| K. A. Buist - 1874 - 252 pages
...sympathies checked, by coming upon that which, however beautiful as poetry, out ofhiglier respects thev must reject and condemn — in which, too, they shall...them, to entangle them unawares in admiration for aught which is inconsistent with their faith and fealty to their man spiritual mother." — PREFACE.... | |
| David Masson - 1874 - 400 pages
...upon that which, hmvever beautiful as poetry, out of higher respects they must reject and condemn—in which, too, they shall not fear that snares are being...them, to entangle them unawares in admiration for aught which is inconsistent with their faith and fealty to their own spiritual mother."—PREFACE.... | |
| 1874 - 376 pages
...that, which, however beautiful as poetry, out of higher respects they must reject and condemn—in which, too, they shall not fear that snares are being...them, to entangle them unawares in admiration for ougM which is inconsistent with their faith and fealty to their own spiritual mother. Such being the... | |
| William Black - 1874 - 496 pages
...sympathies cheched, by coming upon that which, howevcr beautiful as poetry, out of higher respects thev must reject and condemn — in which, too, they shall not fear that snares are being laid for thtm, to entangle them unawares in admiration for aught which is inconsistent with their faith and... | |
| Richard Lewis - 1874 - 374 pages
...current of their sympathies cheched, by coming upon that which, however beautiful as poetry, out of higher respects they must reject and condemn — in which, too, they shall not fear that snares arc being laid for tlum, to entangle them unawares in admiration for aught which is inconsistent with... | |
| Samuel Edmund Waller - 1874 - 268 pages
...current of their sympathies checked, by coming upon that •Hfkick, however beautiful as poetry, out of higher respects they must reject and condemn — in which, too, they shall not fear that snaret are being laid for them, to entangle them unawares in admiration for aught which is inconsistent... | |
| Sir Francis Cowley Burnand - 1874 - 526 pages
...current of their sympathies checked, by coming upon that which, httatver beautiful as poetry, out of higher respects they must reject and condemn — in which, too, they shall tu>l fear that snares are being laid for them, to entangle than unawares in admiration for aught which... | |
| 1905 - 906 pages
...London, JT Hayes, 17 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden assert that this collection shall contain nothing " which is inconsistent with their faith and fealty to their own spiritual mother." (1) This, in his view, excludes " all hymns which in any way imply theRomish doctrine of transubstantiation,"... | |
| Frederick John Gillman - 1927 - 336 pages
...his determination to exclude anything that might tend to check the current of their sympathies, or " entangle them unawares in admiration for ought which...their faith and fealty to their own spiritual mother." And he particularly . desired to omit anything that savoured of superstition, or 1 Stanley'a Introduction... | |
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