The Prose Works of John Milton, Volume 1J. W. Moore, 1859 |
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Page 17
... manner , their precepts mainly tend to break a national spirit and courage , by countenancing open riot , luxury , and ignorance , till having thus disfigured and made men beneath men , as Juno in the fable of Io , they deliver up the ...
... manner , their precepts mainly tend to break a national spirit and courage , by countenancing open riot , luxury , and ignorance , till having thus disfigured and made men beneath men , as Juno in the fable of Io , they deliver up the ...
Page 18
... manner of priestly government serve without inconvenience to all these temporal mu- tations ; it served the mild aristocracy of elective dukes , and heads of tribes joined with them ; the dictatorship of the judges , the easy or ...
... manner of priestly government serve without inconvenience to all these temporal mu- tations ; it served the mild aristocracy of elective dukes , and heads of tribes joined with them ; the dictatorship of the judges , the easy or ...
Page 22
... manner planted and erected by us , and having been since to us the faithful watchmen and discoverers of many a ... manners and language , the commodity of traffic , which founded the old Burgundian league betwixt us , but chiefly ...
... manner planted and erected by us , and having been since to us the faithful watchmen and discoverers of many a ... manners and language , the commodity of traffic , which founded the old Burgundian league betwixt us , but chiefly ...
Page 23
... manner , upon that day which God's law , and even our own reason hath consecrated , that we might have one day at least of seven set apart wherein to examine and increase our knowledge of God , to meditate and commune of our faith , our ...
... manner , upon that day which God's law , and even our own reason hath consecrated , that we might have one day at least of seven set apart wherein to examine and increase our knowledge of God , to meditate and commune of our faith , our ...
Page 34
... of our own dangers and disquiets , in what best manner we can devise , without running at a loss , as we must needs in those stale and useless records of either uncertain or unsound antiquity ; which 34 OF PRELATICAL EPISCOPACY .
... of our own dangers and disquiets , in what best manner we can devise , without running at a loss , as we must needs in those stale and useless records of either uncertain or unsound antiquity ; which 34 OF PRELATICAL EPISCOPACY .
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