| David Bogue, James Bennett - Dissenters - 1812 - 554 pages
...this college. paid increased attention to the education of their ministers. The general association, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth century, strongly recommended raising of funds for instructing young men in the learned languages with a view... | |
| John Poynder - 1816 - 482 pages
...consistency will always " remain the same *." CHAP. XXI. DIFFERENT EVENTS RELATING TO THE JESUITS, AT THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH AND BEGINNING OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. V GLUMES must be multiplied if we were to follow the Jesuits into all their Establishments, and to... | |
| John Watkins - 1821 - 1570 pages
...of Sterne. BURTON (Robert), the assumed name of an author who published a number of small volumes, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth century, which were usually called Chapmen's books, because they were commonly sold by hawkers. The original... | |
| Henry Digby Beste - Catholic converts - 1826 - 470 pages
...equally true: we have seen a Calvinist and a Lutheran King become good members of the Church of England at the end of the seventeenth, and beginning of the eighteenth century. In the evening we rambled among the vineyards on the slopes, and reached the summits of the hills at... | |
| Hugh James Rose - 1830 - 108 pages
...enquirer, even if unfavourable to Revelation, to affirm, that the writers against Revelation, who appeared at the end of the seventeenth, and beginning of the eighteenth century, in this country, (though perhaps superior to their continental brethren,) were entitled to consideration... | |
| China - 1833 - 530 pages
...prevalent in a "superficial age." He does not think that "the writers against revelation who appeared at the end of the seventeenth, and beginning of the eighteenth century, in England, (though perhaps superior to, their continental brethren,) were entitled to consideration... | |
| William Chambers - Belgium - 1839 - 102 pages
...interesting object in our estimation was a beautiful model of a Dutch merchant's house, as it appeared at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth century. This wonder of art is enclosed in a. large square case, composed of plate glass framed in tortoise-shell... | |
| Charles Mackay - England, Southern - 1840 - 426 pages
...Belvidere Road, formerly stood a celebrated place of public resort, called Cuper's Gardens, famous, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth century, for its grand displays of fire-works. It was not, however, the resort of respectable company, but of... | |
| Friedrich von Schlegel - Literature - 1841 - 472 pages
...is one that can scarcely be defended now. The universal freedom, the full emancipation of intellect, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth century, does not at least belong to the immediate consequences of the Reformation ; it was produced by a great... | |
| 674 pages
...terms, that at the end of the 17th century, and the beginning of the 18th, the tenantry of Scotland were so benumbed with oppression or poverty, that...instructor in husbandry would have made nothing of them. Kitchen also describes their situation at that period as truly deplorable. At the suggestion of Mr.... | |
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