| Books and bookselling - 1799 - 500 pages
...fuppofe would difplace it from its focket ; the lover, 6r rather the ravimer, is regardlefs of the (tones or broken pieces of trees, which may lie in his route,...fafety to his own party, where a fcene enfues too (hocking to relate. This outrage is not refented by the relations of the female, who only retaliate... | |
| Thomas Robert Malthus - Population - 1807 - 606 pages
...woods by •one arm, regardlefs of the ftones and broken pieces of trees that may lie in his route, and anxious only to convey his prize in fafety to his own party. The woman thus treated beD 2 comes 35 Of the Checks to Population in the Book I comes his wife, and... | |
| G. Paterson - Aboriginal Australians - 1811 - 648 pages
...supposed would displace it from its socket. The lover, or rather ravisher, is regardless of the stones or broken pieces of trees which may lie in his route, being anxious only to convey his prize, in safety, to his own party, where a scene ensues too shocking to relate. This outrage is not resented... | |
| R. P. Forster - Voyages and travels - 1818 - 592 pages
...supposed would displace it from its socket. The lover, or rather ravisher, is regardless of the stones or broken pieces of trees which may lie in his route, being anxious only to convey his prize, in safety, to his own party, where a scene ensues too shocking to relate. This outrage is not resented... | |
| Christianity - 1829 - 510 pages
...supposed would displace it from its socket. The lover, or rather the ravisher, is regardless of the stones or broken pieces of trees which may lie in his route, being anxious only to convey his prize in safety to his own party, where a scene ensues too shocking to relate. This outrage is not resented... | |
| Robert Mudie - Australia - 1829 - 464 pages
...would displace it from its socket. The lover, or rather the .ravisher, is regardless of the stones or broken pieces of trees which may lie in his route, being anxious only to convey his prize in safety, to his own party, where a scene ensues too shocking to relate. This outrage is not resented... | |
| Robert Brown - Ethnology - 1873 - 712 pages
...socket. The lover, or rather the ravisher, is regardless of the stones or broken pieces of trees that may lie in his route, being anxious only to convey his prize in safety to his own party, when a scene ensues ton shocking to relate. This outrage is not resented by... | |
| Sir John Lubbock - Anthropology - 1875 - 646 pages
...would displace it from its socket. The lover, ' or rather the ravisher, is regardless of the stones or ' broken pieces of trees which may lie in his route, ' being anxious only to convey his prize in safety to his ' own party, when a scene ensues too shocking to relate. ' This outrage is not resented... | |
| J. G. Mandley - Women - 1880 - 180 pages
...supposed would displace it from its socket. The lover, or rather the ravisher, is regardless of the stones or broken pieces of trees which may lie in his route, being anxious only to convey his prize in safety to his own party, when a scene ensues too shocking to relate. This outrage is not resented by... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - American periodicals - 1883 - 924 pages
...socket. The lover, or rather the ravisher, is regardless of the stones or broken pieces of trees that may lie in his route, being anxious only to convey his prize in safety to his own party, when a scene ensues too shocking to relate. This outrage is not resented by... | |
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