| Cassell, ltd - 1883 - 492 sider
...thanks to the true and living God, with expanded hands exclaiming, " Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost!" with other spiritual...did not cut .short my discourse. Nevertheless, by tho grace of God, I purpose shortly to write moro concerning him ; particularly of those things which... | |
| Richard Chew - 1885 - 268 sider
...Mr. Griffith to the faults of Protestants. In a letter to Mr. Smith, March 2nd, 1874, he says: ' What I saw with my own eyes and heard with my own ears of Orangeism when I was in Ireland, convinces me that for bitterness, bigotry, passion, violence, devilry,... | |
| Henry Morley - 1888 - 460 sider
...thanks to the true and living God, with expanded hands exclaiming, ' Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost !' with other spiritual...saw with my own eyes, and heard with my own ears/'* Bede was buried first under the church porch, and afterwards within the church at Jarrow. There Elfred,... | |
| Henry Morley - 1888 - 438 sider
...thanks to the true and living God, with expanded hands exclaiming, 'Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost!' with other spiritual...saw with my own eyes, and heard with my own ears."* Bede was buried first under the church porch, and afterwards within the church at Jarrow. There Elfred,... | |
| Sir Arthur Conan Doyle - 1893 - 318 sider
...of everything in the books about history, and so I shall just leave that alone and talk about what I saw with my own eyes and heard with my own ears. The regiment to which our friend had been appointed was the 7ist Highland Light Infantry, which wore'the... | |
| Hamadānī Husain (Mirza) - 1893 - 578 sider
...Bab, when all Persia was convulsed, I arrived by way of Constantinople and Trebizonde at Tabrfz. Here I saw with my own eyes and heard with my own ears how the Babfs were everywhere hunted down, and, whereever found, doomed to death, without enquiry or... | |
| Sir Max Pemberton - 1896 - 268 sider
...done, it must be the business of one who got his learning at school. All that I can speak about is that which I saw with my own eyes and heard with my own ears during the days when I was servant to him. And if my word can do any tiling to set him right before... | |
| Joseph Arch - 1898 - 458 sider
...Being a little chap at the time, I did not realise all that—it was not likely—but I remembered what I saw with my own eyes and heard with my own ears. About the time of the Repeal things had got so bad that they could hardly be worse. The food we could... | |
| Alfred Barbeau - 1904 - 446 sider
...told him you never made any such; nor, if he considered, was it possible, since all that had passed I saw with my own eyes, and heard with my own ears. I told him I did not impute the unkindness shown me, in behaving so coldly, to him originally, but... | |
| Alfred Barbeau - 1904 - 446 sider
...told him you never made any such; nor, if he considered, was it possible, since all that had passed I saw with my own eyes, and heard with my own ears. I told him I did not impute the unkindness shown me, in behaving so coldly, to him originally, but... | |
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