The Quarterly Review, Volume 28John Murray, 1823 |
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Página 6
... hand . He tells us indeed of an Irishman who , under the inexplicable name of Shady Iland , preached at Boston , and held all his meetings at night , without candles , because , he said , he was the light , and all other light was ...
... hand . He tells us indeed of an Irishman who , under the inexplicable name of Shady Iland , preached at Boston , and held all his meetings at night , without candles , because , he said , he was the light , and all other light was ...
Página 9
... hands and feet become cold ; and yet the pulse is as formerly , though sometimes rather slower . Some grow weak , so as not to be able to stand , but do not lose their speech altogether , They continue in that state from one hour to ...
... hands and feet become cold ; and yet the pulse is as formerly , though sometimes rather slower . Some grow weak , so as not to be able to stand , but do not lose their speech altogether , They continue in that state from one hour to ...
Página 13
... the person thus admitted into the church , laying his hand upon his breast and answering for himself , which they conceive essential to to the sacrament . They seldom marry out of their Gregoire History of Religious Sects . 15.
... the person thus admitted into the church , laying his hand upon his breast and answering for himself , which they conceive essential to to the sacrament . They seldom marry out of their Gregoire History of Religious Sects . 15.
Página 15
... hand ? One of the brothers was mad enough to declare he would ascend bodily into Heaven , in the sight of the people : it is said so many clung to him for the pur- pose of partaking in his ascension , that they furnished him with a fair ...
... hand ? One of the brothers was mad enough to declare he would ascend bodily into Heaven , in the sight of the people : it is said so many clung to him for the pur- pose of partaking in his ascension , that they furnished him with a fair ...
Página 16
... hands . To the dis- grace of the government under which he lived , this fellow continued this life during twenty years , with no other interruption than that of a short imprisonment now and then ; and , such is the credulity of mankind ...
... hands . To the dis- grace of the government under which he lived , this fellow continued this life during twenty years , with no other interruption than that of a short imprisonment now and then ; and , such is the credulity of mankind ...
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ancient appears Arago Archibald Edmonstone Archipelago assembly Avignon believe Bencoolen Buonaparte Buonaparte's called Captain Franklin cause Champollion character Christian church circumstances colonies conduct constitution containing Dendera doubt Duke of Orleans Egypt endeavoured England English Enterprize Europe fact favour feelings France French French revolution give Greece Greek Gregoire heart honour important inhabitants instance interest islands king labour language laws letter liberty Lord Madame Campan manner Marie Antoinette means ment mind ministers moral nation nature navigation never nutmeg O'Meara object observed opinion original Paris party perhaps persons Pindar political poor possession present principles produce Ptolemy queen racter readers religion respect revolution river royal says Shendi ships Sir Hudson Lowe slaves society Spain spirit supposed Sylla temple Theophilanthropists thing tion truth Whigs whole words writing zodiac
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 392 - Doctor particularly remarked the sepulchral tone of our voices, which he requested us to make more cheerful if possible, unconscious that his own partook of the same key.
Página 267 - A Speech delivered on the 24th of May, 1822, before the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, explanatory of the Measures which have been successfully pursued in St. John's Parish, Glasgow, for the Extinction of its compulsory Pauperism; with an Appendix.
Página 266 - Vestiges of Ancient Manners and Customs discoverable in Modern Italy and Sicily.
Página 395 - Upon entering the now desolate building we had the satisfaction of embracing Captain Franklin, but no words can convey an idea of the filth and wretchedness that met our eyes on looking around. Our own misery had stolen upon us by degrees and we were accustomed to the contemplation of each other's emaciated figures, but the ghastly countenances, dilated eyeballs, and sepulchral voices of Captain Franklin and those with him were more than we could at first bear.
Página 157 - ... since all the lands in question being indisputably acknowledged to belong of right to the Crown of Spain, no settlements of that kind, or the population which would follow, could be allowed.
Página 8 - Surely the Lord is in this place. This is none other but the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.
Página 379 - Indeed, we have already mentioned, that the heat is abstracted most rapidly from the body during strong breezes, and most of those who have perished from cold in this country, have fallen a sacrifice to their being overtaken on a lake or other unsheltered place, by a storm of wind. The intense colds were, however, detrimental to us in another way. The trees froze to their very centres, and became as hard as stones, and more difficult to cut. Some of the axes were broken daily, and by the end of the...
Página 318 - ... hill was comprised under this name,) seems unquestionably to have been the northern summit; and in this Mr. Burton acquiesces. Now it follows that the title of Capitolinus was much more appropriate to Jupiter when seated on the Capitolium than on the Arx. 2d. The passage in Virgil, where the actual appearance of the hill is contrasted with what it was under Evander, leads to the same conclusion : — ' Hinc ad Tarpeiam sedem, et Capitolia ducit, Aurea nunc, olim sylvestribus horrida dumis.' The...
Página 528 - Light, a stream from the fountain of heavenly Wisdom and Love. This is the evidence which sustains the faith of thousands, who never read and cannot understand the learned books of Christian apologists, who want, perhaps, words to explain the ground of their belief, but whose faith is of adamantine firmness, who hold the gospel with a conviction more intimate and unwavering than mere arguments ever produced.
Página 465 - Unexampled barbarity to leave an unhappy and sickly infant eight years old in a great room, locked and bolted in, with no other resource than a broken bell which he never rang, so greatly did he dread the people whom its sound would have brought to him ! He preferred wanting everything to the sight of his persecutors.