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" The wounds I might have healed ! The human sorrow and smart ! And yet it never was in my soul To play so ill a part : But evil is wrought by want of Thought, As well as want of Heart... "
Prose and Verse - Page 209
by Thomas Hood - 1845
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The Bombay Quarterly Review, Volume 5

India - 1857 - 434 pages
...mind when he conceived that exquisite poem the Lady's Dream ? — " The wounds I might have heal'd, The human sorrow and smart, And yet it never was in...wrought by want of thought, As well as want of heart." VOL. V. — NO. II. 48 wretchedness Lear can entertain no less a cause than the ingratitude of his...
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Children at home, by [the] author of 'Almost persuaded'.

Frances Elizabeth G. Carey- Brock - 1857 - 340 pages
...very short time had fallen asleep, thoroughly exhausted with fatigue and excitement. CHAPTER VII. " And yet it never was in my soul To play so ill a part...wrought by want of thought As well as want of heart." HOOD. THE next morning Harry and Willie made their appearance at the breakfast-table with pale faces...
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English Literature of the Nineteenth Century: On the Plan of the Author's ...

Charles Dexter Cleveland - English literature - 1857 - 800 pages
...never remember'd the naked limbs That froze with winter's cold. " The wounds I might have heal'd ! The human sorrow and smart! And yet it never was in...ill a part: But evil is wrought by want of thought Aa well as waut of heart !" She clasp'd her fervent hands, And the tears began to stream ; Large, and...
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Bombay Quarterly Review, Volume 5

India - 1857 - 848 pages
...human sorrow and smart. And yet it never was in my soul As well as want of heart." VOL. V.—NO. II. 48 To play so ill a part: But evil is wrought by want of thought, wretchedness Lear can entertain no less a cause than the ingratitude of his children :— " KENT.—He...
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The Juvenile messenger of the Presbyterian Church in England, Volumes 7-11

1857 - 954 pages
...but through thoughtlessness and idleness he made complete work of it, and got himself into trouble. " Evil is wrought by want of thought, As well as want of will." Eleven long months of thia year are gone, and only one remains. These months are all committed...
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The Protestant Episcopal Quarterly Review, and Church Register, Volume 5

1858 - 590 pages
...Supplied my hungry mood ; But I never remembered the wretched ones That starve for want of food 1 " I dressed as the noble dress, In cloth of silver and...wrought by want of thought, As well as want of heart I" Soon, however, Lady Blessington was to find that the retribution of reckless luxury as well as of...
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English Hearts and English Hands: Or, The Railway and the Trenches

Catherine Marsh - Evangelistic work - 1858 - 384 pages
...the foundations of their lines, and bridges, and tunnels, in the flesh and blood of their brothers. But, " Evil is wrought By want of thought, As well as want of heart." The contract has been entered into — engaging for the railway to be completed by a fixed date. The...
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The ways of the line, a monograph on excavators [by A.R. Tregelles].

Anna Rebecca Tregelles - 1858 - 190 pages
...received from the police, and they soon decamped, and I lost sight of them altogether. CHAPTER XII. ' Evil is wrought By want of thought, As well as want of heart.' §NE fine Monday morning, I took some Tesi taments to one or two of the men in the !, - cutting ; and,...
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A Treatise on Theism, and on the Modern Skeptical Theories

Francis Wharton - History - 1859 - 410 pages
...that even the sparrow falls not unmarked of God ! I drank the richest draughts, and ate whatever was good — Fish, and flesh, and fowl, and fruit, supplied...wrought by want of thought, as well as want of heart! § 24. Schiirmayer, not the least accurate of recent German writers on Forensic Medicine,* thus speaks:...
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A Treatise on Theism, and on the Modern Skeptical Theories

Francis Wharton - Skepticism - 1859 - 410 pages
...that even the sparrow falls not unmarked of God I I drank the richest draughts, and ate whatever was good— Fish, and flesh, and fowl, and fruit, supplied...But evil is wrought by want of thought, as well as ivant of heart! § 24. Schurrnayer, not the least accurate of recent German writers on Forensic Medicine,*...
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