Fifty Years of Catholic Life & Social Progress, 1 tomasUnwin, 1901 |
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xi psl.
... Poor Schools His Three Aims - Schools and Churches , Union with Rome , and Reconcilement with the English Public 220 Statistical Details of Schools , etc .... His Policy as to New Churches ... ... Instances of Individual Efforts in this ...
... Poor Schools His Three Aims - Schools and Churches , Union with Rome , and Reconcilement with the English Public 220 Statistical Details of Schools , etc .... His Policy as to New Churches ... ... Instances of Individual Efforts in this ...
4 psl.
... poor proportions and of the meanest materials , so that it might pass for a dissenting place of worship ! These pitiable structures were the old Embassy chapels , enjoying the protection of foreign courts , and were almost the only ...
... poor proportions and of the meanest materials , so that it might pass for a dissenting place of worship ! These pitiable structures were the old Embassy chapels , enjoying the protection of foreign courts , and were almost the only ...
7 psl.
... poor set of Irishmen , coming and going at harvest * With St. George's must be associated the hard - working , quaint Father Doyle , who made himself familiar by his reiterated , often jocose , appeals for support under the title of ...
... poor set of Irishmen , coming and going at harvest * With St. George's must be associated the hard - working , quaint Father Doyle , who made himself familiar by his reiterated , often jocose , appeals for support under the title of ...
29 psl.
... poor . His heart had that full and delicate love of good people that led him to speak to them with an irony of love , reserving its expression by talking a language opposite to his feeling . I mean that modest strength of affection ...
... poor . His heart had that full and delicate love of good people that led him to speak to them with an irony of love , reserving its expression by talking a language opposite to his feeling . I mean that modest strength of affection ...
65 psl.
... poor woman , and perhaps being a Catholic she might not like to make an appeal to the police . " The charge was to the effect that the chapel was intrusive , and that Mr. Hope - Scott thus brought the matter on himself . The jury took ...
... poor woman , and perhaps being a Catholic she might not like to make an appeal to the police . " The charge was to the effect that the chapel was intrusive , and that Mr. Hope - Scott thus brought the matter on himself . The jury took ...
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
admirable Archbishop Athenæum Club became Bishop Blessed brought called Canons Cardinal Wiseman cathedral Catholic Church chapel chaplain character charity Charles Kent Church of England clergy controversy convert COVENTRY PATMORE curious death devoted died diocese Divine Dublin Review earnest ecclesiastical England English Errington extraordinary Faber fancy fashion Father favour feeling felt furnished gifts grace heart Hierarchy Holy Hope-Scott interesting Jesuits King William Street labours Lady learned letter lived looked Lord Manning's matter ment Milner mind missions natural never Newman noble old Catholic Oscott College owing Oxford Movement Passionists person pious position prayers Prelate priest principle Protestant Pugin Purcell recall recognised reforms religion religious remarkable Rome Sedgley Park seemed sermons sort soul spirit story strange struggle style surprise sympathy thing tion took Ullathorne Ultramontanes Western Schism whole wonderful writings wrote
Populiarios ištraukos
26 psl. - I am scornfully amused at your appeal to me, of all people in the world the precisely least likely to give you a farthing ! My first word to all men and boys who care to hear me is " Don't get into debt. Starve and go to heaven — but don't borrow. Try first begging — I don't mind if it's really needful — stealing ! But don't buy things you can't pay for...
8 psl. - Irishmen, coming and going at harvest time, or a colony of them lodged in a miserable quarter of the vast metropolis. There, perhaps, an elderly person, seen walking in the streets, grave and solitary, and strange though noble in bearing, and said to be of good family, and a
81 psl. - And thus still doing, thus he pass'd along. Duch. Alas, poor Richard ! where rides he the whilst? York. As in a theatre, the eyes of men, After a well-grac'd actor leaves the stage, Are idly bent on him that enters next, Thinking his prattle to be tedious : Even so, or with much more contempt, men's eyes Did scowl on Richard ; no man cried, God save him...
26 psl. - Don't get into debt. Starve and go to heaven — but don't borrow. Try first begging — I don't mind if it's really needful — stealing ! But don't buy things you can't pay for ! " And of all manner of debtors pious people building churches they can't pay for, are the most detestable nonsense to me. Can't you preach and pray behind the hedges — or in a sandpit — or a coalhole — first ? And of all manner of churches thus idiotically built, iron churches are the damnablest to me.
244 psl. - You were far above me in fitness for the general superintendency in worldly talent of administration, and far more in the spiritual qualifications which God values in a Superior ; my being placed over you was my misfortune, not my fault.
58 psl. - Bernard : let even a few such men, with the high clerical feeling. which I believe them to possess, enter fully into the spirit of the Catholic religion, and we shall be speedily reformed, and England quickly converted. I am ready to acknowledge that, in all things, except the happiness of possessing the truth, and being in communion with God's true Church, and enjoying the advantage and blessings that flow thence, we are their inferiors.
7 psl. - — not a sect, not even an interest, as men conceived of it — not a body, however small, representative of the Great Communion abroad, but a mere handful of individuals who might be counted like the pebbles and detritus of the great deluge ; and who, forsooth, merely happened to retain a creed, which in its day, indeed, was the profession of a Church. Here, a set of poor Irishmen, coming and going at...
149 psl. - ... part, was seen gracefully, and without effort, to accept what was conceded to him, and to take up the subject under consideration ; throwing light upon it, and, as it were, locating it, pointing out what was of primary importance in it, what was to be aimed at, and what steps were to be taken in it. I am told that, in like manner, when residing on his property in France, he was there too made a centre for advice and direction on the part of his neighbours, who leant upon him and trusted him in...
8 psl. - Quaker's meeting-house, and tomorrow on a chapel of the "Roman Catholics"; but nothing was to be gathered from it, except that there were lights burning there, and some boys in white, swinging censers; and what it all meant could only be learned from books, from Protestant Histories and Sermons; and they did not report well of "the Roman Catholics," but, on the contrary, deposed that they had once had power and had abused it.
26 psl. - And of all manner of churches thus idiotically built, iron churches are the damnablest to me. And of all the sects of believers in any ruling spirit, — Hindoos, Turks, Feather Idolaters, and Mumbo Jumbo, Log and Fire worshippers, who want churches, your modern English Evangelical sect is the most absurd, and entirely objectionable and unendurable to me ! All which they might very easily have found out from my books— any other sort of sect would ! — before bothering me to write it to them. Ever,...