But if we were to make a progress through the outskirts of this town, and look into the habitations of the poor, we should there behold such pictures of human misery as must move the compassion of every heart that deserves the name of human. What, indeed,... The History of Henry Fielding - Página 274por Wilbur Lucius Cross - 1918Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Anna Maria Hall - 838 páginas
...through the outskirts of the town, and look into the habitations of the poor, we should there bchold such pictures of human misery as must move the compassion of every heart that deserves the name of human ; whole families in want of every necessary of life, oppressed with hunger, cold, nakedness, and filth,... | |
| Frederick Lawrence - 1855 - 430 páginas
...following pathetic terms : " If," said he, " we were to make a progress through the outskirts of the town, and look into the habitations of the poor, we should...compassion of every heart that deserves the name of human ; whole families in want of every necessary of life, oppressed with hunger, cold, nakedness, and filth,... | |
| Frederick Lawrence - 1855 - 398 páginas
...pictures of human misery as must move the compassion of every heart that deserves the name of human ; whole families in want of every necessary of life,...with diseases, the certain consequence of all these." To afford relief to this wide-spread wretchedness, and to provide an asylum for the houseless poor... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1891 - 928 páginas
...through the outskirts of the metropolis, and look for the habitations of the poor, we should theie behold such pictures of human misery as must move...could see whole families in want of every necessary of liie, oppressed with hunger, cold, nakedness, and filth, and with diseases the certain consequences... | |
| Henry Fielding, William Ernest Henley - 1902 - 318 páginas
...abhorrence, and so seldom with pity. But if we were to make a progress through the outskirts of this town, and look into the habitations of the poor, we should...nakedness, and filth; and with diseases, the certain consequences of all these — what, I say, must be his composition who could look into such a scene... | |
| Candace Ward - 2007 - 306 páginas
...Provision of the Poor, published one hundred years before Bleak House. How, asks Fielding, can anyone "behold such Pictures of human Misery as must move the Compassion of every Heart" and "see whole Families in Want of every Necessary of Life, oppressed with Hunger, Cold, Nakedness,... | |
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