| Lady Rachel Russell - 1793 - 624 pages
...them, the lofs of my poor boy. He has been ill, and God has let me lee the folly of my imaginations, which made me apt to conclude I had nothing left, the deprivation of which could be matter of much anguifh, or its pofleflion, of any confiderable refremment. I have felt the falfenefs of the firft... | |
| Lady Rachel Russell - 1819 - 410 pages
...use to= her mind, by proving to her that she had yet something to lose. With her usual reason, ať (1) Anne Carr, daughter of Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset,,...possession " of any considerable refreshment. I have felt u the falseness of the first notion, for J know " not how to part with tolerable ease from the '* little... | |
| 1821 - 340 pages
...He ha.been ill, and God has let me see the folly ot my imaginations, which made me apt to conclnde I had nothing left, the deprivation of which could...part, with tolerable ease, from the little creature. 1 desire to do so of the second, and that my thankfulness for the real blessing of these children may... | |
| 1847 - 206 pages
...them — the loss of my poor boy. He has been ill, and God has let me see the folly of my imagination, which made me apt to conclude I had nothing left,...have felt the falseness of the first notion — for I knew not how to part, with tolerable ease, from the little creature. I desire to do so of the second,... | |
| Mrs. Newton Crosland - 1854 - 430 pages
...resignation. In allusion to it she writes : — " God has let me see the folly of my imaginations, which made me apt to conclude I had nothing left the...or its possession of any considerable refreshment." About the end of June Lady Russell removed — for tho sake- of change of air for her boy, and to be... | |
| 1855 - 1016 pages
...been ill, and God has let me see the folly of my imaginations, which made me apt to conclude I hud nothing left, the deprivation of which could be matter...notion, for I know not how to part with tolerable cage from the little creature. I desire to do so of the second, and that my thankfulness for the real... | |
| Elizabeth Charles - 1880 - 388 pages
..." He has been ill," she wrote of the child, " and God has let me see the folly of my imaginations, which made me apt to conclude I had nothing left,...tolerable ease from the little creature. I desire that my thankfulness for the real blessing of these children may refresh my labouring, weary mind,... | |
| Lady Catherine Pollock Manners Stepney - 1898 - 268 pages
...— the loss of my poor boy. He has been ill, and God has let me see the folly of my imaginations, which made me apt to conclude I had nothing left the...the real blessing of these children may refresh my weary, labouring mind with some joy and satisfaction, at least in my endeavours to do that part towards... | |
| Lady Catherine Pollock Manners Stepney - 1898 - 264 pages
...— the loss of my poor boy. He has been ill, and God has let me see the folly of my imaginations, which made me apt to conclude I had nothing left the...tolerable ease from the little creature. I desire to do so Lady Russell 113 of the second, and that my thankfulness for the real blessing of these children may... | |
| |