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England 1810. William Devreux, the fourth Earl of Hartwell, despises his shallow and dissolute life. But a riding accident in a remote country town gives him the opportunity to escape his troubles for a month or two, and he concocts a phony identity in order to conceal his unsavory past. He discovers unexpected contentment in his new circumstances, finding himself especially drawn to Charissa Armitage, a young woman whose views of faith and love challenge his own. However, all is not as simple as it seems . . .
Helping the orphan children in Richmond just might overturn everything Gracie thought she knew, including the value of love. Gracie Williams has always had an adventurous streak, which led her from her home in the Shenandoah Valley to Richmond, Virginia, where she can devote her life to the orphan children. Though her beauty has brought on the advances of many men, she has no plans to marry, and finds suitors an unfortunate irritation she doesn’t have time for—much to her parents’ chagrin. When she befriends Matthew Weston, the mature and serious orphanage superintendent, she confides in him and believes he shares her goals. Neither are prepared for the sparks that fly. Tension grows as Matthew falls in love with her, yet realizes he is just another man in the long line of would-be suitors. A family crisis, an orphan train, and the plight of a sweet orphan named Emma throw the couple together in deep and meaningful ways. But will this be enough for Gracie to embrace a new way of thinking, and the gift of love that only true soulmates can share?
Replace those Sunday bulletins you use for taking notes with this beautiful resource for permanent note keeping. Here is the perfect notebook to help recall and revisit the memorable messages heard on Sunday morning and at other times. Spiral bound for ease of use, each notebook is durable and meant to last. Space is provided to record the date, speaker, title of the sermon, relevant Scripture passages, and personal reflections for over a year. Great also for Bible study notes and for use in sermon preparation. You will wonder how you managed without it.
This book provides readers – students, researchers, academics, policy-makers, activists and interested non-specialists – with a sophisticated understanding of contemporary discussion, analysis and theorizing of issues pertaining to conflict, citizenship and civil society. It does so through thirteen pieces of most recent in-depth sociological research that delve on: challenges to citizenship, civil society and citizenship in early and late modernity, the reflexive imperative in transformations of civil society, social conflict challenges to social science approaches, methodology and explanatory power, gender, minorities-immigrants-refugees and the extension of citizenship, violence in modernity, the place of civil society for sociology, and postcolonialism, trauma, and civil society.
Includes a few dances with music.
This book traces the background to the Treaty of Union of 1707, explains why it happened and assesses its impact on Scottish society, including the bitter struggle with the Jacobites for acceptance of the union in the two decades that followed its inaugur