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" The new scenes of each day make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow and not of joy, that so good a man is landed safe on the happy shore of a blessed eternity ; doubtless he is at rest, though I find... "
Some Account of the Life of Rachael Wriothesley, Lady Russell - Page 66
by Lady Rachel Russell, Mary Barry - 1819 - 387 pages
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Letters of Lady Rachel Russell: From the Manuscript in the Library at Woburn ...

Lady Rachel Russell - 1809 - 536 pages
...Providences with the uses you do, it would give ease indeed, and no disasterous events should much affect us. The new scenes of each day, make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow, and not of joy, thxtsogoodaman is landed safe on the happy...
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Letters. To which is prefixed, an intr. vindicating the character of lord ...

baroness Rachel Russell - 1809 - 542 pages
...Providences with the uses you do, it would give ease indeed, and no disasterous events should much affect us. The new scenes of each day, make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow, and not of joy, that so good a man is landed safe on the...
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Elegant epistles: a copious selection of instructive, moral, and ...

Elegant epistles - 1812 - 316 pages
...providence with the uses you do, it would give ease indeed, and no disastrous events should much affect us. The new scenes of each day make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow and not of joy, that so good a man is landed safe on the...
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Classical English Letter-writer: Or, Epistolary Selections; Designed to ...

Elizabeth Frank - 1814 - 400 pages
...in the manner you do, it would give me ease indeed, and no disastrous events would much affect me. The new scenes of each day make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow and not of joy, that so good a man is landed safe en the...
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Classical English letter-writer: or, Epistolary selections designed to ...

Frank Elizabeth - 1814 - 400 pages
...in the manner you do, it would give me ease indeed, and no disastrous events would much affect me. The new scenes of each day make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow and not of joy, that so good a man is landed safe on the...
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Some Account of the Life of Rachael Wriothesley Lady Russell,

Lady Rachel Russell - 1819 - 410 pages
...reading all the principal political works of the day, convinced of the (1) Published Letters^ p. 6.5. F mischief and confusion likely to ensue ; and referring...scenes of each day make me often " conclude myself veiy void of temper and rea" son, that I still shed tears of sorrow, and not " of joy, that so good...
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Some Account of the Life of Rachael Wriothesley, Lady Russell

Lady Rachel Russell, Mary Barry - 1819 - 268 pages
...by Lady Russell. We find her reading all the principal political works of the day, convinced of the mischief and confusion likely to ensue ; and referring...thing, with a melancholy constancy of feelings to their rnasxlvi ter-key, reproaching herself with still mourning the absence of one, whose virtues would have...
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Letters

baroness Rachel Russell - 1826 - 296 pages
...providences with the uses you do, it would give ease indeed, and no disastrous events should much atfect us. The new scenes of each day make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow, and not of joy, that so good a man is landed safe on the...
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Chambers's Cyclopædia of English Literature: A History ..., Volumes 3-4

Robert Chambers - 1830 - 844 pages
...with the uses you do, it would give ease indeed, and no disastrous events should much affect гш. The new scenes of each day make me often conclude myself very void of temper and reason, thnt I etill shed tears of sorrow and not of joy, that so good a man is landed safe on the...
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The Life of Thomas Ken, D.D., Deprived Bishop of Bath and Wells: Viewed in ...

William Lisle Bowles - 1831 - 372 pages
...of Ken's which I have never seen, "Seraphic Meditations." I must be indulged in citing the passage. "The new scenes of each day make me often conclude myself very void of temper or reason, that I still shed tears of sorrow, and not of joy, that so good a man [Lord Russell, her...
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