The Cold-water-man: Or, a Pocket Companion for the Temperate |
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Page 12
... labor which his workmen perform by using it . Every man who has tried the experiment on himself or oth- ers , knows that the same man will perform a greater amount of labor and do his work better , in a given time , without tasting ...
... labor which his workmen perform by using it . Every man who has tried the experiment on himself or oth- ers , knows that the same man will perform a greater amount of labor and do his work better , in a given time , without tasting ...
Page 14
... labor as he could have accomplished without it ; hence if he had not purchased the dollar's worth of liquor , his pecuniary ability would have been such , that he might have pur- chased to the amount of at least two or three dollars in ...
... labor as he could have accomplished without it ; hence if he had not purchased the dollar's worth of liquor , his pecuniary ability would have been such , that he might have pur- chased to the amount of at least two or three dollars in ...
Page 20
... labor on their own strength . Of the 200,000 paupers which the United States have to support , at least 150,000 were thrown on public charity by in- temperance . Let him who wishes to be poor and despised and an outcast from society ...
... labor on their own strength . Of the 200,000 paupers which the United States have to support , at least 150,000 were thrown on public charity by in- temperance . Let him who wishes to be poor and despised and an outcast from society ...
Page 88
... labor in the bottom of the ocean than pour them on the earth in the form of a flood of liquid destruction . Let no man who loves his neighbor , his country or his God , feed the distillery , V. The Second Class , or Manufacturers . The ...
... labor in the bottom of the ocean than pour them on the earth in the form of a flood of liquid destruction . Let no man who loves his neighbor , his country or his God , feed the distillery , V. The Second Class , or Manufacturers . The ...
Page 150
... labor in vain . The liquor , too , will be wasted , and its disagreeable taste will be endured for nothing . No harm ! no harm ! But is it , in fact , such an inno- cent article that a little will do no harm ? A lit- tle of it makes ...
... labor in vain . The liquor , too , will be wasted , and its disagreeable taste will be endured for nothing . No harm ! no harm ! But is it , in fact , such an inno- cent article that a little will do no harm ? A lit- tle of it makes ...
Other editions - View all
The Cold-Water-Man, Or, a Pocket Companion for the Temperate Doctor Springwater No preview available - 2017 |
The Cold-Water-Man, Or a Pocket Companion for the Temperate (Classic Reprint) Doctor Springwater No preview available - 2018 |
The Cold-Water-Man; Or, a Pocket Companion for the Temperate Doctor Springwater No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
abstain entirely alcohol alcoholic poison banish become beverage called cause cease cholera church chymical cider cold-water-man countenance crime danger death desolation destroy disease distilled liquor distillers and venders dram drank drink a little drink ardent spirits drunk drunkard drunkard's grave drunkenness duty earth engaged enter entire abstinence eternal evil example fatal feel fermented fountain frown furnish give happiness harm heart heaven hell Hinnom influence injure intempe intoxicating join a temperance kind labor liberty liquid love a little medicine misery moderate drinker Moloch moral neighbor ness never nourish or refresh ordinary perance pernicious person in health pledge poison produces promote quantity quors racters rance rate drinker refuse religion ruin sake sell single drop smile sober soon soul spirituous liquors strong drink tempe temperance society temperate drinker throw tion tippler traffic truth unite valley VAN BENTHUYSEN vending ardent spirits wine
Popular passages
Page 189 - ... speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience seared with a hot iron; forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth.
Page 210 - Passions spring up in a horrible dance! Then prone on the earth, they adore in the dust, A man's baser half, rais'd, in room of his bust. Such orgies the nights of the drunkard display, But how black with ennui, how benighted his day ! With drams it begins, and with drams...
Page 210 - Now the arrogant reptile, here, raises his crest ! His head winding up from the tail of his plan, 'Till the Worm stands erect o'er the prostrated Man. Here, he joys to transform, by his magical spell, The...
Page 83 - Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake and thine often infirmities.
Page 72 - They soon came round almost to the same spot from which they had sailed. At this critical moment, the only one in which it was possible for them to be saved, a number of persons on shore, who knew their danger, discovered them, and instantly gave the alarm. They entreated those in the boat to make one desperate effort and drive it on shore if possible.
Page 211 - Nor boast that no track of the viper is seen, To stain thy pure surface of Emerald green ; For the Serpent will never want poison to kill, While the fat of your fields feeds the Worm of the Still!
Page 210 - As it drops from her arm, mark her stupify'd stare ! Then she wakes with a yell, and a shriek of despair. Is this the civility promis'd our nation? This the Union— dissolv'd in a cup of damnation— "Which our Chancellor Comus extols as divine, To train up our fate and our fortunes — as swine? Drink, ERIN ! drink deep from this...
Page 210 - ... he likes best : How the arrogant reptile here raises his crest ! His head winding up from the tail of his plan, Till the worm stands erect o'er the prostrated man. Here, he joys to transform, by his magical spell, The sweet milk of the Earth to an essence of Hell, Fermented our food, and corrupted our grain, To famish the stomach, and madden the brain. By his water of life, what distraction and fear; By the gloom of its light, what pale spectres appear! A Demon keeps time on his fiddle, finance,...
Page 193 - And they have built the high places of Baal, which are in the valley of the son of Hinnom, to cause their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire to Moloch...
Page 71 - The young men could not ply the oars as dexterously as many others. But they supposed there could be no danger. All nature seemed to smile. The sunbeam briskly played on the bosom of the ocean. Calmness had thrown its oily wand on the billow and it slept. The water presenting a smooth unruffled surface, seemed a sea of glass. The most timorous would scarcely have suspected that danger, in its most terrific form...