Unbelief and jealousy of the divine favour freeze the affections, and, like the northern blast of approaching winter on the trees of the forest, detrude the heavenly juices of the soul. |
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Unless the word superior be taken in such a sense as to signify, that he who does a bad action, does thereby, detrude himself out of the rank of men. |
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Lady Austen made him the most popular poet of his age, and raised him to a rank in English poetry from which no revolution of taste can detrude him. |
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But those with whom she can complete the circle, whom she can elevate from the lowest stations into the highest, detrude them again, and lastly leave them where she found them. |
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In general, the same powers which detrude the head in natural labour, will also, and perhaps with greater facility, push the nates to the outlet of the pelvis. |
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