| William Walsham How (bp. of Wakefield.) - 1866 - 168 pages
..." statement of the horrors and infamies dis" covered in one brief visitation from house to " house. So far from making the worst of our " facts for the...to emotion, " we have been compelled to tone down every" thing, and wholly to omit what most needs to " be known, or the ears and eyes of our readers... | |
| Robert William Dale, James Guinness Rogers - Congregational churches - 1883 - 1102 pages
...driest statement of the horrors and infamies discovered in one brief visitation from house to house. So far from making the worst of our facts, for the...wholly to omit what most needs to be known, or the eyes and ears of our readers would have been insufferably outraged." For the literal correctness of... | |
| Campaign literature - 1888 - 262 pages
...dryest statement of tbe horrors and infamies discovered in one brief visitation from house to house. Bo far from making the worst of our facts for the purpose...readers would have been insufferably outraged. The- condition in which they live. "We do not say tbe condition of their boroes, for how can those places... | |
| Campaign literature - 1884 - 254 pages
...driest statement of the horrors and infamies discovered in one brief visitation from house to house. So far from making the worst of our facts for the...our readers would have been insufferably outraged. Tke condition in which they live. " We do not say the condition of then* homes, for how can those places... | |
| Josiah Strong - 1885 - 264 pages
...summer. t * The Bitter Cry of Outcast London," pp. 3, 4, 10. writer : " So far from making the most of our facts for the purpose of appealing to emotion,...our readers would have been insufferably outraged. Indeed, no respectable printer would print, and certainly no decent family would admit, even the driest... | |
| Josiah Strong - Home missions - 1885 - 262 pages
...summer. t " The Bitter Cry of Outcast London," pp. 3, 4, 10. writer : " So far from making the most of our facts for the purpose of appealing to emotion,...our readers would have been insufferably outraged. Indeed, no respectable printer would print, and certainly no decent family would admit, even the driest... | |
| Republican National Committee (U.S.) - Campaign literature - 1888 - 408 pages
...dryest statement of the horrors and infamies discovered in one brief visitation from houee to house. So far from making the worst of our facts for the...down everything, and wholly to omit what most needs tobe known, or the ears and eyes of our readers would have been insufferably outraged. The condition... | |
| Josiah Strong - Home missions - 1891 - 306 pages
...their staring eyes with the merciful film of death."1 Says the writer: " So far from making the most of our facts for the purpose of appealing to emotion,...and eyes of our readers would have been insufferably oiitraged. Indeed, no respectable printer would print, and certainly no decent family would admit,... | |
| Daniel Bivona, Roger B. Henkle - Literary Criticism - 2006 - 224 pages
...together in discourse through the very spectacle of their dissolution. Although Mearns assures us that "so far from making the worst of our facts for the...emotion, we have been compelled to tone down everything ... or the ears and eyes of our readers would have been insufferably outraged," he subjects the reader... | |
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