Thus, while attempting to exonerate the state, even the orthodox politician admits that the body politic is deeply afflicted by the virus of pauperism, and therefore himself posits the very question he would fain ignore.
Private judgment, therefore, is not only a right, but a duty, from which no man can exonerate himself or be exonerated by others.
Of course, what you say doesn't exonerate Mr. Levine.
That her refusing to take a stand could not exonerate them.
No matter if the destroying of the Indians were right, that wouldn't exonerate the whites for having been cruel and crooked in doing it.
But a young and unassisted investigator, imperfectly equipped, has an excuse which will exonerate him at least from a malicious intention.
Yet his words, his manner, did in some strange and unexplained way greatly exonerate Evelyn in my estimation, at least for a time, of complicity.
I wish to spare your feelings as much as possible, and I will say all I can with truth to exonerate you in your father's eyes.
He was innocent of real disloyalty, and her perfidy might well exonerate his ignorance; but even Camelia's perfidy could not excuse that kiss.
She secretly hoped this, although, in her magnanimity, she considered it her duty to exonerate her lover from all ties.
Fowler had incurred her father's displeasure, and she felt also that she ought to sacrifice everything to exonerate her generous and fondly devoted lover from the disgraceful suspicion attached by her father to his conduct.
It is, therefore, impossible to exonerate the ruler from great blame in hastily undertaking operations which a little consideration ought to have shown to be unwise.
The tribunal complained that this deprived it of its jurisdiction over its own officials, to which the reply was that it was not the pope's intention to exonerate them from it.
Salazar adds that the value of the evidence was still further diminished by the command of the demon to accuse the innocent and exonerate the guilty, and by the fact that bribes were given in order to have enemies prosecuted.
Do you fancy I would stoop to exonerate myself from such a charge?
The club was evidently willing to exonerate him and to offer such reparation as lay in its power, but it was not prepared formally to rebuke its committee.
I knew it was because she could not bear to blame her sister, and yet she could not, in justice, exonerate her; but with father I discussed the matter freely.
Can any one who has ever known her exonerate her from the charge?
He must, he could exonerate her, there wasn't the slightest doubt of it.
He would exonerate the person, but never the property.
He therefore thought it his duty, in vindicating himself, to exonerate those members from censure.
Certainly, all other possibilities had been exhausted, and her story of the bill, even if accepted, would never quiteexonerate her from secret suspicion while that elusive jewel remained unfound.
You exaggerate that impulse and speak of ‘sin’ merely to exonerateyour own behaviour and your doctrine.
The jury were inclined to exonerate the signalman, weren't they?
I had no fear of his doing this, but I had great fear of what Ella might do if he let this implication stand and made no effort to exonerate himself by denying his presence in the cutter, and consequent return to the Cumberland home.
I don't think it would exonerate him, either with them, or with legal functionaries of a higher grade.
She would naturally be led by me, and I wish therefore to exonerate her completely.
I exonerate Sir John, and I think Legrand there, but cuss me if I'm sure about you.