| 1852 - 448 pages
...honorable to the farmers of New-Hampshire • In popular education this quietism is sadly out of place. "There is nothing so revolutionary, because there is nothing so unnatural and so convulsive to societv, as the strain to keep things fixed, when all the world, by the very law of its creation, is... | |
| Theology - 1848 - 620 pages
...despotic as well as the free ; though they may not be equally easy to be recovered in ill. — Miaquu or There is nothing so revolutionary, because there is nothing so unnatural and so convulsive to toclety, ai the strain to keep thing! fixed when all the world is by the very law of its creation in... | |
| Arthur Penrhyn Stanley - 1845 - 566 pages
...income that I should be rather puzzled to match in America , if I were obliged to change my quaiters. My quarrel with the anti-liberal party is, that they...the very law of its creation, in eternal progress ; ond the cause of all the evils of the world may be traced to that natural but most deadly error of... | |
| 1846 - 602 pages
...those who adopted thatname. Yet there is room for distinction here : " There is nothing," says he, " so revolutionary, because there is nothing so unnatural...the very law of its creation, in eternal progress 5 and the cause of all the evils may be traced to that most natural but most deadly error of human... | |
| Frederick Denison Maurice, John Malcolm Forbes Ludlow - Great Britain - 1848 - 284 pages
...it sounds more like divinity than politics; but there may be some sense in it, and I will consider. There is nothing so revolutionary, because there is...fixed, when all the world is by the very law of its execution in eternal progress; and the course of all the evils of the world may be traced to that natural... | |
| Lentush club - 1850 - 106 pages
...which thou knowest to be a duty. The second duty will already have become clearer. — Carlylc. THERK is nothing so revolutionary, because there is nothing...eternal progress, — and the cause of all the evils in the world may be traced to that natural, but most deadly error of human indolence and corruption,... | |
| Edward Hughes - 1851 - 362 pages
...are born our happiness to earn. SHARP. AROUSE THEE, SOUL. 143 XXXVII. PROGRESS THE LAW OF NATURE. " THERE is nothing so revolutionary, because there is...law of its creation in eternal progress ; and the causes of all the evils of the world may be traced to that natural but most deadly error of human indolence... | |
| India - 1851 - 580 pages
...the work. Dr. Arnold says : — " There is nothing so revolutionary, because there is nothing ' 80 unnatural and so convulsive to society, as the strain...eternal progress ; and the cause of all the evils ' in the world may be traced to that natural, but most deadly ' error of human indolence and corruption... | |
| India - 1851 - 590 pages
...enabled him to overcome all opposition, because his heart was in the work. Dr. Arnold says : — " Tbere is nothing so revolutionary, because there is nothing...convulsive to society, as the strain to keep things Jixed, when all the world is, by the very law of its creation, in eternal progress ; and the cause... | |
| Samuel Hopkins - 1852 - 834 pages
...ultimate result of checking the desire for expanded knowledge. " There is nothing," says Dr. Arnold, " so revolutionary, because there is nothing so unnatural...its creation, in eternal progress; and the cause of nil the evils of the world may be traced to that natural but most deadly error of human indolence and... | |
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