| Periodicals - 1841 - 276 pages
...keep clean, delighting in good clothes, well worn, and being wont to say, that the outward neatness of our bodies might be a monitor of purity to our souls." LONDON : JOHN WILLIAM PARKER, WEST STRAND. FOBLISIIBD IN WKHKLY NUMBKHJ, PRICE ONE FENNY, AND ix MONTHLY... | |
| John Campbell Baron Campbell - Chief justices - 1849 - 620 pages
...and keep clean, delighting in good clothes, well worn ; being wont to say that the outward neatness of our bodies might be a monitor of purity to our souls."* " The neatness of outward apparel," he himself used to say, " reminds us that all ought to be clean... | |
| Arthur Thomas Malkin - Biography - 1853 - 542 pages
...keep clean, delighting in good clothes, well worn, and being wont to say ' that the outward neatness of our bodies might be a monitor of purity to our souls.' " The most celebrated of Sir Edward Coke's works is the treatise commonly known by the name of " Coke... | |
| John Campbell Baron Campbell - Great Britain - 1874 - 480 pages
...clean, delighting Imim^ners. in g ood clothes, well worn; being wont to say that the outward neatness of our bodies might be a monitor of purity to our souls."* " The neatness of outward apparel," he himself used to say, " reminds us that all ought to be clean... | |
| John Cordy Jeaffreson - Law - 1876 - 354 pages
...and keep clean, delighting in good clothes, well worn ; being wont to say that the outward neatness of our bodies might be a monitor of purity to our souls." The courts of James I. and his son drew some of their most splendid fops from the multitude of young... | |
| Leslie Stephen - Great Britain - 1887 - 512 pages
...keep clean, delighting in good cloaths, well worne, and being wont to say, that the outward neatness of our bodies might be a monitor of purity to our souls ' ( Worthies, Norfolk, 251. For a list of portraits, see GRANGER'S Biog. Hist. i. 383, and WOOLRYCH,... | |
| Oscar Tully Shuck - Biography - 1901 - 1236 pages
...the law he delighted in good clothes, well worn, agreeing with Sir Edward that the outward neatness of our bodies might be a monitor of purity to our souls. He possessed excellent literary taste and was a critical judge of the fine arts. He was not the victim... | |
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