| John Ray - Creation - 1714 - 430 pages
...obferves the fame Tenor, becaufe her Works are fo perfect, that there is no Place for Amendments j nothing that can be reprehended. The moft fagacious...Blot or Error in this great Volume of the World., as if any thing had been an imperfetf Effay at the firft, to ufe the Bifliop of Chefters Words : Nothing... | |
| John Ray - Fossils - 1735 - 428 pages
...lefs. Man is always mending and altering his Works, but Nature obferves the fame Tenor, becaufe hec Works are fo perfect, that there is no place for Amendments,...have not been able to find any Flaw in thefe divinely contriv'd and form'd Machines, no Blot or Error in this great Volume of the World, as if any thing... | |
| Dugald Stewart - Psychology - 1814 - 560 pages
...always mending and altering his works; bnt nature observes the same tenor, because her works are so perfect, that there is no place for amendments, nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious men in so many ages have not been able to find any flaw in these divinely contrived... | |
| Dugald Stewart - 1829 - 654 pages
...always mending and altering his works ; but nature observes the same tenor, because her works are so perfect that there is no place for amendments, nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious men in so many ages have not been able to find any flaw in these divinely contrived... | |
| Dugald Stewart - 1829 - 442 pages
...always mending and altering his works ; but nature observes the same tenor, because her works are so perfect, that there is no place for amendments, nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious men in so many ages have not been able to find any flaw in these divinely contrived... | |
| Dugald Stewart - 1829 - 418 pages
...always mending and altering his works ; but nature observes the same tenor, because her works are so perfect, that there is no place for amendments, nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious men in so many ages have not been able to find any flaw in these divinely contrived... | |
| Arthur Hill Hassall - Algae - 1852 - 728 pages
...always mending and altering his Works; but Nature observes the same Tenor, because her Works are so perfect that there is no place for Amendments; nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious Men in so many Ages have not been able to find any Flaw in these Divinely contrived... | |
| Dugald Stewart - 1854 - 454 pages
...always mending and altering his works ; but nature observes the same tenor, because her works are so perfect that there is no place for amendments, nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious men in so many ages have not been able to find any flaw in these divinely contrived... | |
| Francis Bowen - History - 1855 - 512 pages
...always mending and altering his works ; but nature observes the same tenor, because her works are so perfect, that there is no place for amendments, nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious men in so many ages have not been able to find any flaw in these divinely contrived... | |
| Arthur Hill Hassall - Marine algae - 1857 - 482 pages
...always mending and altering his Works; but Nature observes the same Tenor, because her Works are so perfect that there is no place for Amendments; nothing that can be reprehended. The most sagacious Men in so many Ages have not been able to find any Flaw in these Divinely contrived... | |
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