| 1858 - 862 str.
...remain ; it is to them we owe all that we now have : they are for all ages and all times ; never young, and never old, they bear the seeds of their own life...able to do even at the moment of their promulgation." — (P. 205.) After so eloquent a passage, it is disagreeable to return to the task of cavilling, or... | |
| 1858 - 516 str.
...remain ; it is to them we owe all that we now have, they are for all ages and all times ; never young, and never old, they bear the seeds of their own life...able to do even at the moment of their promulgation." But Mr. Buckle's most characteristic application of this doctrine is to his conception of what history... | |
| 1858 - 516 str.
...remain ; it is to them we owe all that we now have, they are for all ages and all times ; never young, and never old, they bear the seeds of their own life...able to do even at the moment of their promulgation." But Mr. Buckle's most characteristic application of this doctrine is to his conception of what history... | |
| 1858 - 456 str.
...remain : it is to them we owe all that we now have, they are for all ages and all times ; never young, and never old, they bear the seeds of their own life...cumulative, and, giving birth to the additions which they'subsequently receive, they thus influence the most distant posterity, and alter the lapse of centuries... | |
| 1858 - 878 str.
...remain. It is to them we owe all that we now have. They are for all ages, and all times ; never young, and never old ; they bear the seeds of their own life...essentially cumulative ; and giving birth to the additions they subsequently receive, they thus influence the most distant posterity ; and after the lapse of... | |
| 1858 - 812 str.
...remain ; it is to them we owe all that we now have ; they are for all ages and all times; never young and never old, they bear the seeds of their own life...they are essentially cumulative, and giving birth to tho additions which they subsequently receive, they thus influence the most distant posterity, and... | |
| 1858 - 796 str.
...that we no\v have ; they arc for all ages and all times ; never young, and never old, they bear tlio seeds of their own life; they flow on in a perennial...undying stream ; they are essentially cumulative, and, givimj birth to the additions which they subsequently receive, they thus influence the most distant... | |
| 1868 - 758 str.
...one set of opinions for one age, another set for another. Th^e discoveries of genius alone remain ; they are essentially cumulative, and giving birth...able to do even at the moment of their promulgation." Such is the substance of Buckle's famous passage on the relative vitality of moral and intellectual... | |
| Gilbert Sutton - 1868 - 356 str.
...remain : it is to them we owe all that we now have ; they are for all ages and all times ; never young and never old, they bear the seeds of their own life...able to do even at the moment of their promulgation." And in the opening of the next, chapter v., he thus recapitulates the results at which he has arrived,... | |
| Robert Chambers - 1881 - 856 str.
...airci* and all times ; never young and never old. they bear the seeds of their own life : tfiey flOTV on in a perennial and undying stream ; they are essentially...receive, they thus influence the most distant posterity, und after the hipee of centuries produce more effect thau they were able to do even at the moment of... | |
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