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"tenderest" Synonyms
frailest fragilest feeblest slightest weakest daintiest infirmest faintest softest wimpiest lowest most delicate most breakable most effete most sensitive most unsubstantial most asthenic most enervated most languid most softened youngest earliest least rawest most youthful most immature most blooming most junior most juvenile most formative most pubescent most vernal callowest dewiest freshest greenest naifest unwariest rookiest ignorantest newest unripest most innocent most ingenuous most childlike most impressionable most inexperienced most naive most vulnerable most childish kindest kindliest gentlest lovingest nicest warmest benignest humanest mildest neighborliest(US) fondest best-mannered most caring most compassionate most considerate most benevolent most sympathetic most thoughtful most affectionate most adoring most amatory most amorous most comforting most emotional most commiserative most demonstrative most devoted most soothing most lovey-dovey most touchy-feely soppiest most moving most touching most romantic most sentimental most emotive most evocative most poignant most heartrending naughtiest randiest sexiest steamiest torridest most aphrodisiacal most ardent most erogenous most erotic most erotical most erotogenic most fervent most lascivious most libidinous most lustful most passionate most rapturous most sensual lightest mellowest balmiest blandest painfullest sorest reddest acutest most smarting most aching most inflamed most irritated most stinging most burning most hypersensitive most oversensitive difficultest trickiest awkwardest stickiest touchiest riskiest most ticklish most dangerous most troublesome most complicated most controversial juiciest ripest mushiest most chewable most edible most succulent most tenderized(US) most eatable More
"tenderest" Antonyms
robustest powerfullest strongest toughest hardiest mightiest ruggedest sturdiest healthiest stoutest longest-lasting best-made most durable most resilient most stalwart most unbreakable most hard-wearing maturest oldest grayest(US) greyest(UK) worldliest most experienced most adult most advanced most seasoned most senior most sophisticated most grown-up most worldly-wise astutest shrewdest smartest wisest most educated most cultured most enlightened most hardened most knowledgeable most streetwise most cultivated most guileful most perceptive most politic most grasping cruelest unkindest viciousest meanest violentest wantonest most callous most inhuman most heartless most unsympathetic most inhumane most insensitive most sadistic most uncaring most uncompassionate most unfeeling most brutish most fiendish most indifferent coldest harshest stoniest most inconsiderate most hardhearted most merciless most pitiless most unconcerned most unloving most indurate most ruthless most soulless most stonyhearted stolidest numbest most unemotional most emotionless most undemonstrative most impersonal most objective most stoic most affectless most passionless most unsentimental most impassive most inexpressive frigidest most unsensual most unarousing most dispassionate most unaroused most unerotic most unromantic strictest hardest dourest firmest heaviest severest extremest rigidest roughest austerest coarsest seriousest sternest stiffest grimmest deadest most painless most benumbed most senseless most insensible most anesthetized(US) most nonreactive safest most uncontroversial most straightforward chewiest gristliest stringiest most leathery most fibrous most coriaceous most sinewy

66 Sentences With "tenderest"

How to use tenderest in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "tenderest" and check conjugation/comparative form for "tenderest". Mastering all the usages of "tenderest" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Wrestlers do the tenderest things when a big match is over.
Sleep was everything to her now, the kindest friend, the tenderest lover.
Val was lovely, funny, brilliant — the tenderest, kindest person I'd ever met.
He gets the best jokes, the tenderest moments, and even the most creative action beats.
Hint: as any Southern grandma will tell you, the secret to the tenderest biscuits is in the lard.
Once you get to the heart of them — the tenderest part — they reveal an unmitigated sweet, nutty goodness.
"Writing about my tenderest bits is the only way I know how to have power over them," they write.
There's a raw spot — one of the tenderest places on the continent of human emotions — that exists between laughter and pain.
In her tenderest voice, she encourages a second-person listener, possibly herself, to stop hiding, start feeling things, and be open.
His tenderest singing was reserved for a medley from "The Light in the Piazza," which revealed his facility at semi-operatic declamation.
The medium-rare chicken breast is among the tenderest I have ever had; I suspect that is because of Lee's sixth sense.
Cooking aficionados are also upping their games, hoping to prove that theirs is the clearest broth, the tenderest turkey, the smoothest mash.
Even at the devastating moment when Mélisande, a victim of Golaud's violence, declares her unhappiness — to Debussy's tenderest and most tragic music — there was no yielding.
"Once you get to the heart of them — the tenderest part — they reveal an unmitigated sweet, nutty goodness," she writes in a column for The Times Magazine.
One moment he was terrifying in his wrath, the next he was singing the tenderest, most lieder-like of lullabies in his farewell to his rebellious daughter, Brünnhilde.
This is the foolproof method that self-proclaimed barbecue deity Adam Perry Lang has adapted to transform turkey breast into one of the tenderest pieces of smoked meat that you will ever taste.
The only one of his peers willing to speak to him in a way that is not demeaning is ultimately responsible for his tenderest adolescent moment and the most vicious violence he experiences.
When Mr. Myint can get it, he adds the pith of the banana stem, made up of leaves tightly rolled together; the tenderest, at the core, add crunch and a faint, grassy bitterness.
There's a young artist from Baghdad named Ali Eyal, who has one of the tenderest works in this show: pillowcases that he embroidered with records of the dreams and nightmares his family has while sleeping.
" She continued: "And in the moment that he evades the truth or tells the lie, if not before, he has made a decision about whose love matters most, about who will receive his tenderest love.
And for this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of the 46 della Robbia sculptures in Boston, which include one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence, "The Visitation," on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
And for this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of the 46 Della Robbia sculptures in Boston, which include "The Visitation," one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence, on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
And for this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of the 46 Della Robbia sculptures in Boston, which include one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence, "The Visitation," on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
And for this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of the 45003 Della Robbia sculptures in Boston, which include "The Visitation," one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence, on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
And for this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of the 5553 della Robbia sculptures in Boston, which include "The Visitation," one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence, on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
And for this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of the 13 Della Robbia sculptures in Boston, which include "The Visitation," one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence, on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
And for this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of the 28100 Della Robbia sculptures in Boston, which include "The Visitation," one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence, on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
The former relationship is one of the tenderest and most interesting arcs in the whole show, and here these two sweet, tall, soft butches got to gaze into one another's eyes (they're the same height) and get kinky with their power dynamic.
This hurts me in the tenderest part of my tender heart, because, truly, the joy of the job — other than the joy that comes along with the voyeurism of learning how, exactly, you fused your rear end to the sofa — is helping people.
His mom and Gladys's daughter, Ellen (Joan Allen), and his stepdad, Howard (David Cromer), are classic overworked, cross-talking New Yorkers, who, by dint of loudness and constant interruption, possess that prized urban ability to sound like they're arguing even at the tenderest moments.
For this reason, beauty may be the biggest surprise of "Della Robbia: Sculpting With Color in Renaissance Florence," at the Museum of Fine Arts here, a show of ideal size and scholarly weight that includes among 21567 pieces one of the tenderest Renaissance sculptures in existence — "The Visitation" by Luca della Robbia — on first-time American loan from its Tuscan church.
Prefiguring the Situationist dérive, some of the best writing in the collection describes de Chirico's experience of Paris in an almost diaristic fashion: After leaving the station and entering the heart of the city the landscape becomes ever more magical; one has the impression of being in a giant jack-in-the-box; of finding oneself before the open curtain of a marvelous theater: the background scenery is the tenderest gray of the fog that connects the sky to the earth and to human constructions, which are gray as well and rising curious and inviting, solemn and surprising right and left like enormous curtains from which emerge, similar to magic lantern figures, hurried throngs of men and of vehicles — strange and multicolored herds.
More, she fed him, and her last drop of new milk and her last and tenderest morsel of meat were reserved for his regalement.
Instead, he decrees, "The tenderest part of the Marquess is his purse. We'll hurt him there. Thieve his cattle, steal his rents." Betty, a maidservant at Montrose's estate, has become pregnant with Cunningham's child.
Upon release, Jan Moir of The Guardian described the song as a "big ballad" and considered it the best track on the album. Rick Anderson of AllMusic felt "Dear John" was "perhaps the tenderest kiss-off song ever written".
In 1939, the Second World War broke out. It claimed more victims than the First World War, among Löllbach's men as well. Once again, men from every age group, from tenderest youth to older men who headed households, had to give their lives.
Keppel died unmarried on 2 October 1786. Burke, who regarded him with great affection, said that "he had something high in his nature, and that it was a wild stock of pride on which the tenderest of all hearts had grafted the milder virtues". The peerage died with him.
A lot of sweeping and mopping of the floor of a grotty > old movie house near Worcester, Massachusetts. Also the tenderest > drama—funny, heartbreaking, sly, and unblinking—now playing at a theater > near you. ... It's uncanny; rarely has so much feeling been mined from so > little content. Something's lost in the process, of course: brevity.
It has two ends: the butt and the "tail". The smaller, pointed end—the "tail"—starts a little past the ribs, growing in thickness until it ends in the "sirloin" primal cut, which is closer to the butt of the cow. This muscle does very little work, so it is the tenderest part of the beef.
May your name ring out through the universe. Our Burundi, sacred heritage from our forefathers, Recognized as worthy of self-government, With your courage you also have a sense of honour. Sing the glory of liberty conquered again. Our Burundi, worthy of our tenderest love, We vow to your noble service our hands and hearts and lives.
It was also performed at the Concerts du Conservatoire on the 22 and 29 January 1893 with Éléonore Blanc (who would create the role of Briséïs four years later) as soloist, conducted by Paul Taffanel. The orchestral manuscript is now in the Bibliothèque nationale de France. The music (marked Andantino, molto con affetto) is in Chabrier's tenderest, most lyrical vein, entirely free from any suggestion of eccentricity or pseudo-Wagnerian grandiloquence.
At the age of twenty-two he was sent to found a new community of the Stricter Observance at Badajoz. He was ordained a priest in 1524, and the following year was appointed Guardian of the friary of St. Mary of the Angels at Robredillo, Old Castile. A few years later he began preaching with much success. He preferred to preach to the poor; his sermons, taken largely from the Prophets and Sapiential Books, breathe the tenderest human sympathy.
"Picture This" has seen critical acclaim since its release. Music critic Arion Berger of Rolling Stone called "Picture This" "the tenderest new wave love song put to vinyl". Slant Magazine praised Harry's vocal range on the track, "her voice purring like a kitten and then building to a mean growl." Pitchfork lauded the song as "exuberant new wave, far looser than the stiff, herky-jerky tracks that would go on to characterize that sound in the 80s".
Cassava leaves are an important cooking ingredient in Sierra Leone and considered the primary staple food. In order to prepare them, the tenderest cassava leaves are washed, then either pounded very finely or bruised with a pestle and mortar, and then finely shredded before cooking. The leaves are added to palaver sauce, which is made using red palm oil, mixed with other ingredients, such as onions, pepper, fish, meat, and vegetables to create a stew. The stew is a favorite among Sierra Leoneans at home and abroad.
Orderlies, two to each ward, were at the bottom of the hierarchy, and they worked under the authoritarian, and unchallenged, command of the ward sister. Veterans of World War I had little affection for the military hospitals; many memoirists complained of an inhumanity that seemed to increase with distance from the battlefield. At the front, wounded soldiers were treated by fellow-combatants and by familiar regimental doctors. 'The wounded man' recalled one soldier, ‘ is in a moment a little baby and all the rest become the tenderest of mothers.
Based on the Gospel accounts of the Nativity of Jesus, this was one of the tenderest hymns and is often considered one of the seven greatest Latin hymns.Sabatier, Paul Life of St. Francis Assisi Charles Scribner Press, NY, 1919, page 286The seven great hymns of the Mediaeval Church by Charles Cooper Nott 1868 ASIN: B003KCW2LA page 96 The 13th century growth of Marian devotions was also witnessed in France, with the construction of Marian churches such as Notre Dame de Paris and the introduction of liturgical material such as offices.
In her dedicatory preface to the op. 1 sonatas Bayon's reference to "the many kindnesses bestowed upon me since my tenderest infancy" by the family of Madame la Marquise de Langeron suggests that her musical training came through such patronage. From the age of about twenty-one she was associated with Madame de Genlis's salon on the rue de Grenelle. Her good friend, the encyclopedist and philosophe Denis Diderot, who hired her as music teacher for his daughter, Angélique, compared Bayon's music to that of Domenico Alberti, Johann Christian Bach, Johann Gottfried Eckard, Johann Schobert, and other foreign composers in Paris.
New York Army & Navy Journal The prominent Throop-Martin family, with whom Keogh had become friendly after his comrade General A.J. Alexander married Evelina Martin, was responsible for his burial in their Fort Hill plot and the design of his monument. At the base of decorative, white obelisk there is an inscription taken from the poem, The Song of the Camp by Bayard Taylor: "Sleep soldier still in honored rest, Your truth and valor wearing; The bravest are the tenderest, The loving are the daring." The marble cross atop his grave was added later at the request of his sister in Ireland.
A shoulder tender also called beef shoulder petite tender, beef shoulder tender petite roast, bistro filet, rat or teres major steak is a US cut of beef of the teres major muscle from the blade of the shoulder (chuck). It is one of the tenderest beef muscles and is said to be "white-tablecloth quality", being a similar quality to filet mignon, but less expensive. It is seldom used, as it requires skill to extract. It is known as petite tender medallion, petite tender or tender medallions if sliced into medallions (after being roasted or grilled whole).
Regarding the Granville house, Christian Dior wrote: "I have the tenderest, most magical memories of it. Not only that; my life, my style, owe nearly everything to its location and architecture," and "...(it) was pebbledashed in a very soft pink, blended with gray gravel, and these two colors have remained my favorite shades in couture." But it was above all his mother's garden that made a deep impression on the couturier. Having spent his childhood learning the names of flowers and their descriptions from horticulture catalogs, Christian Dior drew inspiration from them to create the silhouettes that would lead to his success in 1947 with the Corolle line.
Roast beef tenderloin Whole tenderloins are sold as either "unpeeled" (meaning the fat and silver skin remain), "peeled" (meaning that the fat is removed, but silver skin remains), or as PSMOs ("pismos"), which is short for peeled, silver skin removed, and side muscle (the "chain") left on. While the most expensive option pound-for-pound, PSMOs offer considerable savings over other tenderloin options as they require little handling by the chef, since the fat and trimmings have already been removed. Since it is the tenderest part of the animal, beef dishes requiring exceptionally tender meat, such as steak tartare, are ideally made from the tenderloin.
Saint recalls that Kazan selected her for the role after he had her do an improvisational skit with Brando playing the other character. She had no idea that he was looking to fill any particular film part, however, but remembers that Kazan set up the scenario with Brando which brought out surprising emotions: Life magazine described On the Waterfront as the "most brutal movie of the year" but with "the year's tenderest love scenes," and stating that Saint was a "new discovery" in films. In its cover story about Saint, it speculated that it will probably be as Edie in On the Waterfront that she "starts her real trip to fame."Life magazine, July 19, 1954 pp.
There is no innocent natural feeling of the young female heart for which she has not kindly comprehension and tolerance. In Whitney's stories, we find the tenderest motherly sympathy for this natural feeling of the young girl's heart. Some of the prettiest pages of The Other Girls are given to a description of the raptures and tremors of the beautiful young country girl, Bel Bree, when acting as a lay figure in trying on an exquisite dress which she and her aunt were making up for a customer. Then there is a suggestion of an admiring male spectator, lodging in the same house, who catches through the half-open door a glimpse of all this loveliness.
However, he seems to have disliked hypocrisy in its many forms, and seems to be free from cant, pedantry, or affectation of any kind. Though many of his epigrams indicate a cynical disbelief in the character of women, yet others prove that he could respect and almost revere a refined and courteous lady. His own life in Rome afforded him no experience of domestic virtue; but his epigrams show that, even in the age which is known to modern readers chiefly from the Satires of Juvenal, virtue was recognized as the purest source of happiness. The tenderest element in Martial's nature seems, however, to have been his affection for children and for his dependents.
New York, New York: Barnes & Noble, retrieved online June 30, 2018. Interviewed in 2001, the 89-year-old Wust recalledConnolly, I still feel her breath, The Guardian US.: > It was the tenderest love you could imagine.... I was fairly experienced > with men, but with Felice I reached a far deeper under-standing of sex than > ever before....There was an immediate attraction, and we flirted > outrageously.... I began to feel alive as I never had before....She was my > other half, literally my reflection, my mirror image, and for the first time > I found love aesthetically beautiful, and so tender....Twice since she left, > I've felt her breath, and a warm presence next to me. I dream that we will > meet again - I live in hope.
The work received a positive review in the June 26 issue of the Courrier de l'Europe, published in London: > The Concert Spirituel on Corpus Christi Day began with a symphony by M. > Mozart. This artist, who from the tenderest age made a name for himself > among harpsichord players, may today be ranked among the most able > composers. The work was performed again at the Concert Spirituel on 15 August, this time with a new second movement, an Andante replacing the original Andantino in 6/8 (the latter, according to Deutsch, "had failed to please".) The work evidently was popular. Deutsch lists several further performances at the Concert Spirituel during 1779, on 18 and 23 March, 23 May, and 3 June; and on 14 May 1780.
It is this sentiment that has gained the fable the reputation of being La Fontaine's best and tenderest as it comes to rest on an evocation of past innocence: ::::O, did my wither'd heart but dare ::::To kindle for the bright and good, ::::Should not I find the charm still there? ::::Is love, to me, with things that were?Elizur Wright's translation of all the fables was first published in 1841 and often reprinted in both the USA and UK, oaks.nvg.org Translations of the fable were familiar enough in Britain but the subject of male bonding left some readers uneasy (as it very obviously did Elizur Wright). Eventually there appeared an 18th-century version in octosyllabic couplets that claimed to be ‘improved from Fontaine’.
During his > confinement and trial, he exhibited those proud and elevated sensibilities > which designate greatness and dignity of mind. Not a murmur or a sigh ever > escaped him, and the civilities and attentions bestowed on him were politely > acknowledged. Having left a mother and two sisters in England, he was heard > to mention them in terms of the tenderest affection, and in his letter to > Sir Henry Clinton, he recommended them to his particular attention. The > principal guard officer, who was constantly in the room with the prisoner, > relates that when the hour of execution was announced to him in the morning, > he received it without emotion, and while all present were affected with > silent gloom, he retained a firm countenance, with calmness and composure of > mind.
A 1571 book of Ronsard's works The character and fortunes of Ronsard's works are among the most remarkable in literary history, and supply in themselves a kind of illustration of the progress of French literature during the last three centuries. It was long his fortune to be almost always extravagantly admired or violently attacked. At first, as has been said, the enmity, not altogether unprovoked, of the friends and followers of Marot fell to his lot, then the still fiercer antagonism of the Huguenot faction, who, happening to possess a poet of great merit in Du Bartas, were able to attack Ronsard at his tenderest point. But fate had by no means done its worst with him in his lifetime.
Wust, Elisabeth. Righteous Among the Nations, Yad Vashem. Interviewed in 2001, the 89-year-old Wust recalled her time with Schragenheim:Connolly, I still feel her breath, The Guardian US. > It was the tenderest love you could imagine.... I was fairly experienced > with men, but with Felice I reached a far deeper under-standing of sex than > ever before....There was an immediate attraction, and we flirted > outrageously.... I began to feel alive as I never had before....She was my > other half, literally my reflection, my mirror image, and for the first time > I found love aesthetically beautiful, and so tender....Twice since she left, > I've felt her breath, and a warm presence next to me. I dream that we will > meet again - I live in hope.
A prison What the heroine's hasty plan may be, we learn at the beginning of the second, where she gains admittance to her brother's gaol to prove if he is worth the saving. She reveals to him Friedrich's shameful proposals, and asks him if he craves his forfeit life at this price of his sister's dishonour? Claudio's wrath and readiness to sacrifice himself are followed by a softer mood, when he begins to bid his sister farewell for this life, and commit to her the tenderest greetings for his grieving lover; at last his sorrow causes him to quite break down. Isabella, about to tell him of his rescue, now pauses in dismay; for she sees her brother falling from the height of nobleness to weak avowal of unshaken love of life, to the shamefaced question whether the price of his deliverance be quite beyond her.
Ye nymphs and swains, whom love inspires With all his pure and faithful fires, Hither with joyful steps repair; You who his tenderest transports share For lo ! in beauty's fairest pride, Summer expands her heart so wide; The Sun no more in clouds inshrin'd, Darts all his glories unconfin'd; The feather'd choir from every spray Salute Melissa's natal day. Hither ye nymphs and shepherds haste, Each with a flow'ry chaplet grac'd, With transport while the shades resound, And Nature spreads her charms around; While ev'ry breeze exhales perfumes, And Bion his mute pipe resumes; With Bion long disus'd to play, Salute Melissa's natal day. For Bion long deplor'd his pain Thro' woods and devious wilds in vain; At last impell'd by deep despair, The swain proferr'd his ardent pray'r; His ardent pray'r Melissa heard, And every latent sorrow cheer'd, His days with social rapture blest, And sooth'd each anxious care to rest.
Haviland not only ran the risk of being physically harmed by angry slave-owners, like the Chesters, or their slave-catchers, if found guilty of violating the Fugitive Slave Law she would also be subject to hefty fines and imprisonment. Still, Haviland was determined to continue with her work, no matter what the personal cost: > ... I would not for my right hand become instrumental in returning one > escaped slave to bondage. I firmly, believe in our Declaration of > Independence, that all men are created free and equal, and that no human > being has a right to make merchandise of others born in humbler stations, > and place them on a level with horses, cattle, and sheep, knocking them off > the auction-block to the highest bidder, sundering family ties, and > outraging the purest and tenderest feelings of human nature. Fortunately for Haviland, her case was brought before Judge Ross Wilkins, who sympathized with the abolitionists.
But is there in art any originality of genius without naïveté? Such criticism of Mendelssohn for his very ability – which could be characterised negatively as facility – was taken to further lengths by Richard Wagner. Mendelssohn's success, his popularity and his Jewish origins irked Wagner sufficiently to damn Mendelssohn with faint praise, three years after his death, in an anti-Jewish pamphlet Das Judenthum in der Musik: > [Mendelssohn] has shown us that a Jew may have the amplest store of specific > talents, may own the finest and most varied culture, the highest and > tenderest sense of honour – yet without all these pre-eminences helping him, > were it but one single time, to call forth in us that deep, that heart- > searching effect which we await from art [...] The washiness and the > whimsicality of our present musical style has been [...] pushed to its > utmost pitch by Mendelssohn's endeavour to speak out a vague, an almost > nugatory Content as interestingly and spiritedly as possible. The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche expressed consistent admiration for Mendelssohn's music, in contrast to his general scorn for "Teutonic" Romanticism: > At any rate, the whole music of romanticism [e.g.
It was this propensity that attached him so warmly to Allan Ramsay, the Doric bard of Scotland. Though younger than Ramsay, Mr. Aikman, while at college, formed an intimate acquaintance with him, which constituted a principal part of his happiness at that time, and of which he always bore the tenderest recollection. It was the same delicate bias of mind which at a future period of his life attached him so warmly to Thomson, who then unknown, and unprotected, stood in need of, and obtained the warmest patronage of Aikman; who perhaps considered it as one of the most fortunate occurrences in his life that he had it in his power to introduce this young poet of nature to Sir Robert Walpole, who wished to be reckoned the patron of genius, and to Arbuthnot, Swift, Pope, Gay, and the other beaux esprits of that brilliant period. Thomson could never forget this kindness; and when he had the misfortune, too soon, to lose this warm friend and kind protector, he bewailed the loss in strains distinguished by justness of thought, and genuine pathos of expression.
"The late Earl of Rosse was, in character and disposition, like the humorous Earl of Rochester; he had an infinite fund of wit, great spirits, and a liberal heart; was fond of all the vices which the beau monde call pleasures, and by those means first impaired his fortune as much as he possibly could do; and finally, his health, beyond repair." Parsons died on 21 June 1741 at his home in Molesworth Street Dublin in the parish of St Anne. On his deathbed he received a letter from the vicar of St Anne, the dean of Kilmore “to remind him of his past life, the particulars of which he mentioned, such as profligacy, gaming, drinking, rioting, turning day into night, blaspheming his Maker, and, in short, all manner of wickedness; and exhorting him in the tenderest manner to employ the few moments that remained to him, in penitently confessing his manifold transgressions, and soliciting his pardon from an offended Deity, before whom he was shortly to appear.” Parsons ordered the letter, addressed only to My Lord, to be put into a fresh cover and carried by the dean's own servant to an unusually pious gentleman, the Earl of Kildare.

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