| John William Burgon - 1862 - 456 pagina’s
...without feeling my heart beat faster, and my whole spirit stirred with unutterable sympathy : — " Though for no other cause, yet for this ; that posterity may know we have not loosely through silence permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
| Henry Noble Day - 1866 - 342 pagina’s
...as the succeeding extract from Middleton, labor from being broken up by numerous qualifying clauses. Though for no other cause, yet for this; that posterity may know we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
| Henry Noble Day - 1867 - 374 pagina’s
...the succeeding extract from Middleton, labor from being broken up by numerous qualifying clauses. " Though for no other cause, yet for this, that posterity may know we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
| John Daniel Morell - 1873 - 494 pagina’s
...before begun were by this means somewhat increased." Ex. 4. Turn the following into the English order. " Though for no other cause, yet for this, that posterity may know we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
| Henry Noble Day - 1872 - 386 pagina’s
...the succeeding extract from Middleton, labor from being broken up by numerous qualifying clauses. " Though for no other cause, yet for this, that posterity may know we have not loosely, through, silence, permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be... | |
| John Walker Vilant Macbeth - 1875 - 558 pagina’s
...all our woe, Sing, heavenly Muse." tical Polity." Mark the air of grandeur which inversion gives : " Though for no other cause, yet for this, that posterity may know we have not loosely through silence permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
| Henry Noble Day - 1875 - 372 pagina’s
...the succeeding extract from Middleton, labor from being broken up by numerous qualifying clauses. 41 Though for no other cause, yet for this, that posterity may know we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
| Francis Armstrong Power - 1879 - 668 pagina’s
...begins the preface to his celebrated work, Ecclesiastical Polity, with the following sentence: — " ce, " that nothing should be considered as an article of faith w we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away in a dream, there shall be, for... | |
| William Minto - 1881 - 596 pagina’s
...are derived from this adoption ; but perspicuity, sweetness, and ease are too generally sacrificed." "Though for no other cause, yet for this, that posterity may know we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
| 1888 - 576 pagina’s
...Of that species of diction to which I here allude, it may* be proper to produce one or two examples. Though for no other cause, yet for this, that posterity may know we have not loosely, through silence, permitted things to pass away as in a dream, there shall be for... | |
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