Gods Providence in Accidents a Sermon Occasioned By the Deaths of the Rev Jo
Gods Providence in Accidents a Sermon Occasioned By the Deaths of the Rev Jo
Henry a Henry Augustus Boardman
The book Gods Providence in Accidents a Sermon Occasioned By the Deaths of the Rev Jo was written by author Henry a Henry Augustus Boardman Here you can read free online of Gods Providence in Accidents a Sermon Occasioned By the Deaths of the Rev Jo book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Gods Providence in Accidents a Sermon Occasioned By the Deaths of the Rev Jo a good or bad book?
What reading level is Gods Providence in Accidents a Sermon Occasioned By the Deaths of the Rev Jo book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
2 18 I cannot help thinking there is much in his life and character which may be usefully improved, and I only regret that the pres- sure of constant duties prevents me from giving you more fully, as I would wish to do, the impression close intimacy with him has left upon my mind. With much respect, I am, Sincerely yours. This genial and discriminating sketch supersedes the necessity for any attempt at a formal portraiture of Mr. CoNNELL on my part. I certainly have never known a man of greater... modesty, or of greater gen- tleness of disposition. And yet beneath this almost feminine mildness and sweetness of character, there was an acute and vigorous intellect, a robust scholar- ship, and stores of learning which in the hands of most men would have been so used (and I will not say unfitly used) as to attract to their possessor the admiration of the multitude. He shunned the noto- riety which others would have courted. It was only in communion wdtli a very few chosen friends, that he brought out his treasures; and they were content to listen to him with the deference which men pay to an acknowledged superior, and the warm affection which it was impossible not to feel towards one whose radiant gifts derived their highest charm from the modest guise in which they were attired.
User Reviews: