| Johannes Colerus - 1706 - 122 pagina’s
...Minds of thofe Young Boys. This is a matter of fact, which I cou'd prove, if there was any neceffity for it, by the Teftimony of feveral honeft Gentlemen,...Amfterdam. Thofe good Men blefs every day the Memory of 3 their Parents, who took care in due time to remove them from the School of fo pernicious and fo impious... | |
| Johannes Colerus - 1706 - 124 pagina’s
...Minds of thofe Young Boys. This is a matter of fact, which I cou'd prove, if there was any neceffity for it, by the Teftimony of feveral honeft Gentlemen,...of whom have been Elders of the Lutheran Church at Amrterdam. Thofe good Men blefs every day the Memory of 3 their Parents, who took care in due time... | |
| Frederick Pollock - 1880 - 538 pagina’s
...living, and some of whom have been Elders of the Lutheran Church at Amsterdam. Those good men bless every day the Memory of their Parents, who took care in due time to remove them from the School of so pernicious and so impious a Master. Vanden Ende had an only Daughter, who understood the Latin Tongue,... | |
| Baruch Spinoza - 1894 - 434 pagina’s
...Spinoza, says that Van den Ende taught atheism as well as Latin, and that many of his pupils "bless every day the memory of their parents who took care in due time to remove them from the school of so pernicious and impious a master." The charge is not improbable, for Van den Ende's character was... | |
| Johannes COLERUS (Lutheran Minister at Amsterdam.) - 1706 - 122 pagina’s
...which I cou'd prove, if there was any neceffity for it, by the Teftimony of feveral honeft Gentlftnen, who are ftill living, and fome of whom have been Elders...from the School of fo pernicious and fo impious a Matter. Vanden Ende had an only Daughter, who underttood the Latin Tongue, as well as Mufick, fo perfectly,... | |
| Benedictus de Spinoza - 1910 - 394 pagina’s
...strongly suspected of atheism. Colerus relates that some of the past students of Van den Enden " blessed every day the memory of their parents, who took care in due time to remove them from the school of so pernicious and impious a master." But he was admittedly an able teacher, and Spinoza, no doubt,... | |
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