| William Thomas Stead - 1903 - 720 str.
...statesman is a rare object of reverence and honour," or to Mr. Spurgeon, who wrote to Mr. Gladstone, " You do not know how those of us regard you ; who feel...it is restful to be sure of one man's integrity." " He, beyond all other statesmen," declared another Nonconformist, " gave us the impression of a man... | |
| Whitelaw Reid - 1900 - 278 str.
...addressed to one of his colleagues always seems thought admirably fitted to Mr. Bright himself: — "We believe in no man's infallibility, but it is restful to be sure of one man's integrity." What better guarantee can you get for your community or for your country than youth trained up in that... | |
| Henry Norman, Henry Chalmers Roberts - 1903 - 706 str.
...guiding principle of this myriad-minded man. It was his religion. " You do not know," wrote Spurgeon, " how those of us regard you, who feel it a joy to live when a Premier believes in righteousness." We go back to the diary of his twentieth year to find what Mr. Morley calls " the biographic clue " :... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 694 str.
...to my poor people the simple word which has held them by their thousands these twenty-eight years. You do not know how those of us regard you, who feel...but it is restful to be sure of one man's integrity. That admirable sentence marks the secret. All the religious agitations of the time come before us.... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 692 str.
...to my poor people the simple word which has held them by their thousands these twenty-eight years. You do not know how those of us regard you, who feel...but it is restful to be sure of one man's integrity. That admirable sentence marks the secret. All the religious agitations of the time come before us.... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 690 str.
...to my poor people the simple word which has held them by their thousands these twenty-eight years. You do not know how those of us regard you, who feel...infallibility, but it is restful to be sure of one maw's integrity. That admirable sentence marks the secret. All the religious agitations of the time... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 696 str.
...to my poor people the simple word which has held them by their thousands these twenty-eight years. You do not know how those of us regard you, who feel...believe in no man's infallibility, but it is restful to le sure of one man's integrity. That admirable sentence marks the secret. All the religious agitations... | |
| John Morley - 1903 - 692 str.
...to my poor people the simple word which has held them by their thousands these twenty-eight years. You do not know how those of us regard you, who feel...righteousness. We believe in no man's infallibility, but it in rest/id to be sure of one man's integrity. That admirable sentence marks the secret. All the religious... | |
| John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler - 1904 - 940 str.
...the less does this able and frank exposition convince us of the truth of Mr. Spurgeon's fine tribute: "We believe in no man's infallibility, but it is restful to be sure of one man's integrity" (II. 531). To each volume is added a helpful chronology of Mr. Gladstone's activities. GEORGE M. WRONG.... | |
| James Wells - 1904 - 496 str.
...EMOTIONAL LANGUAGE — THE HARDEST OF HARD WORKERS PERENNIAL CHEERFULNESS AND YOUTHFULNESS "We believe 1n no man's infallibility; but it is restful to be sure of one man's integrity." — SPURGEON on Glads font. " We honour our departed friends by imitation. " — TACITUS. " He mourns... | |
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