The Living Age, Volume 212Living Age Company, 1897 |
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Page 19
... tion of species , to so many forms of supernaturalism , to all systems of symbolism , and to most of the ob- scurer manifestations of emotional or intellectual spiritualism . To do this effectually we must in the first place divest ...
... tion of species , to so many forms of supernaturalism , to all systems of symbolism , and to most of the ob- scurer manifestations of emotional or intellectual spiritualism . To do this effectually we must in the first place divest ...
Page 22
... tion . " Their mind and sense and feel- ings [ of aspirants yet imperfect in the path of God ] are full of fancies , whereby they very often see imag- inary and spiritual visions . . . where- in the devil and their own proper fancy most ...
... tion . " Their mind and sense and feel- ings [ of aspirants yet imperfect in the path of God ] are full of fancies , whereby they very often see imag- inary and spiritual visions . . . where- in the devil and their own proper fancy most ...
Page 61
... tion failed most completely was where the Puritan was most in earnest - in the matter of the Church . From that failure we all suffer to - day . It is the source of the perplexity which con- founds us in our present politics . The ...
... tion failed most completely was where the Puritan was most in earnest - in the matter of the Church . From that failure we all suffer to - day . It is the source of the perplexity which con- founds us in our present politics . The ...
Page 63
... tion was rapid . 1 have frequently seen twenty or more lines which he had written , he said , in the last half - hour , and refashioning was rarely needful , though he was an unwearied corrector in minor details . In these minutiæ I was ...
... tion was rapid . 1 have frequently seen twenty or more lines which he had written , he said , in the last half - hour , and refashioning was rarely needful , though he was an unwearied corrector in minor details . In these minutiæ I was ...
Page 70
... tion . Have they , as they fondly sup- pose , employed , in the support of their charge , a strictly scientific method ? We will return to Mr. Max Nordau presently ; but first let us examine the accusations of the Italian sociologist ...
... tion . Have they , as they fondly sup- pose , employed , in the support of their charge , a strictly scientific method ? We will return to Mr. Max Nordau presently ; but first let us examine the accusations of the Italian sociologist ...
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