It was a piteous thing," she says, "to see this holy company in such a plight, so overcome with fatigue and grief that several swooned by the way. It was rainy weather, and all were obliged to walk through muddy roads, except four poor invalids who were... The Life of John Calvin - Página 57por Thomas Henry Dyer - 1855 - 458 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| William Maxwell Blackburn - 1867 - 464 páginas
...a day in getting to St. Julien, about four miles distant. ' It was a pitiful thing,' she writes, ' to see this holy company in such a plight, so overcome...to walk through the muddy roads, except four poor old women who had taken their vows more than sixteen years before. Two of these, who were past sixty-six,... | |
| Philip Schaff - 1898 - 924 páginas
...us a lively and naive account of their departure to Annecy. " It was a piteous thing," she says, " to see this holy company in such a plight, so overcome with fatigue aud grief that several swooned by the way. It was rainy weather, and all were obliged to walk through... | |
| Philip Schaff - 1894 - 928 páginas
...left us a lively and naive account of their departure to Annecy. " It was a piteous thing," she says, "to see this holy company in such a plight, so overcome...rainy weather, and all were obliged to walk through muddy roads, except four poor invalids who were in a carriage. There were six poor old women who had... | |
| Richard Taylor Stevenson - 1907 - 220 páginas
...their departure. The sprightly Jeanne de Jussie tells of the going to Annecy: "It was a piteous thing to see this holy company in such a plight, so overcome...swooned by the way. It was rainy weather, and all were compelled to walk through muddy roads, except four poor invalids who were in a carriage. There were... | |
| William Maxwell Blackburn - 1865 - 366 páginas
...spent a day in getting to St. Julien, about four miles distant. "It was a pitiful thing," she writes, "to see this holy company in such a plight, so overcome...to walk through the muddy roads, except four poor old women who had taken their vows more than sixteen years before. Two of these who were past sixty-six,... | |
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