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Mrs. Sandham's Twin Sisters , 251 INDICATED BY THE CONDITION OF 16. Mrs.
Ellis ' Daughters of England , 251 WOMEN . By E. D. Sanborn , Professor 17.
Harpers ' Family Library , No. 154 , 253 of Latin language and Literature , Dart 18.
Mrs. Sandham's Twin Sisters , 251 INDICATED BY THE CONDITION OF 16. Mrs.
Ellis ' Daughters of England , 251 WOMEN . By E. D. Sanborn , Professor 17.
Harpers ' Family Library , No. 154 , 253 of Latin language and Literature , Dart 18.
Page 13
According to the interpretation we are considering , the meaning of this petition ,
divested of its figurative language , must be , My Father , if it be not possible for
me to survive this agony in the garden , if it be thy will that I never reach the cross
...
According to the interpretation we are considering , the meaning of this petition ,
divested of its figurative language , must be , My Father , if it be not possible for
me to survive this agony in the garden , if it be thy will that I never reach the cross
...
Page 16
It was in reference to such a state of devotional feeling as this , that I once heard
Dr. Payson of Portland say , that he pitied the Christian who never had desires in
prayer which he could not clothe in language . Another passage worthy of notice
...
It was in reference to such a state of devotional feeling as this , that I once heard
Dr. Payson of Portland say , that he pitied the Christian who never had desires in
prayer which he could not clothe in language . Another passage worthy of notice
...
Page 22
The dead languages in which their literature is buried cpnsume the best years of
our choicest youth . An acquaintance with their poetry , philosophy , architecture ,
and sculpture is regarded as indispensable to the formation of a perfect taste .
The dead languages in which their literature is buried cpnsume the best years of
our choicest youth . An acquaintance with their poetry , philosophy , architecture ,
and sculpture is regarded as indispensable to the formation of a perfect taste .
Page 27
The line to which we refer has been translated by Cicero , “ Ut illum efficeret
oratorem verborum , actoremque rerum " —that he might make Achilles in
language an orator , and in deeds , a hero . * We hear nothing in Homer of
reading and ...
The line to which we refer has been translated by Cicero , “ Ut illum efficeret
oratorem verborum , actoremque rerum " —that he might make Achilles in
language an orator , and in deeds , a hero . * We hear nothing in Homer of
reading and ...
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