The British Review, and London Critical Journal, Band 7Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1816 |
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Seite 2
... possessing at once the most op- posite and irreconcileable properties . Acids and alkalies the . most corrosive are combined without neutralizing each other . Mr. Cunningham has undermined the church without gratifying the dissenters ...
... possessing at once the most op- posite and irreconcileable properties . Acids and alkalies the . most corrosive are combined without neutralizing each other . Mr. Cunningham has undermined the church without gratifying the dissenters ...
Seite 4
... possessed in favour of whatever should possess the sanction of his name , and though the present work is by no means a finished performance , we were not disappointed . It is , we confess , occasionally trifling , and sometimes deals in ...
... possessed in favour of whatever should possess the sanction of his name , and though the present work is by no means a finished performance , we were not disappointed . It is , we confess , occasionally trifling , and sometimes deals in ...
Seite 37
... possessed men formed in a better school , and whose names will always live an eternal honour to the period of his reign . In works of polemical divinity the reign of James the Second is wholly unequalled . The important controversy ...
... possessed men formed in a better school , and whose names will always live an eternal honour to the period of his reign . In works of polemical divinity the reign of James the Second is wholly unequalled . The important controversy ...
Seite 38
... possessed a distinguishing character of their own in being modelled , like those of the primitive Fathers , from the language of the sacred Scriptures , in such a manner that Biblical phrases and allusions were habitually interwoven ...
... possessed a distinguishing character of their own in being modelled , like those of the primitive Fathers , from the language of the sacred Scriptures , in such a manner that Biblical phrases and allusions were habitually interwoven ...
Seite 39
... possessed scarcely any relish for the writers of Greece and Rome , Yet , in his time , the learned languages , though not very deeply studied , began to regain much of their long - lost elegance and beauty . The general politeness of ...
... possessed scarcely any relish for the writers of Greece and Rome , Yet , in his time , the learned languages , though not very deeply studied , began to regain much of their long - lost elegance and beauty . The general politeness of ...
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admiration admit Afghauns ancient appear assertion baptism Belsham Bishop Horsley called Catacombs of Paris character Christ Christian church Church of England constitution divine doctrine Ebionites England expression faith favour feel fluxions France French give Godwin heart Hebrew Hebrew Christians holy honour human John king knowledge language learned letter liberty literature Lope de Vega Lord Lord Byron manner Mant Mant's means Melancthon ment Milton mind minister moral nation nature never object observed opinion Parisina party passage Persian persons Philips poem poet poetry political possessed present Priestley principles profession racter readers reason regeneration religion remarks respect scarcely Scripture sentiments Siege of Corinth Sir John Malcolm society Socinian Spain specimen spirit taste thing thought tion tract truth Unitarian universal Vendeans Vols whole words writers