Memorial of Mary ... queen -consort to king William iii

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Strana 5 - LORD, thou hast been favourable unto thy land : thou hast brought back the captivity of Jacob. Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people, thou hast covered all their sin.
Strana xvi - As an eagle stirreth up her nest, fluttereth over her young, spreadeth abroad her wings, taketh them, beareth them on her wings : so the Lord alone did lead him, and there was no strange god with him.
Strana 5 - I will hear what God the LORD will speak : For he will speak peace unto his people, And to his saints : But let them not turn again to folly. Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him ; That glory may dwell in our land.
Strana xlviii - I dissemble very ill to those who know me — at least, 'tis a great constraint to myself, yet I must endure it. All my motions are so watched, and all I do so observed, that if I eat less, or speak less, or look more grave, all is lost in the opinion of the world...
Strana xlix - Farewell, do but continue to love me, and forgive the taking up so much of your time to your poor wife, who deserves more pity than ever any creature did, and who loves you a great deal too much for her own ease, though it can't be more than you deserve.
Strana 37 - She looked on idleness as the great corrupter of human nature ; and believed that if the mind had no employment given it, it would create some of the worst sort to itself...
Strana xx - I must put you in mind of one thing, believing it now the season, which is, that you would take care of the church in Ireland. Every body agrees that it is the worst in Christendom.
Strana xvii - The place,' she wrote to him, 'made me think how happy I was there when I had your dear company. But now I will say no more; for I shall hurt my own eyes, which I want now more than ever. Adieu. Think of me, and love me as much as I shall you, whom I love more than my life.
Strana 59 - ... with melancholy reflections. She was very sensibly touched, when she heard that some, who pretended to much zeal for the crown and the revolution, seemed thence to think they had a sort of right to be indulged in their licentiousness and irregularities. She often said, " Can a blessing be expected from such hands, or on anything that must pass through them?
Strana xlviii - I live, for this great mercy, that I don't sink under this affliction ; nay, that I keep my health, for I can neither sleep nor eat. I go to Kensington as often as I can for air, but then I can never...

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