| 1915 - 540 páginas
...any criminality of theirs justify our neglect in this particular. Mr. Henry Fielding says " Religion will, I am satisfied, have a strong influence in correcting...alone which can effectually accomplish so great and so desirable a work." ' The application of these principles, and the adoption of the power given by... | |
| Henry Fielding, William Ernest Henley - 1902 - 318 páginas
...prudent an exchange. In such a place, and among such a people, religion will, I am satisfied, have a very strong influence in correcting the morals of men;...alone which can effectually accomplish so great and so desirable a work. XXVIII., XXIX. Need no explanation, but may be altered as the legislature pleases.... | |
| John Bender - 1987 - 355 páginas
...to address the public with massive portals that spoke architectural terror. Henry Fielding's opinion "that it is religion alone which can effectually accomplish so great and so desirable a work" as to reform the morals of prisoners, but a guilty sense of shared mortal frailty... | |
| Henry Fielding - 1988 - 466 páginas
...those to whom their laws were ascribed' (Loeb). 6 Tillotson, Sermon n1, p. 47. satisfied, have a very strong Influence in correcting the Morals of Men;...alone which can effectually accomplish so great and so desireable a Work. XXVIII. XIX. Need no Explanation, but may be altered as the Legislature pleases.... | |
| Herbert Schlossberg - 2000 - 420 páginas
...we owe this to them; nor can any criminality of theirs justify our neglect in this particular. . . . and I am no less persuaded, that it is religion alone which can effectually accomplish so great and so desirable a work. 77 When much later the Record, in its second month of publication, attributed... | |
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