The Works of Dr. Benjamin Franklin: Consisting of Essays, Humorous, Moral, and Literary, with His LifeS. Andrus and Son, 1847 - 304 Seiten |
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... marriages , and deaths , earlier than the year 1555 ; the parish register not * As a proof that Franklin was anciently the common name of an order or rank in England , see Jude Fortesqae , de laudibus legum Angliæ , written about the ...
... marriages , and deaths , earlier than the year 1555 ; the parish register not * As a proof that Franklin was anciently the common name of an order or rank in England , see Jude Fortesqae , de laudibus legum Angliæ , written about the ...
Seite 121
... marriages , or any other thing for their advantage , in preference to all other persons whatsoever , even of equal merit . " The constitution being signed and made pub- lic , with the names of the gentlemen proposing themselves as ...
... marriages , or any other thing for their advantage , in preference to all other persons whatsoever , even of equal merit . " The constitution being signed and made pub- lic , with the names of the gentlemen proposing themselves as ...
Seite 169
... MARRIAGES . TO JOHN ALLEYN , ESQ . You desire , you say , my impartial thoughts on the sub- ject of an early marriage , by way of answer to the num- berless objections that have been made by numerous persons to your own . You may ...
... MARRIAGES . TO JOHN ALLEYN , ESQ . You desire , you say , my impartial thoughts on the sub- ject of an early marriage , by way of answer to the num- berless objections that have been made by numerous persons to your own . You may ...
Seite 170
... marriages are generally in the morning of life ; our children are therefore educated and settled in the world by noon ; and thus , our business being done , we have an after- noon and evening of cheerful leisure to ourselves , such as ...
... marriages are generally in the morning of life ; our children are therefore educated and settled in the world by noon ; and thus , our business being done , we have an after- noon and evening of cheerful leisure to ourselves , such as ...
Seite 274
... marriages , by the certainty of subsistence in culti- vating the earth , the increase of inhabitants by natural gen- eration is very rapid in America , and becomes still more so by the accession of strangers : hence there is a continual ...
... marriages , by the certainty of subsistence in culti- vating the earth , the increase of inhabitants by natural gen- eration is very rapid in America , and becomes still more so by the accession of strangers : hence there is a continual ...
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acquaintance adelphia advantage America appeared Assembly Boston Britain brother called colonies consequence continued debt electricity employed endeavor engaged England Europe experiments father favor fluid Franklin French friends gave give Governor hand hundred inconvenience Indians industry inhabitants Keimer kind labor land laws learned letters liberty Little Britain lived Madeira wine manner marriages master means ment merchants mind nation necessary never obliged observed obtained occasion opinion paper Pennsylvania perhaps persons Philadelphia philosophers pleasure poor Richard says pounds pounds sterling power of points present printer printing printing-house procure produced proposed Quaker received respect shillings Sir William Wyndham slavery soon stamp act Stephen Potts subsistence sylvania tence thing Thomas Penn thought tion took town trade whole wish young