| Sharon Turner - 1830 - 552 páginas
...superior and sovereign FRANCIS- °fa^» t^ie sentence has passed, and its operation has CAN never ceased, that in the sweat of his face he should eat his bread; that instead of corn, its spontaneous produce as to his subsistence should be thorns and thistles;... | |
| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1851 - 768 páginas
...God told Adam that the ground was cursed for his sake, but not that his labor was cursed. He told him that in the sweat of his face he should eat his bread till he returned to the ground. But so far from labor partaking of the curse, it was given him as the... | |
| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1853 - 800 páginas
...God told Adam that the ground was cursed for his sake; but not that bin labor was cursed. He told him that in the sweat of his face he should eat his bread till he returned to the ground. But so far from labor partaking of the curse, it was given him as the... | |
| Michigan State Agricultural Society - 1854 - 1088 páginas
...cursed, and was to produce thorns and thistles, and he to gain his bread from the sweat of his brow; yet it is evident that in the economy of his creation, as well as in the appointment of his lot, he was destined for active employment. An English poet has said, with some poetic license— <{ The... | |
| Maine State Agricultural Society - 1859 - 284 páginas
...livelong day, enduring to the last drop of perspiration, the curse entniled upon good old father Adam, that '' in the sweat of his face, he should eat his bread, till he returned unto the ground out of which he was taken." With these views in the premises, he neither... | |
| Richard Green Parker, James Madison Watson - 1859 - 422 páginas
...God told Adam that the ground was cursed for his sake; but not that his labor was cursed. He told him that in the sweat of his face he should eat his bread till he returned to the ground. But so far from labor partaking of the curse, it was given him as the... | |
| Richard Green Parker, James Madison Watson - 1861 - 446 páginas
...told Adam that the ground was cursed for his sake ; but not that his labor was cursed. He told him that in the sweat of his face he should eat his bread till he returned to the ground. But so far from labor partaking of the curse, it was given him as the... | |
| Daniel Stevens Dickinson - 1867 - 772 páginas
...his state of calm and happy innocence changed to one of solicitude, toil and endurance — the ground cursed for his sake with thorns also and thistles,...evident, that in the economy of his creation, as well MS in the appointment of his lot after the fall, he was destined for active employment. Practical agriculture... | |
| Charles Dexter Cleveland - 1869 - 810 páginas
...told Adam that the ground tras cursed for his sake; but not that his labor was cursed. Hr told him that in the sweat of his face he should eat his bread till h* returned to the ground. J5ut so far from labor partaking of the curse, it was given him as... | |
| Richard Green Parker - 1870 - 444 páginas
...told Adam that the ground was cursed for his sake ; but not that his labor was cursed. He told him that in the sweat of his face he should eat his bread till he returned to the ground. But so far from labor partaking of the curse, it was given him as the... | |
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