The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 105A. Constable, 1857 |
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Page 31
... expressed himself in terms of bitterness and hostility against the Inquisition . ' Matters have now reached such a point ( said Philip , in writing to his aunt , the queen of Portugal ) , that to fulfil my duty to God and my kingdom as ...
... expressed himself in terms of bitterness and hostility against the Inquisition . ' Matters have now reached such a point ( said Philip , in writing to his aunt , the queen of Portugal ) , that to fulfil my duty to God and my kingdom as ...
Page 38
... expression of the human intellect to its fellow men , are alike free ; whilst free institutions secure the personal rights of every man and the public rights of all . Under the protection of these institutions and these liberties , the ...
... expression of the human intellect to its fellow men , are alike free ; whilst free institutions secure the personal rights of every man and the public rights of all . Under the protection of these institutions and these liberties , the ...
Page 132
... expression of the heathen mind , and verticality of the Christian , but because the Greek adhered strictly to a wooden type which admitted of no other development , while the genuine Roman form was the arch . Christian architecture ...
... expression of the heathen mind , and verticality of the Christian , but because the Greek adhered strictly to a wooden type which admitted of no other development , while the genuine Roman form was the arch . Christian architecture ...
Contents
1 History of the Reign of Philip the Second King | 1 |
sur le Globe Par P Flourens Membre de lAca | 46 |
England from the earliest period to the year 1742 | 78 |
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