The Christian Examiner, 74. kötetCrosby, Nichols, & Company, 1863 |
Részletek a könyvből
170. oldal
... learned authors on the English language who themselves write execrable English : this , too , may be because their at- tention is fixed on the construction of the language , instead of their energies being engaged in the use of it , in ...
... learned authors on the English language who themselves write execrable English : this , too , may be because their at- tention is fixed on the construction of the language , instead of their energies being engaged in the use of it , in ...
171. oldal
... learned priest , but also a most learned lawyer ; he had knowledge enough to confute his questioners , and when he pleased , he had art enough to confound them . He was offered books in abundance , but he had little need of them , and ...
... learned priest , but also a most learned lawyer ; he had knowledge enough to confute his questioners , and when he pleased , he had art enough to confound them . He was offered books in abundance , but he had little need of them , and ...
174. oldal
... learned dupes . How success could have been expected otherwise than by miracle is to us a marvel . The Catholic Irish have intensely the religious temperament , and they have been always ardently attached to the Church of Rome . This ...
... learned dupes . How success could have been expected otherwise than by miracle is to us a marvel . The Catholic Irish have intensely the religious temperament , and they have been always ardently attached to the Church of Rome . This ...
176. oldal
... Learned men have impeached the originality of this book , both as to its learning and its argument ; but all candid read- ers will confess that there is a polemical bitterness in it which is all the author's own . His work , on a ...
... Learned men have impeached the originality of this book , both as to its learning and its argument ; but all candid read- ers will confess that there is a polemical bitterness in it which is all the author's own . His work , on a ...
207. oldal
... learned men in St. Augustine's time , as a thing which might be defended , notwithstanding the apparent absurdity which the vulgar find in it . It was Descartes , however , who developed this theory , and gave it celebrity . He allows ...
... learned men in St. Augustine's time , as a thing which might be defended , notwithstanding the apparent absurdity which the vulgar find in it . It was Descartes , however , who developed this theory , and gave it celebrity . He allows ...
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