The British Quarterly Review, Volume 39Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1864 - Christianity |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 35
Page 7
... learned or literary studies , and especially that no man occupied in the newspaper or periodical press , shall ever speak of Nonconformist authorship otherwise than disparagingly and scornfully , and shall avail himself of every ...
... learned or literary studies , and especially that no man occupied in the newspaper or periodical press , shall ever speak of Nonconformist authorship otherwise than disparagingly and scornfully , and shall avail himself of every ...
Page 19
... learned and for the populace ; for the senti- mental and the fashionable ; for the devout and the worldly . They recognise clearly the importance of instilling into the minds of the young their own notions of the character and events of ...
... learned and for the populace ; for the senti- mental and the fashionable ; for the devout and the worldly . They recognise clearly the importance of instilling into the minds of the young their own notions of the character and events of ...
Page 22
... learned from it the lesson that God had " given such power unto Man : " and as our Lord in no way ' found fault with this view of the matter , we must conceive that it was the teaching which he intended it to convey ; that he meant to ...
... learned from it the lesson that God had " given such power unto Man : " and as our Lord in no way ' found fault with this view of the matter , we must conceive that it was the teaching which he intended it to convey ; that he meant to ...
Page 42
... learned doctors of Salerno . Their enigmatical sentence runs thus : - ' Not to be cured , yet not incurable ! The only remedy that remains Is the blood that flows from a maiden's veins Who of her own free will shall die And give her ...
... learned doctors of Salerno . Their enigmatical sentence runs thus : - ' Not to be cured , yet not incurable ! The only remedy that remains Is the blood that flows from a maiden's veins Who of her own free will shall die And give her ...
Page 45
... learned long since ! He comes . In the twilight he will not see The difference between his priest and me . ' 45 Prince Henry enters , and kneeling at the confessional to the mock priest , entreats his benediction . Lucifer promises him ...
... learned long since ! He comes . In the twilight he will not see The difference between his priest and me . ' 45 Prince Henry enters , and kneeling at the confessional to the mock priest , entreats his benediction . Lucifer promises him ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Amy Robsart appear authority barons become Bishop blank verse British Catholic cause character Christian Church Church of England clergy Colonel Crawley common court Court-martial Crawley Darjeeling degeneration Divine doctrine doubt Earl effect Elizabeth England English Europe Evangelical evidence evil existence fact faith favour feeling France French friends give Government hands heart Henry Himalayas honour human influence interest Italy King labour liberty Lilley London Lord Lord Palmerston Madagascar Majesty's Government ment Mhow mind Minister Montfort moral nation nature never noble Nonconformist opinion Parliament party passed persons poem poet popular present principle Protestant Puritans Queen question Radama II readers relation religious result Schleswig Scripture seems sentry Shakspere Simon de Montfort songs spirit supposed things thought tion treaty true truth Turin verse volume Whigs whole words writer