The New-York Review, Volumen6George Dearborn & Company, 1839 |
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Página 5
... institution of universities - the cultivation of the mo- dern languages , by multiplying books and extending the art ... institutions of mo- dern Europe , and the study of it , with the expositions both oral and written , contributed ...
... institution of universities - the cultivation of the mo- dern languages , by multiplying books and extending the art ... institutions of mo- dern Europe , and the study of it , with the expositions both oral and written , contributed ...
Página 21
... institutions , engen- dered by protestantism . Bold and passionate writers in France , Buchanan in Scotland , and even the Jesuits , dared to advocate tyrannicidal doctrines , to trace the corruptions of kingly power , and to affirm ...
... institutions , engen- dered by protestantism . Bold and passionate writers in France , Buchanan in Scotland , and even the Jesuits , dared to advocate tyrannicidal doctrines , to trace the corruptions of kingly power , and to affirm ...
Página 30
... institutions ; constitutional monarchists were insisting upon the theory of an original compact between prince and peo- ple ; Bacon uttered some clear and far - sighted maxims ; Hobbes made the happiness of the community his funda ...
... institutions ; constitutional monarchists were insisting upon the theory of an original compact between prince and peo- ple ; Bacon uttered some clear and far - sighted maxims ; Hobbes made the happiness of the community his funda ...
Página 51
... institutions - that they may have personal , political , or sectarian interests to be advanced by it . By thus eulogizing and elevating the character of the " pilgrim fathers , " they may hope to justify their separation from , and ...
... institutions - that they may have personal , political , or sectarian interests to be advanced by it . By thus eulogizing and elevating the character of the " pilgrim fathers , " they may hope to justify their separation from , and ...
Página 58
... institution , ) who shall have authority to depose their sovereign , either by war , or otherwise , if he seem to them to break the covenant , as the Ephori in Lacedæmon had . " By teaching that the government of the commonwealth must ...
... institution , ) who shall have authority to depose their sovereign , either by war , or otherwise , if he seem to them to break the covenant , as the Ephori in Lacedæmon had . " By teaching that the government of the commonwealth must ...
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Pasajes populares
Página 67 - Let men of God in courts and churches watch O'er such as do a toleration hatch ; Lest that ill egg bring forth a cockatrice, To poison all with heresy and vice.
Página 124 - A Popular Essay on subjects of Penal Law, and on uninterrupted Solitary Confinement at Labor, as contradistinguished to Solitary Confinement at Night and Joint Labor by Day, in a letter to John Bacon, Esquire, President of the Philadelphia Society for alleviating the miseries of Public Prisons.
Página 413 - When the college and appurtenances shall have been constructed, and supplied with plain and suitable furniture, and books, philosophical and experimental instruments and apparatus, and all other matters needful to carry my general design into execution ; the income issues and profits of so much...
Página 464 - Visits to Remarkable Places : Old Halls, Battle-Fields, and Scenes illustrative of Striking Passages in English History and Poetry. By WILLIAM HOWITT. 2 vols. square crown 8vo. with Wood Engravings, 25s. The Rural Life of England.
Página 10 - Rome itself, imposing, unbroken, unchangeable, radiating in equal expansion to every part of the earth, and directing its convergent curves to heaven. Round this were numbered, at unequal heights, the Baptistery, with its gates...
Página 66 - Tolerations of divers religions, or of one religion in segregant shapes. He that willingly assents to the last, if he examines his heart by daylight, his conscience will tell him, he is either an atheist, or an heretic, or an hypocrite, or at best a captive to some lust. Poly-piety is the greatest impiety in the world.
Página 214 - For in truth she is a Church beside herself, abounding in noble gifts and rightful titles, but unable to use them religiously ; crafty, obstinate, wilful, malicious, cruel, unnatural, as madmen are. Or rather she may be said to resemble a demoniac...
Página 174 - There it was that I found and visited the famous Galileo, grown old, a prisoner to the Inquisition for thinking in astronomy otherwise than the Franciscan and Dominican licensers thought.
Página 233 - Service, which Gavanti describes as being of very great antiquity. These usages certainly now do but sanction and encourage that direct worship of the Blessed Virgin and the Saints, which is the great practical offence of the Latin Church, and so are a serious evil ; but it is worth pointing out, that, as on the one hand they have more claim to be considered an integral part of the service, so on the other, more can be said towards their justification than for those addresses which are now especially...
Página 9 - In a villa overhanging the towers of Florence, on the steep slope of that lofty hill crowned by the mother city, the ancient Fiesole, in gardens which Tully might have envied, with Ficino, Landino, and Politian at his side, he delighted his hours of leisure with the beautiful visions of Platonic philosophy, for which the summer stillness of an Italian sky appears the most congenial accompaniment.