Hester, an academic whose dissertation on Puritan adultery became a commercial best seller ( retitled " No Sin Goes Unpunished " ), had grown restless in her American studies specialty : " One landmass and the scantiness of four centuries, give or take, was closing in on me.
12.
Regarding a Freyja-Frigg common origin hypothesis, scholar Stephan Grundy comments that " the problem of whether Frigg or Freyja may have been a single goddess originally is a difficult one, made more so by the scantiness of pre-Viking Age references to Germanic goddesses, and the diverse quality of the sources.
13.
In 2008 Danny's third instrumental album " Dream, Extinguished " would significantly eclipse the amount of scantiness and subsequent infringement of " Dream, Interrupted " due to its abrupt cancellation . " Dream, Interrupted "'s lack of publicity was a sharp contrast to the ubiquity of " Charm ", released precisely five months prior.
14.
To defraud any one of wages that are his due is a great crime which cries to the avenging anger of Heaven . " Behold, the hire of the laborers & which by fraud has been kept back by you, crieth; and the cry of them hath entered into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth . " Lastly, the rich must religiously refrain from cutting down the workmen s earnings, whether by force, by fraud, or by usurious dealing; and with all the greater reason because the laboring man is, as a rule, weak and unprotected, and because his slender means should in proportion to their scantiness be accounted sacred.
15.
This description is characteristic of the Hermetic gnosis, . . . here also'to marvel'is found as a step ( " Corp . Hermet . " 4.2, 14.4 ) and the'rest'as escatological salvation ( " Corp . Hermet . " 9.10, 13.20 ) . . . . Because of the scantiness of the material we cannot say how strongly this mystic-gnostic religiosity has influenced the GH, whether it is an essential or merely an infused element . " } } " Rest " is not only to be understood as the ultimate goal of the seeker after truth, which leads to salvation; it is also descriptive of a unity with the wisdom which lies at the heart of the Godhead.
16.
"The Times " concurred with " The Era " : " Mr . W . S . Gilbert . . . by his abstinence from the more vulgar jokes, and the polish of his verse, has gained for himself a position apart from that of the ordinary writers of extravaganza . " " The Morning Post " praised the piece highly and added, " as usually happens in burlesques from the pen of Mr . Gilbert, the writing is of a higher order than in the generality of productions in this irreverent department of dramatic literature . " Despite Norma's apology for " the scantiness of our apparel ", the critic added the reservation that it was not scant enough : " the long dresses in which the female personages are for the most part attired detract from the smartness of the action and the picturesqueness of the general effect ."