The British Quarterly Review, Volume 39Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1864 - Christianity |
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Page 13
... writing after this manner . Happy should we be could we express our- selves otherwise concerning men with whom we are at one sub- stantially in regard to the great substance and purpose of God's revelation to humanity . Good men we have ...
... writing after this manner . Happy should we be could we express our- selves otherwise concerning men with whom we are at one sub- stantially in regard to the great substance and purpose of God's revelation to humanity . Good men we have ...
Page 14
... Writing in June last , he says , - 6 For some years , as is well known , opinion within the University of Oxford set with great and ever - increasing force towards what must be called - however great the misnomer - a Liberal direction ...
... Writing in June last , he says , - 6 For some years , as is well known , opinion within the University of Oxford set with great and ever - increasing force towards what must be called - however great the misnomer - a Liberal direction ...
Page 26
... written by Paul , and much more . Still stronger is the exception taken by this class of persons against any attempt to settle this question which should require the clergy so to profess acceptance of the doctrine of the Church as not ...
... written by Paul , and much more . Still stronger is the exception taken by this class of persons against any attempt to settle this question which should require the clergy so to profess acceptance of the doctrine of the Church as not ...
Page 32
... writing which leads to a perpetual reiteration of the same truths or commonplaces , simply because there is some degree of skill required in uttering them in this artificial manner ? Any one who , after a long and exclusive attention to ...
... writing which leads to a perpetual reiteration of the same truths or commonplaces , simply because there is some degree of skill required in uttering them in this artificial manner ? Any one who , after a long and exclusive attention to ...
Page 35
... written , wherein our poets should be reviewed as representatives of our several tempers , feelings , opinions ; our different modes , in short , of looking upon human life , and reading the great riddle of existence . It might be ...
... written , wherein our poets should be reviewed as representatives of our several tempers , feelings , opinions ; our different modes , in short , of looking upon human life , and reading the great riddle of existence . It might be ...
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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