| 1817 - 404 pàgines
...part of the course of a liheral education, over all those countries on which the gospel shines .' " If such works do really impart their own genuine spirit...if Christianity ought really and in good faith to he the supreme regent of all moral feclings; — then it is evident that the Iliad, and all hooks which... | |
| International peace society - 232 pàgines
...ought to be the practical consequence of such observations ! I may surely answer that I cannot ^ustly be required to assign that consequence. I cannot be...Christianity ought really and in good faith to be the supreme regent of all moral feeling, then it is evident that the Iliad, and all books which combine... | |
| John Foster - 1826 - 290 pàgines
...ought to be the practical consequence of such observations ? I may surely answer that I cannot justly be required to assign that consequence. I cannot be...christianity ought really and in good faith to be the supreme regent of ail moral feelings, then it is evident that the Iliad, and all books which combine... | |
| John Foster - 1846 - 370 pàgines
...ought to be the practical consequences of such observations ? I may surely answer that I cannot justly be required to assign that consequence. I cannot be...of truth. If such works do really impart their own spirit to the mind of an admiring reader, and if this spirit be totally hostile to that of christianity,... | |
| George Combe - 1850 - 452 pàgines
...ought to be the practical consequence of such observations 1 I may surely answer that I cannot justly be required to assign that . consequence. I cannot...works do really impart their own genuine spirit to the inind of an admiring reader, in proportion to the degree ir? which he admires, and if this spirit is... | |
| Charles Hay Cameron - 1853 - 220 pàgines
...in his Essay on the Aversion of Men of Taste to Evangelical Religion, speaks thus of the Iliad : " If such works do really impart their own genuine spirit...Christianity ought really and in good faith to be the supreme regent of all moral feeling, then it is evident that the Iliad, and all books which combine... | |
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