The Christian Review, Volume 16Gould, Kendall & Lincoln, 1851 |
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Page 8
... passed away like the De- ism of England without leaving any deep furrows in the soil of the country . But so it was that French infidelity was pro- voked into being by religious abuses , religious fooleries , and religious pretensions ...
... passed away like the De- ism of England without leaving any deep furrows in the soil of the country . But so it was that French infidelity was pro- voked into being by religious abuses , religious fooleries , and religious pretensions ...
Page 17
... Passing from these associated and organized movements to others more generally providential , the first and unquestion- ably the most important which arrests our notice , is the ap- plication of a new motive power for the purposes of ...
... Passing from these associated and organized movements to others more generally providential , the first and unquestion- ably the most important which arrests our notice , is the ap- plication of a new motive power for the purposes of ...
Page 18
... passed in the first year of this century . The number of both these means of transportation now in use throughout the world it would be difficult to compute . A re- cent writer in the London Quarterly Review records the fact as having ...
... passed in the first year of this century . The number of both these means of transportation now in use throughout the world it would be difficult to compute . A re- cent writer in the London Quarterly Review records the fact as having ...
Page 34
... passed under our notice . On the 12th of October , 1755 , John Adams , writing to a friend , records the remarkable pre- diction - remarkable the whole letter must be called , as pro- ceeding from a young man not yet quite twenty - that ...
... passed under our notice . On the 12th of October , 1755 , John Adams , writing to a friend , records the remarkable pre- diction - remarkable the whole letter must be called , as pro- ceeding from a young man not yet quite twenty - that ...
Page 36
... passed on to his rest ; and Wordsworth sleeps among the hills and valleys of Westmoreland , which he has rendered immortal in song . That these and such as these are deemed the foremost among the Poets , is a fact to be accepted as a ...
... passed on to his rest ; and Wordsworth sleeps among the hills and valleys of Westmoreland , which he has rendered immortal in song . That these and such as these are deemed the foremost among the Poets , is a fact to be accepted as a ...
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