The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 107A. Constable, 1858 |
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Page 3
... never can be community of feeling . We must always continue foreigners , and the object of that jealousy and dislike which a foreign rule never ceases to excite . ' And above all , we would add to these far - sighted remarks the ...
... never can be community of feeling . We must always continue foreigners , and the object of that jealousy and dislike which a foreign rule never ceases to excite . ' And above all , we would add to these far - sighted remarks the ...
Page 213
... Never , certainly , were such gigantic talents employed to give a divine sanction to the doctrine of passive obedience ; and the treatise will ever remain a perpetual monument , that it may be possible for the highest genius to accept ...
... Never , certainly , were such gigantic talents employed to give a divine sanction to the doctrine of passive obedience ; and the treatise will ever remain a perpetual monument , that it may be possible for the highest genius to accept ...
Page 231
... never so concentrated in the palace as to give a pre - eminence to the court pulpit sufficient to sustain such lofty flights of rhetorical magniloquence . England produced in that same age a genius of grander and more truly religious ...
... never so concentrated in the palace as to give a pre - eminence to the court pulpit sufficient to sustain such lofty flights of rhetorical magniloquence . England produced in that same age a genius of grander and more truly religious ...
Contents
1 General Report on the Administration of | 1 |
History of Latin Christianity including that of | 51 |
Memorials and Correspondence of Charles James | 134 |
10 other sections not shown
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