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" Distinctions of colour are of his ordination. It is he who gives existence. In your temples, to his name the voice is raised in prayer : in a house of images, where the bell is shaken, still he is the object of adoration. "
Memoirs of India - Page 475
by Robert Grenville Wallace - 1824
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A View of the Brahminical Religion: In Its Confirmation of the Truth of the ...

John Bayley Sommers Carwithen - Brahmanism - 1810 - 352 pages
...are' equally in his presence. Distin&ions of color are of his ordination. To vilify the religions or customs of other men, is to set at nought the pleasure of the Almighty. When we deface a pi£lure, we naturally incur the resentment of the Painter; and justly has the Poet said — presume...
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An Historical Disquisition Concerning the Knowledge which the Ancients Had ...

William Robertson - India - 1812 - 422 pages
...presence. Distinctions of colours are of his ordination. It is he who gives existence* In your temples, to his name, the voice is raised in prayer; in a house...the religion and customs of other men, is to set at naught the pleasure of the Almighty. When we deface a picture, we naturally incur the resentment of...
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The works of William Robertson, D.D. To which is prefixed, an ..., Volume 12

William Robertson - 1817 - 432 pages
...presence. Distinctions of colours are " of his ordination. It is he who gives existence. " In your temples, to his Name, the voice is raised in "prayer; in a...the religion and customs of other men, is to set at " naught the pleasure of the Almighty. When we de" face a picture, we naturally incur the resentment...
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An Historical Disquisition Concerning the Knowledge which the Ancients Had ...

William Robertson - India - 1817 - 430 pages
...presence. Distinctions of colours are M of his ordination. It is he who gives existence. " In your temples, to his Name, the voice is raised in " prayer ; in...shaken, still He is the object of adoration. To vilify M the religion and customs of other men, is to set at " naught the pleasure of the Almighty. When we...
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The Works of William Robertson ...: History of India

William Robertson - America - 1817 - 450 pages
...presence. Distinctions of colours are " of his ordination. It is he who gives existence. " In your temples, to his Name, the voice is raised in " prayer; in a house of images, where the bell is M shaken, still He is the object of adoration. To vilify " the religion and customs of other men, is...
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The Works of William Robertson: Historical disquisition concerning the ...

William Robertson, Alexander Stewart - America - 1820 - 430 pages
...presence. Distinctions of colours are of his ordination. It is He who gives existence. In your temples, to his Name the voice is raised in prayer; in a house...the religion and customs of other men, is to set at naught the pleasure of the Almighty. When we deface a picture, we naturally incur the resentment of...
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An Historical Disquisition Concerning the Knowledge which the Ancients Had ...

William Robertson - India - 1822 - 368 pages
...existence. In your temples, to his name, the voice is raised to prayer; in a house of images where the bf-11 is shaken, still he is the object of adoration. To...the religion and customs of other men, is to set at naught the pleasure of thn Almighty. When we deface a picture, we naturally incur the resentment of...
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Fifteen Years in India; Or, Sketches of a Soldier's Life: Being an Attempt ...

Robert Grenville Wallace - India - 1823 - 710 pages
...divine, you will there be instructed that God is the God of all mankind, not the God of Mahomedans alone. The Pagan and the Mussulman are equally in...where the bell is shaken, still he is the object of sF adoration. To vilify the religion and customs of other men, is to set at nought the pleasure of...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 29

English literature - 1823 - 616 pages
...is shaken : — still he is the object of our adoration. To vilify, therefore, the religion, or the customs of other men, is to set at nought the pleasure of the Almighty."' — vol. ip 52. This insane and bigoted conduct of Aurungzebe led to the utter overthrow of Malwa....
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 29

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - English literature - 1823 - 636 pages
...is shaken : — still he is the object of our adoration. To vilify, therefore, the religion, or the customs of other men, is to set at nought the pleasure of the Almighty."' — vol. ip 52. This insane and bigoted conduct of Aurungzebe led to the utter overthrow of Malwa....
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