New Englander and Yale Review, Volume 26Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight W.L. Kingsley, 1867 |
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Page 25
... speak of it as a system of spiritual rule - was at a low ebb . It seemed as if there were none so poor as to do it reverence . The Emperor Joseph II . of Austria introduced into his dominions reforms that fell little short of an utter ...
... speak of it as a system of spiritual rule - was at a low ebb . It seemed as if there were none so poor as to do it reverence . The Emperor Joseph II . of Austria introduced into his dominions reforms that fell little short of an utter ...
Page 28
... speak of do- mestic affairs , and would be as far from a situation of inde- pendence as it is claimed he would be were he a subject of the Italian king . Our conclusion is that the " logic of events " is hurrying the Pope to the coerced ...
... speak of do- mestic affairs , and would be as far from a situation of inde- pendence as it is claimed he would be were he a subject of the Italian king . Our conclusion is that the " logic of events " is hurrying the Pope to the coerced ...
Page 34
... speaking parents can be made to speak French as its mother - tongue , by simply giv- ing it a French nurse , and taking care that it learns no English . Children of Americans resident in foreign parts grow up bi- lingual , learning one ...
... speaking parents can be made to speak French as its mother - tongue , by simply giv- ing it a French nurse , and taking care that it learns no English . Children of Americans resident in foreign parts grow up bi- lingual , learning one ...
Page 35
... speak , it is only as we turn and reflect upon what we have spoken , that we recognize its reasons -- and then only very fragmentarily . Of the vocables composing our language , the larger part can have their history and mutations of ...
... speak , it is only as we turn and reflect upon what we have spoken , that we recognize its reasons -- and then only very fragmentarily . Of the vocables composing our language , the larger part can have their history and mutations of ...
Page 40
... speak it . It is wholly in their power and subject to their will . Every word has its form and meaning by our conventional consent ; if we choose to maintain both unchanged , nothing can touch them ; if we choose to alter either or both ...
... speak it . It is wholly in their power and subject to their will . Every word has its form and meaning by our conventional consent ; if we choose to maintain both unchanged , nothing can touch them ; if we choose to alter either or both ...
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adultery American Tract Society Apostle Article believe Bible bishops Boston brethren Brownist called Cambridge Platform character Christ Christian church civil communion Congregational Congregational Churches Congregationalism consociation Council Council of Trent Court crime divine divorce doctrine duty ecclesiastical elders England fact faith father feeling friends give gospel Haven heart human husband Irenæus Jesus judgment justified labor language learned liberty Lord marriage married matter means ment mind ministers moral nation nature negro never opinion Papal particular churches parties passage pastor Percival person philosophy Pope Presbyterian presbyters present principle Protestant Protestantism question readers reason regard religious respect Richard Mather Roman Catholic Rome Scriptures seems society soul speak spirit Sugenheim Synod Testament theological things thought tion truth Unitarian unto volume whole wife woman words worship writer York