The Quarterly Review, Volume 102J. Murray, 1857 |
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Page 24
... reason why men should surrender the control of affairs which they are competent to control . At no stage , therefore , of their gradual transition into a state of tutelage is it probable that they transferred gratuitously and without ...
... reason why men should surrender the control of affairs which they are competent to control . At no stage , therefore , of their gradual transition into a state of tutelage is it probable that they transferred gratuitously and without ...
Page 104
... reason why doors should be the distinction between free and appro- priated seats ; and when the Ecclesiologist asserts that doors make the church hotter in summer and not necessarily warmer in winter , he argues as one whose only ...
... reason why doors should be the distinction between free and appro- priated seats ; and when the Ecclesiologist asserts that doors make the church hotter in summer and not necessarily warmer in winter , he argues as one whose only ...
Page 454
... reason to believe that the picture in its outlines was a true representation of his daily life . A large part , indeed , of the fascination of the book con- sists in the sincerity which pervades its holiness . There are no affected ...
... reason to believe that the picture in its outlines was a true representation of his daily life . A large part , indeed , of the fascination of the book con- sists in the sincerity which pervades its holiness . There are no affected ...
Contents
History of the Irish PoorLaw in connexion with | 59 |
British Tea Plantations in the Himalaya with a Nar | 126 |
Prælectiones Academicæ Oxonii habitæ A Joanne | 204 |
Copyright | |
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