Social Morality: Twenty-one Lectures Delivered in the University of CambridgeMacmillan, 1893 - 414 |
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Strona 2
... tion of a habit . The novels possibly have read . They were addressed by Lord Chesterfield to his son . They were intended to form the manners of a young man , to cultivate in him the ease and grace which he may have inherited from at ...
... tion of a habit . The novels possibly have read . They were addressed by Lord Chesterfield to his son . They were intended to form the manners of a young man , to cultivate in him the ease and grace which he may have inherited from at ...
Strona 6
... tion . equally aloof from the wits and the priests , and who denounced in no measured terms those circles that paid alternate homage to either . He was the son of a watchmaker in Geneva . Though he had led a strange life and done acts ...
... tion . equally aloof from the wits and the priests , and who denounced in no measured terms those circles that paid alternate homage to either . He was the son of a watchmaker in Geneva . Though he had led a strange life and done acts ...
Strona 7
... tion . ' Evangel , ' especially that contained in his Contrat Social , aided in producing this result , Mr. Carlyle has told us . The French Revolution was a Social Revo- lution in the fullest , deepest sense of the words . It Not in ...
... tion . ' Evangel , ' especially that contained in his Contrat Social , aided in producing this result , Mr. Carlyle has told us . The French Revolution was a Social Revo- lution in the fullest , deepest sense of the words . It Not in ...
Strona 9
... tion of of the reader , lies in the discovery of a certain character or eos first doubtless in some individual , but in him as connected with a Society smaller or larger , in him as showing what character makes the Society harmonious ...
... tion of of the reader , lies in the discovery of a certain character or eos first doubtless in some individual , but in him as connected with a Society smaller or larger , in him as showing what character makes the Society harmonious ...
Strona 13
... tion , according to M. Guizot's notion of it , must equally recognise . character . Civilisa- tion in England , Vols . 1 . and II . 1858 . for statis- tics . Mr. Buckle's work on Civilisation is in most re- Buckle's spects very unlike ...
... tion , according to M. Guizot's notion of it , must equally recognise . character . Civilisa- tion in England , Vols . 1 . and II . 1858 . for statis- tics . Mr. Buckle's work on Civilisation is in most re- Buckle's spects very unlike ...
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2nd Edition acts affect Apostles Aristotle authority become believe Bishop Cæsar called century character Christ Christendom Christian Church civilisation claim common Comte Comtists confess Consanguinity Creed Crown 8vo dæmons death distinct divine doctrine domestic dominion earth ecclesiastical Emperor Empire English EPISTLE evil existence F. D. MAURICE F. J. A. HORT facts faith Father Fcap feel fellowship felt force FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE GOSPEL Government Greek habits Heaven Hebrew Hobbes honour human individual Jesuit Julius Cæsar King land language Latin lessons living Lord LORD'S PRAYER Loyalty Marcus Aurelius maxims means ment merely modern nations Nature neighbour obedience opinions Patria Potestas patriarchal philosophers Polygamy Pope PRAYER principle racter recognise relation reverence Roman Rome rulers Sacrifice sect seemed sense SERMONS servant shew shewn Social Morality Society speak suppose TESTAMENT Theology thought tion true truth words worship
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Strona 421 - A CLASS-BOOK Of OLD TESTAMENT HISTORY. New Edition, with Four Maps. i8mo. 4*. 6d. A CLASS-BOOK OF NEW TESTAMENT HISTORY, including the Connection of the Old and New Testament.
Strona 116 - THE power of Armies is a visible thing, Formal, and circumscribed in time and space ; But who the limits of that power shall trace Which a brave People into light can bring Or hide, at will, — for freedom combating By just revenge inflamed...
Strona 34 - The elementary group is the family, connected by common subjection to the highest male ascendant; the aggregation of families forms the gens or house; the aggregation of houses makes the tribe; the aggregation of tribes constitutes the commonwealth.
Strona 34 - In most of the Greek states and in Rome there long remained the vestiges of an ascending series of groups out of which the state was at first constituted.
Strona 302 - LUTHER, they say, was unwise; like a half-taught German, he could not See that old follies were passing most tranquilly out of remembrance; Leo the Tenth was employing all efforts to clear out abuses; Jupiter, Juno, and Venus, Fine Arts, and Fine Letters, the Poets, 90 Scholars, and Sculptors, and Painters, were quietly clearing away the Martyrs, and Virgins, and Saints, or at any rate Thomas Aquinas...
Strona 38 - Asia ; but, as has been explained already, its connection with Scripture rather militated than otherwise against its reception as a complete theory, since the majority of the inquirers who till recently addressed themselves with most earnestness to the colligation of social phenomena, were either influenced by the strongest prejudice against Hebrew antiquities or by the strongest desire to construct their system without the assistance of religious records.
Strona 38 - Sclavonians, supplying the greater part of it ; and indeed the difficulty, at the present « stage of the inquiry, is to know where to stop, to say of what races of men it is not allowable to lay down that the society in which they are united was originally organised on the patriarchal model.
Strona 41 - But if I cannot plant resolve on hope, It will stand firm on certainty of woe. I choose the ill that is most like to end With my poor being. Hopes have precarious life. They are oft blighted, withered, snapped sheer off In vigorous growth and turned to rottenness. But faithfulness can feed on suffering, And knows no disappointment.