The Life and Correspondence of John Foster, Volume 2Bell & Daldy, 1861 - 1 pages |
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Page 17
... Perhaps he is , and is gratified to think that he has possessed and exerted a greater power than any of them will ever enjoy . It is not conceivable there can ever come a crisis in which a British monarch shall possess a power equal to ...
... Perhaps he is , and is gratified to think that he has possessed and exerted a greater power than any of them will ever enjoy . It is not conceivable there can ever come a crisis in which a British monarch shall possess a power equal to ...
Page 18
... perhaps at length in some great catastrophe . It is unlikely that the aristocracy will have learnt any wisdom from their experience . Where , in all Europe , have their class learnt any thing from events which might have instructed all ...
... perhaps at length in some great catastrophe . It is unlikely that the aristocracy will have learnt any wisdom from their experience . Where , in all Europe , have their class learnt any thing from events which might have instructed all ...
Page 19
... perhaps going to ter- rify all the world again with the excesses of democracy , — all this , I confess , forebodes to me any thing rather than a quiet course of events and improvement in this country . " And then the reforming ministry ...
... perhaps going to ter- rify all the world again with the excesses of democracy , — all this , I confess , forebodes to me any thing rather than a quiet course of events and improvement in this country . " And then the reforming ministry ...
Page 31
... perhaps several years , there comes a feeling that the matter of character is now quite a lost thing , and that therefore the case can become no worse . Something partly similar has happened with respect to one or two early friends in ...
... perhaps several years , there comes a feeling that the matter of character is now quite a lost thing , and that therefore the case can become no worse . Something partly similar has happened with respect to one or two early friends in ...
Page 36
... perhaps the final surrender in respect to residence ; for if you get reconciled to London , there is circuit for you after circuit , at only two or three miles distance at each remove , and still again and again the same round , till ...
... perhaps the final surrender in respect to residence ; for if you get reconciled to London , there is circuit for you after circuit , at only two or three miles distance at each remove , and still again and again the same round , till ...
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appear believe Bourton called Catholic Emancipation cause character Christ Christian church circumstances consider considerable continue Corn Laws dear friend death degree dissenters Divine doctrine earnest earth effect eternal event evil excited express faith favour Fawcett feel Foster grand gratified habits happy hear hope human imagine infinite interest Ireland JAMES FAWCETT John Easthope John Fawcett John Purser JOHN SHEPPARD Joseph Cottle Josiah Hill judgment kind labour late letter live look manner means measure ment mercy mind ministry moral Morning Chronicle mortification nature never object opinion painful passed pensive perhaps person piety pleasure popery preaching present principle probably Protestantism racter recollect reform regret religion religious remain respect scene sense sentiment Serampore solemn sometimes soul spirit Stapleton Stokes strong suffered suppose thing THOMAS COLES thought tion truth vols weeks whole wish youth
Popular passages
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