The North American Review, Volumes 38-39O. Everett, 1834 |
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Page 7
... considered their dwelling - place as a family possession : he had become intimate with every tree that grew near it ; and it was with a bitter feeling that he gave it up to the stranger's hands . Immediately after the death of his ...
... considered their dwelling - place as a family possession : he had become intimate with every tree that grew near it ; and it was with a bitter feeling that he gave it up to the stranger's hands . Immediately after the death of his ...
Page 8
... considered his subject only in a religious point of view , it would be impossible to speak of Cowper without re- garding him in that relation . There must be a time in every man's life , we mean every good man , when he begins to act ...
... considered his subject only in a religious point of view , it would be impossible to speak of Cowper without re- garding him in that relation . There must be a time in every man's life , we mean every good man , when he begins to act ...
Page 10
... considered these incidents as supernatural intimations , and to have con- demned himself for neglecting them , as if they had been given by an articulate voice from on high . This weakness and frailty , however , were owing principally ...
... considered these incidents as supernatural intimations , and to have con- demned himself for neglecting them , as if they had been given by an articulate voice from on high . This weakness and frailty , however , were owing principally ...
Page 15
... considered him as a judicious and faithful dispenser of his bounty to the desti- tute , and who would not have entrusted it to incompetent hands . This is in our view the very spirit of religion . That messen- ger of Heaven dwells not ...
... considered him as a judicious and faithful dispenser of his bounty to the desti- tute , and who would not have entrusted it to incompetent hands . This is in our view the very spirit of religion . That messen- ger of Heaven dwells not ...
Page 18
... considered as a moral agent , and his conversion quoted as a genuine instance of the effect of the influences of religion . One would think , however , that admitting the justness of this distinction , it would be unsafe and undesirable ...
... considered as a moral agent , and his conversion quoted as a genuine instance of the effect of the influences of religion . One would think , however , that admitting the justness of this distinction , it would be unsafe and undesirable ...
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