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Civil Gov., ch. xviii. III. iv. III. vi. III. v. Cont. Soc., IV. viii. Cont. Soc., IV. viii. 197-201. This is not unlike what Tocqueville says somewhere, that Christianity bids you render unto Cæsar the things that are Cæsar's, but seems to discourage any inquiry whether Cæsar is an usurper or a lawful ruler. Cont. Soc., IV. viii. 203.

Summa, I. ii. 108, 4; II. ii. 185, 6; II. ii. 186, 3; Summa cont. Gent., iii. 133.

Paul's Cross a voice goes forth to Carlisle and the Land's End, proclaiming that the reign of Edward the Fourth is past and gone, then, Montagu, I claim thy promise of aid and fellowship, not before!" Meanwhile, the king, eager to dispel thought in action, rushed in person against the rebellious forces. "Warkworth Chronicle" Cont. Croyl.

Borrowed from Hobbes, who said, "Magnus ille Leviathan quæ civitas appellatur, opificium artis est." Mackintosh's. Cont. Soc., II. v. IV. ii. For instance, Gouvernement de la Pologne, ch. xi. p. 305. And Corr., v. 180. Cont. Soc., I. viii. Cont. Soc., II. i. Ib., III. x. "Let every individual who may usurp the sovereignty be instantly put to death by free men."

This nobleman, who had maintained his loyalty unshaken to John, during the lowest fortune of that monarch, determined to support the authority of the infant prince; nor was he dismayed at the number and violence of his enemies. Hist. Croyl. cont. p. 474.

Wyse would taste it with the air of a connoisseur and say: "Not quite as good as last year: I must tell the Cont I mean my sister." Again when Mr. Wyse did condescend to honour a tea-party or a bridge-party, Tilling writhed under the consciousness that their general deportment was quite different from that which they ordinarily practised among themselves. There was never any squabbling at Mr.

S. Thom., Cont. gent., lib. 4, c. 86. We now come to consider the crowning glory of all the glorious supernatural attributes wherewith God will clothe our bodies on the last day. I say it is the crowning glory.

Freeman's Growth of the English Constitution, c. i. Cont. Soc., III. xv. 140. See extract from his pamphlet, prefixed to M. Auguis's edition of the Social Contract, pp. xxiii, xxiv. Gouvernement de Pologne, v. 246. For each of the seventeen Intendances into which Comte divides France, is to be ruled by a chief, "always appointed and removed by the central power."

Lightfoot's recent investigations, in view of which the two sentences that follow should perhaps be cancelled; see Cont. Lightfoot in the Contemporary Review for August and October: neither do Dr. Lightfoot's arguments seem very much to affect them. The method of the one is chiefly external, that of the other almost entirely internal. Ev. p. 193. App. 219, 354, 355; Ignat. Epp. 104, 112; Clem.

Impossibile est igitur quod corpus humanum transeat in substantiam spiritualem.... Similiter etiam impossibile est quod corpus hominis resurgentis sit quasi aëreum et ventis simile. S. Thom., Cont. gent., lib. 4, c. 84. In the first place, rising a spiritual body implies that the glorified body will no longer need food, drink, and sleep, to sustain life and strength, as it now does.