The Letters of Peter Plymley to His Brother Abraham: Who Lives in the Country, Together with Selected Writings, Sermons, and SpeechesDent, 1929 - 296 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 34
עמוד 3
... thought of preventing the Protestants from fighting his battles ; and gained accordingly some of his most splendid victories by the talents of his Protestant generals . No power in Europe , but yourselves , has ever thought for these ...
... thought of preventing the Protestants from fighting his battles ; and gained accordingly some of his most splendid victories by the talents of his Protestant generals . No power in Europe , but yourselves , has ever thought for these ...
עמוד 110
... thought , as if there were some- thing in the faculty of thought that rendered the exercise of it incompatible with useful and successful practice . Sometimes a plan , which would not suit the official person's interest , is without ...
... thought , as if there were some- thing in the faculty of thought that rendered the exercise of it incompatible with useful and successful practice . Sometimes a plan , which would not suit the official person's interest , is without ...
עמוד 123
... thought it would be wise to diminish their number , and render them more lax than they are ; and be it observed , that these latitudinarians leant to Arminianism rather than to high Calvinism ; and thought , consequently , that the ...
... thought it would be wise to diminish their number , and render them more lax than they are ; and be it observed , that these latitudinarians leant to Arminianism rather than to high Calvinism ; and thought , consequently , that the ...
תוכן
Benthams Book of Fallacies | 89 |
Persecuting Bishops | 115 |
PoorLaws | 135 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
11 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Abraham absurd abuse admit answer argument Arminian Articles believe better bill Bishop of London Bishop of Peterborough Calvinists Catholic emancipation character chimney sweepers Christian Church of England Clergy clergyman Combe Florey common sense compelled consequence Curate danger disgrace Dissenters doubt duty Edinburgh Review enemies English evil exist favour fear feelings folly friends game laws gentlemen give happiness hatred holy honour human impossible Ireland Irish justice King labour liberty live Lord Castlereagh Lord Hawkesbury Lordship mankind manner master means measure ment ministers moral nature never oath object opinions opposed oppression panel parish Parliament parochial Perceval persons Plymley poachers poor Poor-Laws poulterers present principles Protestant question reason Reform religion religious respect sect slightest society Spencer Perceval spirit suppose Sydney Smith thing twenty virtue whole wisdom wise wish