The British Critic, Volume 22William Beloe, Thomas Fanshaw Middleton, William Rowe Lyall, Robert Nares F. and C. Rivington, 1824 - Books Reviews of new British and European publications and correspondence from readers. |
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Page 5
... mind appeared in action and not in words : the people felt her power without being called upon to read it in formal tractates : and their conduct shewed that they preferred to act and suffer at the command of a practical despot , who ...
... mind appeared in action and not in words : the people felt her power without being called upon to read it in formal tractates : and their conduct shewed that they preferred to act and suffer at the command of a practical despot , who ...
Page 12
... mind against him than the as- surance that he had stirred up the Irish Papists to exercise hostilities upon his Protestant subjects . That the parliament . did not make known the examination of Lanerick is the surest of all proofs ...
... mind against him than the as- surance that he had stirred up the Irish Papists to exercise hostilities upon his Protestant subjects . That the parliament . did not make known the examination of Lanerick is the surest of all proofs ...
Page 22
... mind from a love of moral evi- dence and religious truth , and to raise up images , and cherish san- timents in total repugnance to the Gospel ; while the rewards and applause that follow academical honours , must inspire tempera and ...
... mind from a love of moral evi- dence and religious truth , and to raise up images , and cherish san- timents in total repugnance to the Gospel ; while the rewards and applause that follow academical honours , must inspire tempera and ...
Page 42
... mind may be noble , not the poor man who stands in his honourable post , but the envious hater of all superiority either in virtue or in rank ; the that fiend ambition , which almost rends asunder the very frame that it has to govern ...
... mind may be noble , not the poor man who stands in his honourable post , but the envious hater of all superiority either in virtue or in rank ; the that fiend ambition , which almost rends asunder the very frame that it has to govern ...
Page 43
... mind of persons who have been thus raised from insignificance . No reasoning can ever set aside this incontrovertible axiom of experience . Yet is there evil attending every expedient and policy , and therefore the conclusion from the ...
... mind of persons who have been thus raised from insignificance . No reasoning can ever set aside this incontrovertible axiom of experience . Yet is there evil attending every expedient and policy , and therefore the conclusion from the ...
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Common terms and phrases
admit appear argument Arminian better Bishop body C. J. Blomfield called Calvinist Catholic cause character Christ Christian Church Church of England circumstances clergy Colombia considered discourse divine doctrine duty Edward Daniel Clarke effect endeavour England English established evidence fact faith favour feel friends give Gospel Holy Holy Orders honour human important instance interest Ireland Irenĉus Irish Jarnac Jewitt king labour learning lecture Lord Macculloch manner means ment mind minister moral nature never object observations opinion original passage persons philosophical political possessed preached present principles produced proof prophecy prophets racter readers reason Redgauntlet regard religion religious remarks respect revelation rose nobles Scotland Scripture Sermon shew society Socinian specting spirit supposed thing tion truth University of Oxford volume Waldese whole words writers Yakutsk