The Methodist Quarterly Review, 30±ÇG. Lane and P.P. Sanford, 1848 |
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... never existed , can still conceive facts in the concrete , and represent them instinct with their peculiar life . In studying a past age he is not content with appending to a rigid digest of facts cer- tain appropriate reflections , but ...
... never existed , can still conceive facts in the concrete , and represent them instinct with their peculiar life . In studying a past age he is not content with appending to a rigid digest of facts cer- tain appropriate reflections , but ...
14 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never being tedious , and fixes the pleased attention of the reader when the labored splendor of Gibbon would fatigue from its monotony . Mr. Prescott has the characteristic merits of Robertson with other merits superadded . His style ...
... never being tedious , and fixes the pleased attention of the reader when the labored splendor of Gibbon would fatigue from its monotony . Mr. Prescott has the characteristic merits of Robertson with other merits superadded . His style ...
24 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never appear as bundles of evil qualities , but as men . In the one Mr. Prescott places his readers in a position to understand the moral condition of his personages , as that condition was influenced by the current practices of their ...
... never appear as bundles of evil qualities , but as men . In the one Mr. Prescott places his readers in a position to understand the moral condition of his personages , as that condition was influenced by the current practices of their ...
26 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never gave up his project , but renewed his attempts to perform the " impossible " with the coolness of one setting about a common - place enterprise . It is needless to say that this idea made him unscrupulous , and silenced all ...
... never gave up his project , but renewed his attempts to perform the " impossible " with the coolness of one setting about a common - place enterprise . It is needless to say that this idea made him unscrupulous , and silenced all ...
43 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never - satisfied and never - yielding tyranny - the kó¥ëaoiv alíviov — of its own raging passions , or pas- sional attractions . Hence it must begin its Christian course by opposing nature , and opposing itself . It must go back to God ...
... never - satisfied and never - yielding tyranny - the kó¥ëaoiv alíviov — of its own raging passions , or pas- sional attractions . Hence it must begin its Christian course by opposing nature , and opposing itself . It must go back to God ...
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