In 1850 Guthrie published A Plea on behalf of Drunkards and against Drunkenness, which was followed by The Gospel in Ezekiel (1855); The City: its Sins and Sorrows (1857); Christ and the Inheritance of the Saints (1858); Seedtime and Harvest of Ragged Schools (1860), consisting of his three Pleas for Ragged Schools. [Please select]
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Coarse red: fun for drunkards: guffaw and smoke. [Please select]
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Drunkards out to shake up their livers. [Please select]
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A number of passages in the Papyrus denounce drunkards. [Please select]
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I must see the miserable people, the cripples, the wretched ones, the drunkards and the thieves. [Please select]
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The greatest drunkards in the town are very, very glad that malt's come down. [Please select]
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I devoted myself particularly to the reclaiming of drunkards-- having special sympathy with them. [Please select]
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Ye ken whar the drunkards gang tae in the end, but dinna let me interrupt ye. [Please select]
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Does any one now defend selling liquor to children and converting them into precocious drunkards. [Please select]
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"In consequence of that little sip, which appears so innocent, those children may grow up drunkards." [Please select]
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He only wants to paint his beastly ragamuffins and thieves and drunkards, and be left alone. [Please select]
Do you have a better example in your mind? Please submit your sentence!