| Mary Briody Mahowald - 1994 - 552 páginas
...hatred were they pursued to the utmost, under the prospect of an easy separation? In the third place, we must consider, that nothing is more dangerous than...wife, not secure of her establishment, will still be driving some separate end or project; and the husband's selfishness, being accompanied with more power,... | |
| Peggy Zeglin Brand, Carolyn Korsmeyer - 2010 - 506 páginas
...wife that is so thorough in a good marriage that there is no longer any dissension to prompt divorce. "Nothing is more dangerous than to unite two persons...man and wife, without rendering the union entire and total."25 Here is another suggestive passage. The essay "Of Love and Marriage" concocts a variation... | |
| David Hume - 2006 - 629 páginas
...hatred, were they pursued to the utmost, under the prospect of an easy separation ? In the third place, We must consider, that nothing is more dangerous than...total. The least possibility of a separate interest mast be the source of endless quarrels and mispicions. The wife, not secure of her establishment, will... | |
| David Hume - 2007 - 630 páginas
...hatred, were they pursued to the utmost, under the prospect of an easy separation ? In the third place, We must consider, that nothing is more dangerous than...wife, not secure of her establishment. will still be driving some separate end or project : and the husband's selfishuess, being accompanied with more power,... | |
| 1780 - 552 páginas
...fatisfyin'g it : — that nothing is more dangerous, than to unite two perlons fo dole in all their interelts and concerns, as man and wife, without rendering the union entire and total ¡ — that the leaft- poffibility of a feparate intereft, mutt be the fource of endleis quarrels and... | |
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