| William Ellery Channing - 1894 - 1080 páginas
...on this subject, and is his best vindication from the charge we are now repelling. He says : — " Surely to every good and peaceable man, it must in...would it like him. doubtless, to be the messenger of and contentment, which is his chief intended business to all mankind, but that they resist and oppose... | |
| William Ellery Channing - 1900 - 1080 páginas
...on this subject, and is his best vindication from the charge we are now repelling. He says : — " Surely to every good and peaceable man, it must in nature needs be a hateful thing, to be the displcascr and molester of thousands ; much better would it like him, doubtless, to be the messenger... | |
| Charles J. Little - 1912 - 334 páginas
...its own sake and for the abuse and slander that it would surely bring upon him. Listen again : " For, surely, to every good and peaceable man, it must in...displeaser and molester of thousands ; much better would it please him, undoubtedly, to be the messenger of gladness and contentment, which is his chief intended... | |
| Charles J. Little - 1912 - 334 páginas
...its own sake and for the abuse and slander that it would surely bring upon him. Listen again : " For, surely, to every good and peaceable man, it must in...thing to be the displeaser and molester of thousands ; mjuch better would it please him, undoubtedly, to be the messenger of gladness and contentment, which... | |
| Elbert Nevius Sebring Thompson - 1914 - 228 páginas
...to sacrifice his ease and pleasure. He turned to controversy unwillingly; "for surely," he declared, "to every good and peaceable man, it must in nature...to be the messenger of gladness and contentment." 1 But his responsibilities had to be met; "when God commands to take the trumpet, and blow a dolorous... | |
| C. A. Patrides - 1989 - 370 páginas
...foremost precedent, in a statement immemorially voiced by all aspirants after the office of the prophet: Surely to every good and peaceable man it must in nature needs be a hatefull thing to be the displeaser, and molester of thousands; much better would it like him doubtlesse... | |
| Charles W. Durham, Kristin Pruitt McColgan - 1994 - 316 páginas
...Music." There he sees the call for justice as sounding harshly in the ears of many of his listeners: For surely to every good and peaceable man it must in...mankind, but that they resist and oppose their own pure happiness. But when God commands to take the trumpet and blow a dolorous or a jarring blast, it... | |
| Mike Sanders - 2001 - 632 páginas
...29. KATH. 261 On Superstition [Catherine Barmby] from The New Moral World, 1 May 1836, pp. 219-20. "Surely to every good and peaceable man, it must in...they resist and oppose their own true happiness." — JOHN MILTON. In contemplating the history of antiquity, and marking the gross idolotries, the cruelties,... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2001 - 528 páginas
...it is to cast down our strength and prosperity, or to fix them on a firmer and more august basis. " Surely to every good and peaceable man it must in...thing to be the displeaser and molester of thousands ; * * * but when God commands to take the trumpet and blow a dolorous or a jarring blast, it lies not... | |
| Victoria Silver - 2001 - 432 páginas
...which he knew would be grievous, brings him in bemoaning his lot, that he knew more than other men. For surely to every good and peaceable man it must in nature needs be a hatefull thing to be the displeaser, and molester of thousands; much better would it like him doubtlesse... | |
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