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Etenim, ut nostrorum illa fuit Epistasis turbulenta, sic nostrorum haec evasit divina Catastrophe.
— from Ten Reasons Proposed to His Adversaries for Disputation in the Name of the Faith and Presented to the Illustrious Members of Our Universities by Campion, Edmund, Saint
Ideo monentur Reverendissimi Patres, ut nunc in finem Emendationes de capite quarto hujus Schematis propositas etiam ad proximam Congregationem generalem secum deferre velint.”
— from Letters From Rome on the Council by Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger
[77] "Fraternitatis vestræ pietatem intimis obsecramus precibus ut nos inter feras et ignaras gentes Germaniæ laborantes, vestris sacrosanctis orationibus adjuvemur."
— from A Literary History of the English People, from the Origins to the Renaissance by J. J. (Jean Jules) Jusserand
The passage referred to is in the Apology, c. 46: "Deum quilibet opifex Christianus et invenit et ostendit et exinde totum, quod in Deo quæritur, re quoque assignat; licet Plato affirmet factitatorem universitatis neque inveniri facilem et inventum enarrari in omnes difficilem."
— from Notes and Queries, Number 45, September 7, 1850 by Various
The profession ought to remember (what the public cannot and probably never will come to understand) that pathological diagnosis must precede rational treatment, which consists in applying a proper remedy to the individual case before us, not in fitting every case to a specialised system or panacea—the essence of quackery.
— from The Lettsomian Lectures on Diseases and Disorders of the Heart and Arteries in Middle and Advanced Life [1900-1901] by J. Mitchell (John Mitchell) Bruce
Let us, however, contemplate man as he stands before us, noble in form, erect in position, full of strength, joy, ambition.
— from The Reason Why A Careful Collection of Many Hundreds of Reasons for Things Which, Though Generally Believed, Are Imperfectly Understood by Robert Kemp Philp
The money which the thirty receive from without, together with their own reserves, is lent freely to stock-brokers, with the simple provision that it must be returned immediately upon notice, if financial exigencies require it.
— from Lights and Shadows of New York Life or, the Sights and Sensations of the Great City by James Dabney McCabe
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