The National Quarterly Review, Volume 11 |
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Pagina 4
The Welsh , though they have been much later in starting than the Irish , and are even yet less Celtic in their creed and character , appear to have lately recovered their generic and distinctive credulity in its utmost purity ...
The Welsh , though they have been much later in starting than the Irish , and are even yet less Celtic in their creed and character , appear to have lately recovered their generic and distinctive credulity in its utmost purity ...
Pagina 5
... nor those who learn to devote themselves the less to the efforts of memory , relying on writing ; since it generally occurs to most men , that in their dependence on writing they relax their diligence in learning thoroughly ...
... nor those who learn to devote themselves the less to the efforts of memory , relying on writing ; since it generally occurs to most men , that in their dependence on writing they relax their diligence in learning thoroughly ...
Pagina 12
Still less reason have we for dissatisfaction , or rather still inore reason have we to believe in the divine origin of Christianity , when we reflect that there is no symbol of importance which the Druids possessed in common with ...
Still less reason have we for dissatisfaction , or rather still inore reason have we to believe in the divine origin of Christianity , when we reflect that there is no symbol of importance which the Druids possessed in common with ...
Pagina 25
But neither he nor any other writer ventures to mention any occasion on which the Druids immolated human beings ; much less do they pretend to give names of any person whom they sacrificed . Nothing is more easy than to make charges ...
But neither he nor any other writer ventures to mention any occasion on which the Druids immolated human beings ; much less do they pretend to give names of any person whom they sacrificed . Nothing is more easy than to make charges ...
Pagina 31
The individual thus figuratively called a “ goddess was Wallenstein's second wife , the Countess of Hanach , not thus distinguished for any charms of form or feature , but for the less fragile traits of property and connections ...
The individual thus figuratively called a “ goddess was Wallenstein's second wife , the Countess of Hanach , not thus distinguished for any charms of form or feature , but for the less fragile traits of property and connections ...
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
The National Quarterly Review, Volume 4 Edward Isidore Sears,David Allyn Gorton,Charles H. Woodman Volledige weergave - 1862 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
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