For never can true reconcilement grow Where wounds of deadly hate have peirc'd so deep: Which would but lead me to a worse relapse And heavier fall: so should I purchase deare Short intermission bought with double smart.
Shut up in his cell as in a prison, he struggled without intermission against the evil thoughts and evil propensities of his heart.
From early morn until dark on the Sabbath, there was hardly an intermission in the preaching, exposition, or reading of the Word of God.
The sordid fight in the House of Commons the other night seemed to me only a momentary intermission of hypocrisy.
I have a plan and a desire really to achieve this winter after an intermission of five years, ten or twelve weeks in Italy; and it now seems probable I shall do so.
The evening had set in with steady rain, which continuing with little intermission during the night, wet us considerably.
The school hours were from nine until three, with an intermission at twelve o'clock.
Davis, who was baptized during the intermission today.
It was the custom to open these gates after the intermission at the close of the second act, so as to give the people an unobstructed passageway for leaving the house at the close of the play.
Well, during the intermission between the first and second acts we had a good view of the audience, being up high, and I remarked to my friend that there were a great many women and children present in event of any trouble.
From this moment the enemy attacked us without intermission day and night; but as we were always upon our guard, and kept in a body together, we gave them no opportunity of taking us by surprise.
The labors of Miss Dix for the insane were continued without intermission until the occurrence of those startling events which at once turned into other and new channels nearly all the industries and philanthropies of our nation.
Have had rain almost without intermission for two months and one week.
The latter, pursued without any intermission by Richard and his little army, took to flight, after losing a great number of their men, and concealed themselves in holes and caves.
The evil period began in 1783 and lasted almost without intermission for four years.
In the middle of his lecture, the speaker would hesitate, stop, and say: "Owing to a slight indisposition we will now have an intermission of fifteen minutes.
Act 1st, scene 1st, discloses a log-cabin, with fifteen minutes' intermission between each log.
Hence, as I have heard it remarked, certain diseases appear actually to gain strength by the intermission of a generation.
How it is possible for a character to gain strength by the intermission of a generation, will be considered in the chapter on pangenesis.
The persecution in this protestant part of France continued with very little intermissionfrom the revocation of the edict of Nantes, by Louis XIV.
This marked | |the beginning of a contest which continued with little intermission until | |the downfall of French power in America.
For never can true reconcilement grow Where wounds of deadly hate have peirc'd so deep: Which would but lead me to a worse relapse 100 And heavier fall: so should I purchase deare Short intermission bought with double smart.
The garuas overhang the city almost without intermission from April to October.
I was thirteen hours and a half in the saddle without intermission yesterday, and got back to camp after midnight, very tired, but none the worse; fortunately, I had a cloudy day and a tolerably cool breeze for my work.
The enemy turned us out very early, and the firing continued without intermission till dark, and such a day; liquid fire was no name for the fervent heat.
We were shewn ground which had borne abundant crops of wheat for twenty successive years; but a much shorter period suffices to exhaust the ground, if it were made to produce tobacco without the intermission of some other crop.
Necessary intermission of their power at night, as well as on cloudy days, will preclude their industrial introduction until present fuels have advanced very greatly in cost.
He soon retired from the paper, leaving Beriah Brown in sole control, which he retained with an occasional intermission until about 1878, when it was merged with the Intelligencer.