Essays biographical, historical and miscellaneous, contributed chiefly to the Edinburgh and Quarterly reviews, 2권Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, and Roberts, 1858 |
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70개의 결과 중 1 - 5개
2 페이지
... England , as Henry VIII . settled it , was a sort of bastard Popery Popery without the Pope . Its confession of faith remained substantially the same as it had been pre- viously to the rupture . Its hierarchy retained all their former ...
... England , as Henry VIII . settled it , was a sort of bastard Popery Popery without the Pope . Its confession of faith remained substantially the same as it had been pre- viously to the rupture . Its hierarchy retained all their former ...
1 페이지
... England dates from the very dawn of the Reformation . Our early British schoolmen never spared either the vices of the clergy or the pomp of their ritual services . Wickliffe and the Lollards were on nothing more severe than on the ...
... England dates from the very dawn of the Reformation . Our early British schoolmen never spared either the vices of the clergy or the pomp of their ritual services . Wickliffe and the Lollards were on nothing more severe than on the ...
2 페이지
... England , as Henry VIII . settled it , was a sort of bastard Popery Popery without the Pope . Its confession of faith remained substantially the same as it had been pre- viously to the rupture . Its hierarchy retained all their former ...
... England , as Henry VIII . settled it , was a sort of bastard Popery Popery without the Pope . Its confession of faith remained substantially the same as it had been pre- viously to the rupture . Its hierarchy retained all their former ...
4 페이지
... when the Episcopal Church of England was select- ing for its theological teachers divines ordained to the ministry by Presbyters - when the Presbyterian Churches of Germany and Switzerland were con- sidering the readiest 4 THE PURITANS .
... when the Episcopal Church of England was select- ing for its theological teachers divines ordained to the ministry by Presbyters - when the Presbyterian Churches of Germany and Switzerland were con- sidering the readiest 4 THE PURITANS .
5 페이지
... England - when all were convinced that it is neither in ceremonies nor in ordinances , but in the profession of a common faith and a common charity , that true Church - union consists- at this very moment restless spirits were putting ...
... England - when all were convinced that it is neither in ceremonies nor in ordinances , but in the profession of a common faith and a common charity , that true Church - union consists- at this very moment restless spirits were putting ...
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appear appointed Arica arms artillery artillery and engineers Austria battalion become Bengal Bishop British British India cadets Callao candidates Canterac Captain cavalry chief Church of England civil clergy Colonel Miller command commission Commissioners corps course Court duty enter establishment European officers examination faith Father Ambrose favour force former France Franz guns hand Hindoo horses hundred India infantry institutions instruction land lieutenants Lord Cochrane Lord William Bentinck Louise Mahomedan matter ment military education military schools mind Minister native army native officers never non-commissioned officers Ocoña opinion party pass patriots persons Pisco Polytechnic provinces Prussia Punjab Puritans rank received Reformation regiments render répétiteurs Royalists San Martin Sandhurst scarcely Sepoy sion soldiers Spaniards staff school subadar subjects taken Talcahuano thee thou thousand tion took troops village whole Woolwich young
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16 페이지 - Ireland, or any other your highness' dominions and countries : and to visit, reform, redress, order, correct and amend all such errors, heresies, schisms, abuses, offences, contempts and enormities whatsoever, which by any manner of spiritual or ecclesiastical power, authority or jurisdiction can or may lawfully be reformed, ordered, redressed, corrected, restrained or amended...
199 페이지 - I take this fitting occasion of recording my strong and deliberate opinion, that in the exercise of a wise and sound policy the British Government is bound not to put aside or neglect such rightful opportunities of acquiring territory or revenue as may from time to time present themselves...
195 페이지 - Let Britain be subjugated by a foreign power to-morrow ; let the people be excluded from all share in the government, from public honours, from every office of high trust or emolument, and let them in every situation be considered as unworthy of trust, and all their knowledge and all their literature, sacred and profane, would not save them from becoming, in another generation or two, a low-minded, deceitful, and dishonest race.
46 페이지 - I am forced, with all humility, and yet plainly, to profess, that I cannot with safe conscience, and without the offence of the majesty of God, give my assent to the suppressing of the said exercises: much less can I send out any injunction for the utter and universal subversion of the same.
186 페이지 - We exclude them from every situation of trust and emolument ; we confine them to the lowest offices, with scarcely a bare subsistence ; and even these are left in their hands from necessity, because Europeans are utterly incapable of filling them. We treat them as an inferior race of beings.
194 페이지 - ... more secure from violence; they cannot be wantonly punished, or their property seized, by persons in power, and their taxation is on the whole lighter. But, on the other hand, they have no share in making laws for themselves, little in administering them, except in very subordinate offices; they can rise to no high station, civil or military; they are everywhere regarded as an inferior race, and often rather as vassals or servants than as the ancient owners and masters of the country.
185 페이지 - They seem to last where nothing else lasts. Dynasty after dynasty tumbles down; revolution succeeds revolution; but the village community remains 'the same This union of the village communities, each one forming a separate little state in itself, has, I conceive, contributed more than any other cause to the preservation of the people of India, through all the revolutions and changes which they have suffered, and is in a high degree conducive to their happiness, and to the enjoyment of a great portion...
46 페이지 - If it be your Majesty's pleasure, for this or any other cause, to remove me out of this place, I will, with all humility, yield thereunto, and render again to your Majesty that I received of the same. . . . Bear with me, I beseech you, Madam, if I choose rather to offend your earthly majesty, than to offend the heavenly majesty of God.
195 페이지 - Nations always take a part with their government, whether free or despotic, against foreigners. Against an invasion of foreigners the national character is always engaged, and in such a cause the people often contend as strenuously in the defence of a despotic, as of a free government. It is not the arbitrary power of a national sovereign, but subjugation to a foreign one, that destroys national character and extinguishes national spirit.
102 페이지 - They were a strange medley of persons, differing in all their habits, notions and ideas, from those with whom he had previously been accustomed to mix ; but Miller was too much a man of the world to make any display of the disgust which certain of their peculiarities failed not to excite ; and he was too enthusiastic in the cause to abandon his profession, because it presented an exterior somewhat more rude than his previous imagination had bestowed upon it. On the contrary, he appears to have readily...