| Thomas Chalmers - Human beings - 1833 - 336 pages
...from words, is so powerfully fitted, both to represent and to awaken the mental processes—insomuch that, without the aid of spoken characters, many a...tender sentiment is most emphatically conveyed by it. It says much for the native and original predominance of virtue—it may be deemed another assertion... | |
| Thomas Chalmers - Human beings - 1833 - 348 pages
...from words, is so powerfully fitted, both to represent and to awaken the mental processes—insomuch that, without the aid of spoken characters, many a...tender sentiment is most emphatically conveyed by it- It says much for the native and original predominance of virtue—it may be deemed another assertion... | |
| Thomas Chalmers - Presbyterian Church - 1836 - 434 pages
...from words, is so powerfully fitted, both to represent and to awaken the mental processes—insomuch that, without the aid of spoken characters, many a...tender sentiment is most emphatically conveyed by it. It says much for the native and original predominance of virtue—it may be deemed another assertion... | |
| Natural theology - 1836 - 288 pages
...argument to future labourers in the field. both to represent and to awaken the mental processes—insomuch that, without the aid of spoken characters, many a...interest is most impressively told, many a noble or tei.def sentiment is most emphatically conveyed by it. It says much for the native and original predominance... | |
| Thomas Chalmers - Human beings - 1839 - 322 pages
...from words, is so powerfully fitted, both to represent and to awaken the mental processes—insomuch that, without the aid of spoken characters, many a...tender sentiment is most emphatically conveyed by it. It says much for the native and original predominance of virtue—it may be deemed another assertion... | |
| Thomas Chalmers - Human beings - 1839 - 600 pages
...from words, is so powerfully fitted, both to represent and to awaken the mental processes—insomuch that, without the aid of spoken characters, many a...tender sentiment is most emphatically conveyed by it. It says much for the native and original predominance of virtue—it may be deemed another assertion... | |
| Society for the diffusion of useful knowledge - 1840 - 508 pages
...apart from words, is powerfully fitted both to represent and awaken the mental processes, iiisomur.li that, without the aid of spoken characters, many a...emphatically conveyed by it The power and expressiveness suffering on hearing a certain passage performed, repeated it for some time, in order to try the result,... | |
| Music - 1857 - 416 pages
...must have made in real life, and which might easily be confirmed by instances from dramatic poetry. interest is most impressively told, many a noble or...tender sentiment is most emphatically conveyed by it. It says much for the native and original predominance of virtue—it may be deemed another assertion... | |
| Horace Mann - Education - 1867 - 498 pages
...sympathies of nature, it tells, in accents of love and pity, of its woes, and its wishes for all humanity. The power and expressiveness of music may well be...external nature to the moral constitution of man, for what can be more adapted to his moral constitution than that which is so helpful as music eminently... | |
| Massachusetts. Board of Education - Education - 1837 - 948 pages
...sympathies of nature, it tells, in accents of love and pity, of its woes, and its wishes for all humanity. The power and expressiveness of music may well be...external nature to the moral constitution of man, for what can be more adapted to his moral constitution than that which is so helpful as music eminently... | |
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