.MTIxMA.OTM2MDc: Difference between revisions

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imported>Becca
(Created page with "alone, too much for her strength. The prospect of visiting her fathers house with any company exhilerated her soul and served her ? to encounter too much. She was not wit...")
 
imported>Jveitch
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alone, too much for her strength. The prospect of visiting her fathers house with any company exhilerated her soul and served her [[?]] to encounter too much.  She was not without a husband's expostulations, occasionally, in these days of her activity - my own motto being always, "health first"  She would frequently jocosely remark to her intimate friends that "she never got any praise from me for a hard days work/"  The truth was it was a dangerous theme to utter commendations for. Her will to do was always above her ability, and I thought I saw a very general necessity to restrain by gentle admonitions, her disposition to accomplish too much. Were I a judge I should say that few females, if any were more competent to manage and few could do as much, in her
alone, too much for her strength. The prospect of visiting her fathers house with any company exhilerated her soul and served her [[unknown]] to encounter too much.  She was not without a husband's expostulations, occasionally, in these days of her activity - my own motto being always, "health first"  She would frequently jocosely remark to her intimate friends that "she never got any praise from me for a hard days work."  The truth was it was a dangerous theme to utter commendations for. Her will to do was always above her ability, and I thought I saw a very general necessity to restrain by gentle admonitions, her disposition to accomplish too much. Were I a judge I should say that few females, if any were more competent to manage and few could do as much, in her

Latest revision as of 18:15, 14 August 2020

alone, too much for her strength. The prospect of visiting her fathers house with any company exhilerated her soul and served her unknown to encounter too much. She was not without a husband's expostulations, occasionally, in these days of her activity - my own motto being always, "health first" She would frequently jocosely remark to her intimate friends that "she never got any praise from me for a hard days work." The truth was it was a dangerous theme to utter commendations for. Her will to do was always above her ability, and I thought I saw a very general necessity to restrain by gentle admonitions, her disposition to accomplish too much. Were I a judge I should say that few females, if any were more competent to manage and few could do as much, in her