The Quarterly Review, Volume 233, Issue 463William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1920 - English literature |
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Page 331
... allowed to go ashore nor landsmen to come on board , and cargoes had to wait until the disease had run its course . Yet all these afflictions were hardly so terrible as the tyranny of the Turk . In theory the Franks who dwelt in the ...
... allowed to go ashore nor landsmen to come on board , and cargoes had to wait until the disease had run its course . Yet all these afflictions were hardly so terrible as the tyranny of the Turk . In theory the Franks who dwelt in the ...
Page 345
... allowed to be heard . It would have seemed possible to make experiments at least during the National Mission , and some Bishops were willing to do so , but it was known that certain sections of the Church would refuse to take any part ...
... allowed to be heard . It would have seemed possible to make experiments at least during the National Mission , and some Bishops were willing to do so , but it was known that certain sections of the Church would refuse to take any part ...
Page 347
... allowed to assume the functions of deacons in assemblies of women where no deacon was present . During the Middle Ages they lapsed altogether , and the desire of those women who wished to lead a consecrated life found fuller ...
... allowed to assume the functions of deacons in assemblies of women where no deacon was present . During the Middle Ages they lapsed altogether , and the desire of those women who wished to lead a consecrated life found fuller ...
Page 348
... allowed to do to help the Church at this crisis ? She is told that she may become a deaconess , and she naturally asks what in that capacity she will be allowed to do ? The Order of Deaconesses was revived by Bishop Tait on his own ...
... allowed to do to help the Church at this crisis ? She is told that she may become a deaconess , and she naturally asks what in that capacity she will be allowed to do ? The Order of Deaconesses was revived by Bishop Tait on his own ...
Page 349
... allowed to do , is there anything which differentiates deaconesses from other church - workers . They take no sort of vow ; and the regulations of 1891 state that ' a Deaconess may be released from her obligations by the Bishop if he ...
... allowed to do , is there anything which differentiates deaconesses from other church - workers . They take no sort of vow ; and the regulations of 1891 state that ' a Deaconess may be released from her obligations by the Bishop if he ...
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18th century Academy Aleppo Allies Ambassador Antonio Longo Armenians army attitude Australia Austria British century Chancellor Church cicisbeo civilisation Clemenceau Committee Constantinople Count de Soissons danger deaconess Deschanel direct dispute Donne Donne's East East Prussia economic Embassy emigration Empire enemy England English Entente Cordiale Europe fact Falkenhayn favour forces France French German Germany's Guizot hand Herr Herzen important indemnity Industrial Council influence interest Italy Jewish Jews Keynes Labour land learning Levant Company matter measures ment merchants Metternich military millions Minister moral Moscow opinion organisation Paris Parliament Peace Petrograd political population position possible present protest question race railways realised recognised regard representatives responsible revolutionary Russian sermons ships sinnes social Soissons strike Switzerland thought tion trade Treaty Treaty of Saint-Germain Turkey Turkish Turkish Government Turks Union venereal disease Venice Vorarlberg Wangenheim whole women