Salad for the Social |
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Page xii
... effect ; and we hope everybody will bring to it - what everybody wishes for , and as soon as possessed , loses - a good appetite . Salads are not generally suited for weak digestions , or sickly folk ; yet we have it certified on ...
... effect ; and we hope everybody will bring to it - what everybody wishes for , and as soon as possessed , loses - a good appetite . Salads are not generally suited for weak digestions , or sickly folk ; yet we have it certified on ...
Page 55
... effect . Goldsmith , who was originally poor and unknown , after the publication of the Trav- eller became of much greater consequence ; and one day , on learning that a scandalous attack had appeared against him in a paper published by ...
... effect . Goldsmith , who was originally poor and unknown , after the publication of the Trav- eller became of much greater consequence ; and one day , on learning that a scandalous attack had appeared against him in a paper published by ...
Page 78
... effects of avarice on the human heart . The inordinate desire of wealth has been the occasion of more mischief and misery in the world than anything else . Some of the direst evils with which the world has ever been afflicted , have ...
... effects of avarice on the human heart . The inordinate desire of wealth has been the occasion of more mischief and misery in the world than anything else . Some of the direst evils with which the world has ever been afflicted , have ...
Page 79
... effects of avarice , whether displayed in individual conduct , or among communities of men , are the same . We must content ourselves with referring briefly to a few instances of the former , as illustrative of the force of this ...
... effects of avarice , whether displayed in individual conduct , or among communities of men , are the same . We must content ourselves with referring briefly to a few instances of the former , as illustrative of the force of this ...
Page 82
... effect . It is an anecdote related of Sir William Smyth , of Bedfordshire . He was immensely rich , but most parsimo- nious and miserly in his habits . At seventy years of age , he was entirely deprived of his sight , unable to gloat ...
... effect . It is an anecdote related of Sir William Smyth , of Bedfordshire . He was immensely rich , but most parsimo- nious and miserly in his habits . At seventy years of age , he was entirely deprived of his sight , unable to gloat ...
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