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common people
1. listen so intently to the voices of the common people could so
2. “The common people were abandoned by our civilization, lets see,” she had to translate a hundred and fifty years to local time, “over forty decades before my time
3. Grain, the food of the common people, is dearer in Scotland than in England, whence Scotland receives almost every year very large supplies
4. Oatmeal, indeed, supplies the common people in Scotland with the greatest and the best part of their food, which is, in general, much inferior to that of their neighbours of the same rank in England
5. This great mortality, however will everywhere be found chiefly among the children of the common people, who cannot afford to tend them with the same care as those of better station
6. In foundling hospitals, and among the children brought up by parish charities, the mortality is still greater than among those of the common people
7. The liberal reward of labour, as it encourages the propagation, so it increases the industry of the common people
8. Years of dearth, it is to be observed, are generally among the common people years of sickness and mortality, which cannot fail to diminish the produce of their industry
9. countenance of the common people in the one country and in the other, sufficiently indicates
10. The common people in Scotland, who are fed with oatmeal, are in general neither so strong nor so handsome as the same rank of people in England, who are fed with wheaten bread
11. They neither work so well, nor look so well; and as there is not the same difference between the people of fashion in the two countries, experience would seem to shew, that the food of the common people in Scotland is not so suitable to the human constitution as that of their neighbours of the same rank in England
12. It seems to be so in some of the inland parts of England, particularly in Oxfordshire, where it is usual, even in the fires of the common people, to mix coals and wood together, and where the difference in the expense of those two sorts of fuel cannot, therefore, be very great
13. Fourthly, In many parts of Scotland, during certain seasons of the year, herrings make no inconsiderable part of the food of the common people
14. As the common people could only
15. The employments, too, in which people of some rank or fortune spend the greater part of their lives, are not, like those of the common people, simple and uniform
16. In Scotland, the establishment of such parish schools has taught almost the whole common people to read, and a very great proportion of them to write and account
17. If, in those little schools, the books by which the children are taught to read, were a little more instructive than they commonly are; and if, instead of a little smattering in Latin, which the children of the common people are sometimes taught there, and which can scarce ever be of any use to them, they were instructed in the elementary parts of geometry and mechanics ; the literary education of this rank of people would, perhaps, be as complete as can be
18. There is scarce a common trade, which does not afford some opportunities of applying to it the principles of geometry and mechanics, and which would not, therefore, gradually exercise and improve the common people in those principles, the necessary introduction to the most sublime, as well as to the most useful sciences
19. The former is generally admired and revered by the common people; the latter is commonly more esteemed and adopted by what are called the people of fashion
20. In little religious sects, accordingly, the morals of the common people have been almost always remarkably regular and orderly ; generally much more so than in the established church
21. In the ancient state of Europe, before the establishment of arts and manufactures, the wealth of the clergy gave them the same sort of influence over the common people which that of the great barons gave them over their respective vassals, tenants, and retainers
22. Everything belonging or related to so popular an order, its possessions, its privileges, its doctrines, necessarily appeared sacred in the eyes of the common people; and every violation of them, whether real or pretended, the highest act of sacrilegious wickedness and profaneness
23. In that constitution, the grossest delusions of superstition were supported in such a manner by the private interests of so great a number of people, as put them out of all danger from any assault of human reason; because, though human reason might, perhaps, have been able to unveil, even to the eyes of the common people, some of the delusions of superstition, it could never have dissolved the ties of private interest
24. The austerity of their manners gave them authority with the common people, who contrasted the strict regularity of their conduct with the disorderly lives of the greater part of their own clergy
25. fruquently, too, by cultivating all those arts which best deserve, and which are therefore most likely to gain them, the esteem of people of rank and fortune; by their knowledge in all the different branches of useful and ornamental learning, by the decent liberality of their manners, by the social good humour of their conversation, and by their avowed contempt of those absurd and hypocritical austerities which fanatics inculcate and pretend to practise, in order to draw upon themselves the veneration, and upon the greater part of men of rank and fortune, who avow that they do not practise them, the abhorrence of the common people
26. The vices of levity and vanity necessarily render him ridiculous, and are, besides, almost as ruinous to him as they are to the common people
27. In his own conduct, therefore, he is obliged to follow that system of morals which the common people respect the most
28. The common people look upon him with that kindness with which we naturally regard one who approaches somewhat to our own condition, but who, we think, ought to be in a higher
29. The presbyterian clergy, accordingly, have more influence over the minds of the common people, than perhaps the clergy of any other established church
30. It is, accordingly, in presbyterian countries only, that we ever find the common people converted, without persecution completely, and almost to a man, to the established church
31. But in a clergyman, this train of life not only consumes the time which ought to be employed in the duties of his function, but in the eyes of the common people, destroys almost entirely that sanctity of character, which can alone enable him to perform those duties with proper weight and authority
32. The excise upon the materials and manufacture of home-made fermented and spirituous liquors, is, accordingly, of all the different taxes upon expense, by far the most productive ; and this branch of the excise falls very much, perhaps principally, upon the expense of the common people
33. Such families, therefore, must drink their beer at least nine or ten shillings a-barrel cheaper than any liquor of the same quality can be drank by the common people, to whom it is everywhere more convenient to buy their beer, by little and little, from the brewery or the ale-house
34. It has for some time past been the policy of Great Britain to discourage the consumption of spiritous liquors, on account of their supposed tendency to ruin the health and to corrupt the morals of the common people
35. The Chestnut Quarter was one of the poorer districts of the city though at festival time the nobility also mixed with the common people in the ale houses and on the streets
36. In the final analysis, there are no common men, only common people!
37. Murray’s measure also applies to the evaluation of the common man, of common people everywhere
38. They smiled and showed great joy when a professor translated for them in Chinese Roger’s English version that said “… you will be the colored bird that joyfully sings for me in the morning…” There, in Anyang Roger could touch the feelings of the true Chinese common people
39. Nevertheless, the four days that they stayed in Ponferrada were filled with moments of memorable delight: a Sunday picnic to the river Cúa with Roger’s friends, visits to some of Roger’s relatives, a nostalgic trip to Túy with Enrique’s widow, Pepita, and their daughter Marité of Suni’s age, and the visit to a friend’s orchard for the picking of fresh cherries… The children loved those very busy days, and Josie’s mother enjoyed the camaraderie and friendship of the common people from El Bierzo
40. The rabbis were more closely related to the common people, and unlike the priests, they did not have to be Levites
41. reflects the general principle that, with some drastically tragic exceptions, European Jews fared better among the ruling elite than among the common people (including the lower clergy)
42. And by these, and other such institutions, they obtained in order to their end, which was peace of the commonwealth, that the common people in their misfortunes, laying the
43. These latter-day Puritans know themselves to be possessed of wisdom far in excess of that of the common people
44. 40 Upon which the common people rising and being filled with rage Lysimachus armed about three thousand men and began first to offer violence; one Auranus being the leader a man far gone in years and no less in folly
45. 27 His purpose was to indict a public stigma on our race; therefore he erected a pillar at the tower porch and caused the following inscription to be engraved on it 28 That entrance to their own temple was to be refused to all those who would not sacrifice; that all the Jews were to be registered among the common people; that those who resisted were to be forcibly seized and put to death; 29 that those who were so registered were to be marked on their persons by the ivy leaf symbol of Dionysus and to be set apart with these limited rights
46. These questions, and many others that it would be tedious to mention, are put to the leaders and common people of the pagans, not in an offensive and irritating way, but calmly and with great moderation
47. These acts of selfless service endeared him to common people and made him a unique leader
48. In the weeks following the baptism of Jesus the character of John's preaching gradually changed into a proclamation of mercy for the common people, while he denounced with renewed vehemence the corrupt political and religious rulers
49. 7 The common people marveled at the teaching and ministry of Jesus and his apostles
50. And it was chiefly because of this need for some simple petition for the common people that Jesus at this time consented, in answer to Thomas's request, to teach them a suggestive form of prayer