The London Quarterly Review, Volume 33Theodore Foster, 1826 |
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Pagina 4
... mind naturally ingenuous and acute justifies to itself its belief in error ; and as being perhaps the volume of all others in which we may most perspicuously trace the subtle dis- tinctions by which the educated and conscientious Roman ...
... mind naturally ingenuous and acute justifies to itself its belief in error ; and as being perhaps the volume of all others in which we may most perspicuously trace the subtle dis- tinctions by which the educated and conscientious Roman ...
Pagina 6
... mind of the author is naturally temperate , or is resolved to be impartial , but because it is full of suppressed rather than subdued passion : the very speciousness and elaborate plausibility have in them some- thing suspicious ; and ...
... mind of the author is naturally temperate , or is resolved to be impartial , but because it is full of suppressed rather than subdued passion : the very speciousness and elaborate plausibility have in them some- thing suspicious ; and ...
Pagina 9
... mind . A few bigots may read his work to gratify their rancour ; a few of the irreligious may be delighted with his as with any coarse and unjust attack on the purest form of Christianity existing ; many may have felt an idle curiosity ...
... mind . A few bigots may read his work to gratify their rancour ; a few of the irreligious may be delighted with his as with any coarse and unjust attack on the purest form of Christianity existing ; many may have felt an idle curiosity ...
Pagina 10
... mind will doubt for an instant that the Pope's decision was at the service of that party from which he promised himself the greatest advantage . Be thou well assured , ' says Bonner , in his preface to Gardiner's Book , De verâ Obedi ...
... mind will doubt for an instant that the Pope's decision was at the service of that party from which he promised himself the greatest advantage . Be thou well assured , ' says Bonner , in his preface to Gardiner's Book , De verâ Obedi ...
Pagina 18
... mind in the adoption of the Lu- theran principles was slow , circumspect , and conscientious ; he renounced no doctrine till after a rigid examination ; accepted none without long consideration . How far his opinions advan- ced in ...
... mind in the adoption of the Lu- theran principles was slow , circumspect , and conscientious ; he renounced no doctrine till after a rigid examination ; accepted none without long consideration . How far his opinions advan- ced in ...
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Abbé Albigenses ancient Angrogna Anne Boleyn appears argument Arian Aristophanes Athens Audoin believe Bishop body Boudh Burmans cause century character Christian church circumstances Cochin-China consider contagious court Cranmer Cyprian death Demosthenes dicasts disease divine doctrine effect England English evidence fact faith father favour feelings give Greek MSS ground hand Holy honour human impotent poor interest Isocrates Judson king labour Lady Castlemaine land Latin letter living Lord Lysias Manicheans matter means ment mind mode moral nation nature never object observed occasion opinion passage Pepys persecution persons Piedmont plague Pomaretto poor Pope present priests principles produced proof Protestant racter Rangoon readers reason religion Roman Catholic says scarcely Scripture seventh verse Sister Nativity Spain spirit supposed Tertullian testimony things tion truth Vaudois Walafrid Strabo Waldenses whole witness words writings XXXIII