The Eclectic review. vol. 1-New [8th], Volume 6, Part 11810 |
From inside the book
Page 55
... established church . ' ( p . 153. ) He utterly disapproves of such ' a medley of churchmen and dissenters ; ' he has no notion of such bye - paths ' of doing good ; he detests such unnatu- ral confederacies ' with a new fanatical ...
... established church . ' ( p . 153. ) He utterly disapproves of such ' a medley of churchmen and dissenters ; ' he has no notion of such bye - paths ' of doing good ; he detests such unnatu- ral confederacies ' with a new fanatical ...
Page 57
... established by a convocation of English bull- dogs ! ( 636. ) He consoles himself and Dr. Wake by obser- ving , that their common foe writes with as little strength of argument as ever man did , ' ( p . 212 ) and intimates to Mr. Elstob ...
... established by a convocation of English bull- dogs ! ( 636. ) He consoles himself and Dr. Wake by obser- ving , that their common foe writes with as little strength of argument as ever man did , ' ( p . 212 ) and intimates to Mr. Elstob ...
Page 61
... establish a criterion for unborn reviewers , who should be compelled to shew their taste and judge- ment ' with the duchess of Grafton , by highly approving his- epistolary style . Be this as it may , it is quite certain that neither ...
... establish a criterion for unborn reviewers , who should be compelled to shew their taste and judge- ment ' with the duchess of Grafton , by highly approving his- epistolary style . Be this as it may , it is quite certain that neither ...
Page 65
... established , as to be admitted by the advo- cates of the common reading . But such a fact as this , a fact which would have force in ordinary cases and with ordinary men like ourselves , makes no impression on such extraordinary ...
... established , as to be admitted by the advo- cates of the common reading . But such a fact as this , a fact which would have force in ordinary cases and with ordinary men like ourselves , makes no impression on such extraordinary ...
Page 67
... established Latin version . By them he was goaded into a promise , certainly not a very judicious one , to in- sert the passage in his next edition , provided one Greek manuscript could be discovered which contained it . Most ...
... established Latin version . By them he was goaded into a promise , certainly not a very judicious one , to in- sert the passage in his next edition , provided one Greek manuscript could be discovered which contained it . Most ...
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acid admirable afford ammonia ancient angle animal appear Bishop bullion cause character Christ Christian church church of England coloured Columbiad considerable contains discourse divine doctrine edition effect employed England English engraved equal Euclid exhibited fact favour Francis Baily genius gold Granville Sharp Holy honour hydrogen important India Inquisition instance interesting intitled judgement labours language late learned less letters Lord manner means ment merits mind moral muriatic acid nation nature neral object observations opinion oxygen Paganism passage persons Pharez philosophical piety poem poet political portion present principles produced profession published quarto racter readers reason religion religious remarks respect Royal Sermon shew Socinian Spain spirit supposed thing thought tical tion translation treatise truth verse volume Vulgate whole William Hyde Wollaston writer
Popular passages
Page 108 - ... sun. And behold a man bent with age coming from the way of the wilderness leaning on a staff. And Abraham arose, and met him, and said unto him, ' Turn in, I pray thee, and wash thy feet, and tarry all night ; and thou shall arise early in the morning, and go on thy way.' And the man said, 'Nay; for I will abide under this tree.