The British Quarterly Review, Volume 33Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1861 - Christianity |
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Page 10
... interest of a worldly kind to induce them to cling to orthodoxy , and fully able to avail themselves of the benefit of the luminous pathway which , he says , has been followed by the scholars of Germany , have , after long and anxious ...
... interest of a worldly kind to induce them to cling to orthodoxy , and fully able to avail themselves of the benefit of the luminous pathway which , he says , has been followed by the scholars of Germany , have , after long and anxious ...
Page 12
... interest . Dr. Williams accepts with a slight hesitation Bunsen's demand of 20,000 years as the lowest possible period that can be assigned for man's duration on the earth since his first appearance ; and though he reluctantly gives up ...
... interest . Dr. Williams accepts with a slight hesitation Bunsen's demand of 20,000 years as the lowest possible period that can be assigned for man's duration on the earth since his first appearance ; and though he reluctantly gives up ...
Page 34
... interest attached to it , and a fuss made about it , which are utterly ridiculous . Abstract the special divine element from these books , and what is there in the literature of the Hebrews more than in any other literature that its sum ...
... interest attached to it , and a fuss made about it , which are utterly ridiculous . Abstract the special divine element from these books , and what is there in the literature of the Hebrews more than in any other literature that its sum ...
Page 57
... interests of humanity , accordingly , are lost sight of , and concluded to be eternally subject to the un- wearying procession and inflexible order of physical laws . The Christian philosopher repudiates this conception of man , and of ...
... interests of humanity , accordingly , are lost sight of , and concluded to be eternally subject to the un- wearying procession and inflexible order of physical laws . The Christian philosopher repudiates this conception of man , and of ...
Page 90
... interest when he tries to get out of it . In short , no quality of the legitimate English novel is present in the tragic farce of Hadgi Stavros while it possesses every excellence of the French ' nouvellette . ' We should not trouble ...
... interest when he tries to get out of it . In short , no quality of the legitimate English novel is present in the tragic farce of Hadgi Stavros while it possesses every excellence of the French ' nouvellette . ' We should not trouble ...
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