But, verily, I will tell them what I have often said, that this negligence is insufferable.
It has also passed a law fixing the compensation of government employees for injuries sustained in the employ of the Government through the negligence of the superior.
That is through their sinful negligence and self-deceit: and he is a liar that speaks a falsehood, which he may and ought to know to be a falsehood, though he do not know it.
Many thousands do by their own viciousness and negligence disable themselves, so that they cannot perform what God hath made their duty; yet it remains their duty still: some disability may excuse them in part, but not in whole.
Thus pastors are discouraged, the churches defiled, religion disgraced, and infidels hardened through the impious disorder and negligence of families!
Betray them not by your ungodly negligence to hell.
O foolish, miserable souls, that by your ungodliness and negligence in this life, will prepare each other for such a life of endless woe and horror!
Suffer not vain thoughts or drowsy negligence to hinder your attention.
If the governors of families did faithfully perform their duties, it would be a great supply as to any defects in the pastor's part, and a singular means to propagate and preserve religion in times of public negligence or persecution.
Is it from the forgetfulness or negligence of the workmen, or want of time, that they have not put the finishing stroke to so beautiful a piece of architecture?
He accused himself of negligence in letting it be a moment away from him.
But to my misfortune, when I rose from table, instead of washing my hands well, I only wiped them; a piece of negligence of which I had never before been guilty.
All affectation, particularly in the French gaiety and freedom, is ungraceful in a courtier, and in a monarchy every gentleman ought to be fashioned according to the court model; for which reason, an easy and natural negligence does well.
It should be remembered that thenegligence of superiors is the cue for juniors to be negligent.
There was a slight dash of negligence in it; while his manner was fraught with cheerful composure.
He who busies himself in mean occupations produces, in the very pains he takes about things of little or no use, an evidence against himself of his negligence and indisposition to what is really good.
There were, notwithstanding, evident signs that this arose only from want of taste or ignorance, not from poverty or the negligence which attends it.
To you, who to-day are young, negligenceno longer is possible.
However sacred, they are forfeited through negligence or abuse of their franchises, in which cases the law judges that the body politic has broken the condition, upon which it was incorporated.
There are many instances of the negligenceand abuse, that work the forfeiture of charters, delineated in law books.
The British, unsustained by proper support, through the negligence of the English government, and the irrational conduct of the Portuguese, were compelled to fall back.
Ministers were reproached by him for not cultivating continental alliances, and for their negligence in all their foreign negociations.
Addresses were carried without opposition; though some members blamed ministers for negligence and delay, and for not employing the troops sooner.
True or false, here is something more than an insinuation; and nothing can vindicate the historian, who has overlooked it, from the charge of negligence or of partiality.
But it was not negligence; real negligence means at bottom bad work, and bad work will not stand the trial of time.
Yet all conscientious men agreed with the Waldensians that the world was in a sad plight owing to the negligence and the misdeeds of the clergy.
But what is that in all the world which auarice and negligence will not corrupt and impaire?
And thus in reforming the state of things, he wan him great praise in time of peace, the which either by negligence or sufferance of the former lieutenants, was euer feared, and accounted woorse than open warre.
We're all grateful, of course, to you for having done what our combined negligence appears to have made necessary.
John, though he made less commotion about it, took his wife's negligence even more seriously for he set about attempting to repair it.
Sir Symonds complains of the negligence of the clerk of the commons, who indeed seems to have exerted his negligence, whenever it was found most agreeable to the court party.
He confesses both negligence and idleness in the corrections of his works.
The letter of the law was observed, but negligence and crime were allowed to go unpunished.
If the injury is caused by the negligence of a stranger, the servant has his ordinary remedy against the wrong-doer or any one who is responsible as a principal for the conduct of the wrong-doer.
But under the act he cannot, as against the workmen who come within it and in the cases to which it applies, set up the defence that the negligence complained of was the negligence of a servant in a common employment.
The cases dealt with by the act are five in number; in the first and fourth the words are wide enough to include negligence of the employer himself, for which, as has been seen, he is liable at common law.
The only case (independently of modern legislation: see below) in which he can recover damages from the master is where the injury has been caused by negligence of the master himself.
Injuries to a servant may arise from accident, from the nature of the service, or from negligence; and this negligence may be of the master, of another servant of the master, or of a stranger.
So long as industry was conducted on a small scale, and the master worked with his men, or was himself the manager, its hardship was perhaps little felt; his personal negligence could in many cases be established.
The tendency, however, has been to increase the liability of the employer for the negligence of a fellow-servant, and in the case of employment on railways many states have passed laws either modifying or abrogating the doctrine.
The employer was not liable to a servant for the negligence of a fellow-servant, and therefore, in most cases of injury, was not liable at all.
The precise effect of these terms is not clear; but merenegligence is not within them.
He cannot, however, be pronounced exempt from the usualnegligence of fresco painters in their contours; still he was much esteemed, while he flourished, for the spirit and delicacy of his manner.
The chief part were more eager to imitate his expression and his facility than the elegance of his design and colouring, even so far as to fall into the bordering errors of negligence and of caricature.
They are charged with my safe custody, and if I eluded their vigilance, they would pay the penalty of their negligence with their lives.