| English literature - 1803 - 318 pages
...and waves upon the main ocean of love. The handcuffs and fetters in which the hero commonly appears at the end of the second, or the beginning of the third act, indicate captivity, and when properly jingled to a pathetic piece of recitativo upon guesti cejrjii,... | |
| Richard Price - Annuities - 1812 - 542 pages
...will appear, that in the whole diocese, if the increase in the Jirst period had continued, the burials at the end of the second, or the beginning of the third period should have been nearly 1808, instead of 1 663 . The same conclusions may be deduced by computing... | |
| Richard Price - 1812 - 534 pages
...will appear, that in the whole diocese, if the increase in the jirst period had continued, the burials at the end of the second, or the beginning of the third period should have been nearly 1 808, instead of 1 663 . The same conclusions ma^ be deduced by computing... | |
| James Ferguson - English essays - 1823 - 412 pages
...and waves upon the main ocean of love. The handcuffs and fetters in which the hero commonly appears at the end of the second, or the beginning of the third act, indicate captivity, and when properly jingled to a pathetic piece of recitativo upon questi ceppt,... | |
| Lionel Thomas Berguer - English essays - 1823 - 620 pages
...and waves upon the main ocean of love. The handcuffs and fetters in which the hero commonly appears at the end of the second, or the beginning of the third act, indicate captivity, and when properly jingled to a pathetic piece of recitativo upon qttesti ceppi,... | |
| Thomas Clarkson - Christianity - 1836 - 232 pages
...one of these families, namely, that of Gush, had abandoned the worship of the true God so early as at the end of the second or the beginning of the third century from the Deluge, and had begun to worship the Sun in his stead, and that others ofthem had... | |
| Books - 1836 - 640 pages
...that one of these families, viz. that of Cush, had abandoned the worship of the true God sp early as at the end of the second, or the beginning of the third century from the Deluge, and had begun to worship the Sun in his stead, and that others of them had... | |
| Robert Pedder Buddicom - 1839 - 1038 pages
...Ghost. The opponents of infant Baptism1 have themselves acknowledged that it was practised so early as at the end of the second, or the beginning of the third century : gaining ground, until near the end of the fourth century ; when it continued the stated,... | |
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