| Robert Bage - 1810 - 376 páginas
...want of something to do. Nor do I yet see how I shall be able to accommodate myself to the existing manners of the rich. I cannot eat for hours, nor love candles so well as the sun. I cannot, I fear, submit to be fetteied and cramped throughout the whole circle... | |
| 1820 - 376 páginas
...want of somethiug to do. Nor do I yet see how I shall be able to accommodate myself to the existing manners of the rich. I cannot eat for hours, nor love candles so well as the sun. I cannot, I fear, submit to be fettered and cramped throughout the whole circle... | |
| Joseph Bunn Heidler - 1928 - 196 páginas
...found modes of thinking and acting in England too much hampered by convention. I cannot, I fear, submit to be fettered and cramped throughout the whole circle of thought and action. You submit to authority with regard to the first, and to fashion with regard to the last. I cannot get... | |
| George Tobias Flom - 1928 - 532 páginas
...found modes of thinking and acting in England too much hampered by convention. I cannot, I fear, submit to be fettered and cramped throughout the whole circle of thought and action. You submit to authority with regard to the first, and to fashion with regard to the last. I cannot get... | |
| John Richetti, John Bender, Deirdre David, Michael Seidel - 1994 - 1094 páginas
...his understanding of how personal and political mingle in human experience: I cannot, I fear, submit to be fettered and cramped throughout the whole circle of thought and action. You [the English] submit to authority with regard to the first, and to fashion with regard to the last.... | |
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