The Whole Duty of a Woman, Or, An Infallible Guide to the Fair Sex: Containing Rules, Directions, and Observations, for Their Conduct and Behavior Through All Ages and Circumstances of Life, as Virgins, Wives, Or Widows : with ... Rules and Receipts in Every Kind of Cookery ...T. Reed, 1737 - 682 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 70
Side 5
... alfo its Parts fuit- able to each other , and every one of them agreeably fet to the fame good and great Defign of the whole , does thereby prove itself to be the Contrivance of an All - wife God . And hereby the Wisdom of the Christian ...
... alfo its Parts fuit- able to each other , and every one of them agreeably fet to the fame good and great Defign of the whole , does thereby prove itself to be the Contrivance of an All - wife God . And hereby the Wisdom of the Christian ...
Side 6
... the Gofpel of Chrift was defigned to this very End , and its Tendency hereunto is its Wifdom . And Thirdly , From hence you alfo perceive in what Refpect Faith in Jefus Jefus Chrift is faid to fave us , viz . 6 The whole DUTY of a WOMAN .
... the Gofpel of Chrift was defigned to this very End , and its Tendency hereunto is its Wifdom . And Thirdly , From hence you alfo perceive in what Refpect Faith in Jefus Jefus Chrift is faid to fave us , viz . 6 The whole DUTY of a WOMAN .
Side 20
... alfo perceive , that the Contemplation of the Death of Chrift , with all its Circumstances , tends to the fame admirable End .: And if thefe , or any other Means , hall work upon them to be generoufly juft , to bear a good Will to all ...
... alfo perceive , that the Contemplation of the Death of Chrift , with all its Circumstances , tends to the fame admirable End .: And if thefe , or any other Means , hall work upon them to be generoufly juft , to bear a good Will to all ...
Side 21
... alfo fteers every Part of the outward Frame . It appears in the Face in calm and meek Looks , where it fo impreffes itself , that it feems thence to have acquired the Name of Shamefac'dness . Certainly , whatever the modern Opinion may ...
... alfo fteers every Part of the outward Frame . It appears in the Face in calm and meek Looks , where it fo impreffes itself , that it feems thence to have acquired the Name of Shamefac'dness . Certainly , whatever the modern Opinion may ...
Side 24
... alfo : She has difmifs'd her Guards , difcarded all the Suggestions of Reason , as well as Grace , and is at the Mercy of any , nay , every Affailant : And unless her Vice fecure her Virtue , and the Loathsomeness of the one pre- vent ...
... alfo : She has difmifs'd her Guards , difcarded all the Suggestions of Reason , as well as Grace , and is at the Mercy of any , nay , every Affailant : And unless her Vice fecure her Virtue , and the Loathsomeness of the one pre- vent ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
alfo Anchovies Bacon bake Bay Leaves beat beaten blanch boil Bread Broth Butter clofe cloſe Cloves cold Courſe cover Crawfish Cream Cullis Difh Diſh drefs fame feafon ferve fhould fhred Fire firft firſt Fiſh fliced Flour fmall fo ferve foak fome Fowl freſh Fricafey ftand ftew ftir ftrain ftrew fuch fure garnish Gravy green Onions half a Pound herſelf Juice lard Lemon Liquor Mace Meat melted minced moiſten moſt muft Muſhrooms muſt Mutton Nutmeg Onions Orange Ounce Oven Oyfters Pafte Parfley Pearled Sugar Pepper and Salt Pickle Pieces Pigeons Pint preferved Pudding Quart Quarter Ragoo roaft Sauce Sauce-pan ſeaſon ſerve ſhe Slices ſmall Soop Spice Spoonfuls ſtew Stew-pan Stove Sugar Sweet Herbs Sweetbreads thefe themſelves theſe thick thicken thofe thoſe Thyme tofs Truffles Turky uſe Veal Verjuice Vinegar Water White Wine Yolks Yolks of Eggs
Populære passager
Side 151 - He that hath pity upon the poor lendeth unto the LORD; and that which he hath given will he pay him again.
Side 16 - When ye come together therefore into one place, this is not to eat the Lord's supper. For in eating every one taketh before other his own supper : and one is hungry, and another is drunken.
Side 162 - The hoary head is a crown of glory, if it be found in the way of righteousness.
Side 103 - ... those that are idle have no need of them, and yet they above all others give themselves up to them. To unbend our thoughts when they are too much stretched by our cares is not more natural than it is necessary, but to turn our whole life into a holiday is not only ridiculous but destroyeth pleasure instead of promoting it.
Side 665 - ... thin and clear. The method of procuring the juice is by boring holes in the body of the tree, and putting in fossets, which are commonly made of the branches of elder, the pith being taken out.
Side 138 - ... an Impertinence. The Art of laying out Money wisely is not attained to without a great deal of thought ; and it is yet more difficult in the case of a Wife, who is accountable to her Husband for her mistakes in it. It is not only his Money, his Credit too is at stake, if what lieth under the Wife's care is managed, either with undecent Thrift, or too loose Profusion.
Side 134 - ... not remembering that we can no more have wisdom than grace whenever we think fit to call for it. There are times and periods fixed for both, and when they are too long neglected the punishment is that they are irrecoverable, and nothing remaineth but an useless grief for the folly of having thrown them out of our power. You are to think what a mean figure a woman maketh when she is so degraded by her own fault, whereas...
Side 72 - THERE is another thing to which fome devote a very confiderable part of their time , and that is the reading Romances , which feems now to be thought the peculiar and only becoming ftudy of young Ladies. I...
Side 136 - The kind and severe parts must have their several turns seasonably applied, but your indulgence is to have the broader mixture, that love, rather than fear, may be the root of their obedience.
Side 134 - You may love your children without living in the nursery, and you may have a competent and discreet care of them without letting it break out upon the company or exposing...