1870 - 1040 pages
...have such a crick in his neck that he cannot look backward 1 Yet no better is he who cannot see behind him the actions which long since were performed. History maketh a young man to be old, without either wrinkles or grey hairs; privilcdging him with the experience of age, without either the infirmities... | |
| Samuel Woolcock Christophers - 1873 - 310 pages
...history as a " velvet study and recreation work," which " maketh a young man to be old without either wrinkles or grey hairs ; privileging him with the...either the infirmities or inconveniences thereof." The reader who has become familiar with the pages of John Bunyan would scarcely read the title of Fuller's... | |
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