| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1853 - 556 str.
...read in a purely critical spirit, and with the purpose of studying their contents as the groundwork of one of the most remarkable phenomena in the history of the world. This was not a mood in which real faith could spring up, for it was that of the Protestantism of the... | |
| Hugh Murray - 1837 - 608 str.
...scarcely any other sway in India. The Mahometans have become a subject race. In contemplating Hindostán, as it now exists, the power of Britain appears entirely...continuance, which some entertain, are perhaps chimerical. We have already observed that profoundly passive disposition which prevails among the great body of... | |
| Hugh Murray - 1837 - 604 str.
...scarcely any other sway in India. The Mahometans have become a subject race. In contemplating Hindostan, as it now exists, the power of Britain appears entirely...continuance, which some entertain, are perhaps chimerical. We have already observed that profoundly passive disposition which prevails among the great body of... | |
| Hugh Murray - 1839 - 618 str.
...Britain appear« entirely predominant. This absolute sway of an island comparatively so small, ove> an empire of 100,000,000 inhabitants situated nearly...continuance, which some entertain, are perhaps chimerical. We have already observed that profoundly passive disposition which prevails among the great body of... | |
| Samuel Augustus Mitchell - 1840 - 612 str.
...comparatively so small, over an empire of more than 100 millions of inhabitants, separated from it by so vast a circuit of ocean, presents one of the...the subjection is complete, and almost universally peaceful ; and the expectations of its short continuance, which some entertain, are, perhaps, imaginary.... | |
| 1852 - 468 str.
...read in a purely critical spirit, and with the purpose of studying their contents as the groundwork of one of the most remarkable phenomena in the history of the world. This was not a mood in which real faith could spring up, for it was that of the Protestantism of the... | |
| 1852 - 492 str.
...read in a purely critical spirit, and with the purpose of studying their contents as the groundwork of one of the most remarkable phenomena in the history of the world. This was not a mood in which real faith could spring up, for it was that of the Protestantism of the... | |
| Barthold Georg Niebuhr - 1852 - 600 str.
...read in a purely critical spirit, and with the purpose of studying their contents as the groundwork of one of the most remarkable phenomena in the history of the world. This was not a mood in which real faith could spring up, for it was that of the Protestantism of the... | |
| 1852 - 620 str.
...read in a purely critical spirit, and with the purpose of studying their contents as the groundwork of one of the most remarkable phenomena in the history of the world. This was not a mood in which real faith could spring up, for it was that of the Protestantism of the... | |
| Barthold Georg Niebuhr - 1852 - 466 str.
...read in a purely critical spirit, and with the purpose of studying their contents as the groundwork of one of the most remarkable phenomena in the history of the world. This was not a mood in which real faith could spring up, for it was that of the Protestantism of the... | |
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