Let any one sit on the hill of the little church of St. Martin, and look on the view which is there spread before his eyes. Immediately below are the towers of the great abbey of St. Augustine, where Christian learning and civilization first struck root... A History of Christian Missions During the Middle Ages - Side 435av George Frederick Maclear - 1863 - 466 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| 1856 - 568 sider
...concerning it was more than realised Let any one sit on the hill of the little church of St. Martin and look on the view which is there spread before...Immediately below are the towers of the great Abbey of St. AugustiBv, where Christian learning and civilisation first struck root in the Anglo-Saxon race ; and... | |
| 1856 - 598 sider
...it was more than realised Let any one sit on the hill of the little church pf St. Martin and loofc on the view which is there spread before his eyes....Immediately below are the towers of the great Abbey of St. Augnstirm, where Ciiristian learning and civilisation first struck root in the Anglo-Saxon race ; and... | |
| Arthur Penrhyn Stanley - 1865 - 318 sider
...below are the towers of the great Abbey of St. Augustine, where Christian learning and civilisation first struck root in the Anglo-Saxon race ;* and within...institution has arisen, intended to carry far and wide to 1 Gocelin notices the offence, without traces of Augustine's mission, besides expressly stating the... | |
| Arthur Penrhyn Stanley - 1868 - 348 sider
...reached, may best be seen at Canterbury. Let any one sit on the hill of the little church of St. Martin, and look on the view which is there spread before...Abbey of St. Augustine, where Christian learning and civilisation first struck root in the Anglo-Saxon race ;2 and within which now, after a lapse of many... | |
| George Frederick Maclear - 1869 - 376 sider
...not despising the day of small things. " Let any one," writes the author of the " Historical Memoirs of Canterbury," " sit on the hill of the little Church...wide, to countries of which Gregory and Augustine had never heard, the blessings which they gave to us From Canterbury, the first English Christian city... | |
| 1870 - 972 sider
...one," says Stanley, " sit on the hill of the little Church of St. Martin, :ind look on the view that is there spread before his eyes. Immediately below...Christian learning and civilization first struck root in Britain ; and within which now, after a lapse of many centuries, a new institution has arisen, intended... | |
| John Timbs - 1872 - 104 sider
...concerning it was more than realized. Let any one sit on the hill of the little church of St. Martin, and look on the view which is there spread before...countries of which Gregory and Augustine never heard — the blessings which they gave to us. Carry your view on, and there rises, high above all, the magnificent... | |
| Francis William Cross, John R. Hall - 1882 - 186 sider
...Canterbury," the late Dean Stanley bids his reader stand "on the hill of the little Church of St. Martin, and look on the view which is there spread before...Abbey of St. Augustine, where " Christian learning and civilisation first struck root in the Anglo-Saxon race." He reminds us that this spot was the earliest... | |
| Arthur Penrhyn Stanley - 1883 - 320 sider
...Augustine, where Christian learning and civilisation first struck root in the Anglo-Saxon race ; 2 and within which now, after a lapse of many centuries,...institution has arisen, intended to carry far and wide to 1 Gocclin notices the offence, without traces of Augustine's mission, besides expressly stating the... | |
| John Ruskin - 1884 - 196 sider
...of its self-gratulatory ecstasy. " Let any one sit on the hill of the little church of St. Martin, and look on the view which is there spread before...the great abbey of St. Augustine, where Christian 3 learning and civilization first struck root in the Anglo-Saxon race ; and within which now, after... | |
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