The Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 5Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1965 - American periodicals |
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Page 268
... respect it has not the slightest claim . There is much , indeed , that is valuable in it ; but even that which is best , requires to be sifted and weighed before it can be adopted with safety . We have read the work faithfully and ...
... respect it has not the slightest claim . There is much , indeed , that is valuable in it ; but even that which is best , requires to be sifted and weighed before it can be adopted with safety . We have read the work faithfully and ...
Page 319
... respect which is usu- ally extended to the fallibility of all human judgments . Regarded as a collection of traditions , it is entitled to no respect whatever , especially when the monstrous pretension is set up , that these traditions ...
... respect which is usu- ally extended to the fallibility of all human judgments . Regarded as a collection of traditions , it is entitled to no respect whatever , especially when the monstrous pretension is set up , that these traditions ...
Page 383
... respect they are alike ; and from whatever cause the disproportion of a population to the subsisting faculty of a country may proceed , its effect of pauper- ism is the same . Many parts of Asia would exhibit , perhaps , as af- flicting ...
... respect they are alike ; and from whatever cause the disproportion of a population to the subsisting faculty of a country may proceed , its effect of pauper- ism is the same . Many parts of Asia would exhibit , perhaps , as af- flicting ...
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