| 1837 - 654 sider
...less by any impressive eloquence. Some of his treatises, and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII., or the book ' against the falsely-named order of bishops,'...most of his controversial writings ; and in scornful irony he had no superior. His epistle to Erasmus, prefixed to the treatise De servo arbitrio, is bitterly... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1837 - 714 sider
...any impressive eloquence. Some of his treatises, V*' and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII., or the book " against the falsely-named order of bishops,"...bad Latin. Neither of these books display, as far as 1 can judge, any striking ability. It is not to be imagined, that a man of his vivid parts fails to... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1837 - 606 sider
...by any impressive eloqvicnce. Some of his treatises, and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII., or the book " against the falsely-named order of bishops," can be described as litfle else than bellowing in bad Latin. Neither of these books display, as far as I can judge, any... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1839 - 416 sider
...less by any impressive eloquence. Some of his treatises, and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII., or the book "against the falselynamed order of bishops,"...most of his controversial writings; and in scornful irony he had no superior. His epistle to Erasmus, prefixed to (a) It is usual for protestant writers... | |
| 1840 - 674 sider
...treatises , and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII- or the book » against the falsely — named order of bishops« can be described as little else than bellowing in bad Latin. 3" bor tyfyHtfoytye waren bie Reformatoren ber Sîeligion unb Siterarur bie ®egner ber fct)ola(itfcf)en... | |
| 1840 - 1176 sider
...by any impressive eloquence. Some of his treatises — and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII, or the book " against the falsely-named order of bishops" — can be described as litile else than bellowing in bad Latin. Neither of these books display, so far as I cnn judge, any... | |
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1841 - 600 sider
...by any impressive eloquence. Some of his treatises — and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII, or the book " against the falsely-named order of bishops"...bellowing in bad Latin. Neither of these books display, so far as I can judge, any striking ability. It is not to be imagined, that a man of his vivid parts... | |
| Henry Hallam - 1843 - 608 sider
...less by any impressive eloquence. Some of his treatises, and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII., or the book " against the falsely-named order of bishops,"...imagined that a man of his vivid parts fails to perceive any advantage which may offer itself in that close grappling, sentence by sentence, with an adversary,... | |
| Martin John Spalding - 1844 - 412 sider
...his treatises, and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII, or the book against ' the falsely named order of bishops,' can be described as little else...than bellowing in bad Latin. Neither of these books displays, so far as I can judge, any striking ability." " It is not to be imagined," he continues,... | |
| 1845 - 780 sider
...less by any impressive eloquence. Some of his treatises, and we may instance his reply to Henry VIII., or the book " against the falsely-named order of bishops," can be described as liitle else than bellowing in bad Latin. Neither of these books display, as far as I can judge, any... | |
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