Those were the first days of the war, when the wages of our passions first came to appal us.
"The Crisis, Volume 6"
Winston Churchill
It was fit that the luxurious homes of the oppressors should become squalid as the huts of the slaves they trampled; that their flesh should suffer torture worse than that of the whips they used so unmercifully; that the loss of crops and cattle should bring home to them the hardships of the poor who toiled for their magnificence; that physical darkness should appal them with vague terrors and undefined apprehensions, such as ever haunt the bosom of the oppressed, whose life is the sport of a caprice; and at last that the aged should learn by the deathbed of the prop and pride of their declining feebleness, and the younger feel beside the cradle of the first blossom and fruit of love, all the agony of such bereavement as they had wantonly inflicted on the innocent.
"The Expositor's Bible: The Book of Exodus"
G. A. Chadwick
The result that followed was enough to appal the stoutest heart.
"The Scottish Fairy Book"
Elizabeth W. Grierson