United States or Tunisia ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


See Hilprecht, Explorations in Bible Lands, pp. 289 ff., 540 ff.; and Fisher, Excavations at Nippur, Pt. I , Pt. Ezek. iii. 15. Ezek. i. 1, 3; iii. 23; and cf. x. 15, 20, 22, and xliii. 3. See J. A. Montgomery, Aramaic Incantation Texts from Nippur, 1913 Hilprecht, Explorations, p. 555 f.

But we can form no image of the fact that the window is not to the left of the door. Attempts have often been made to deny such negative facts, but, for reasons which I have given elsewhere,* I believe these attempts to be mistaken, and I shall assume that there are negative facts. * "Monist," January, 1919, p. 42 ff. Word-propositions, like image-propositions, are always positive facts.

Cocker: Christianity and Greek Philosophy, pp. 377, ff. Zeller: Philosophie der Griechen, II, i, s. 926. Plato "never raised the question of the personality of God." Metaphysics, V, 1. Ibid.: x, 7. Metaphysics, xi, 6. E.g., Schwegler: History of Philosophy; Cocker; ut supra, p. 412, ff. xi, 6. xi, 7.

III. and XIV. For his date Bhandarkar, Vaishṇ. and Śaivism, pp. 58-59 and I.A.. 1914, pp. 233 ff. and 262 ff. Chând. Up. XXXVIII.-XL. contains a violent polemic against them. See Jahn's Analysis, pp. 90-106 and Barth in Mélanges Harlez, pp. 12-25.

And if the parson is so dear to you as you say in your letter, then you should have kept him at home, and not suffered him to come among our people. This would have been most agreeable to us, and certainly much better for him." Such scorn and the flames of the faggot were decisive. War was determined on. Bd. II. S. 263 ff.

Arch. Cant., xxi , 110 ff. Also Burton's Charity lands at Loughborough. The "bridgmasteres" here in 1570 collected £33 18s. 6d., and disbursed £16 12s. 11d. Fletcher, Hist. of Loughborough, 41-2. Legge, North Elmham Acc'ts, 87-90. So too at Eltham, Kent, where the "Fifetene peny Lands" have special wardens who account for their revenue. Archaeologia, xxxiv, 51 ff.

On the difference of tone and fidelity between the Epistles and the Acts see the interesting remarks of Prof. P. Gardner, The Religious Experience of St. Paul, pp. 5 ff. 'We have explained that he was good and gentle, mild and merciful; we who lived with him could feel it.

To the west, at the position FF on Sketch 62, were acting large bodies of the enemy, which had swept, almost without meeting resistance, through Arras to Amiens. Against that advance there was nothing but small garrisons of French Territorials, which were brushed aside without difficulty.

The lower part of her belly is decorated with a series of thirteen stars, and immediately beneath it are the two Boats of Ra, called Semketet and Mantchet, or Sektet and Matet. Each of her four legs is held in position by two gods, and the god Shu, with outstretched uplifted arms, supports her body. Soc. Bibl. Arch., vol. iv., p. 1 ff. Soc. Bibl. Arch., vol. viii., p. 412 ft.

No distinction of caste or creed is recognized and hardly any ceremonies are prescribed but meat and wine are forbidden, the mantra of the sect is to be repeated five times a day and Friday is held sacred. These observances seem an imitation of Mohammedanism. Ant. 1893, p. 226, and also in article Ramanandi in E.R.E.; Farquhar, J.R.A.S.1920, pp. 185 ff.