| Saint Bede (the Venerable), John Allen Giles - 1843 - 452 pages
...eternity. This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so bright and merry, is that into which the souls of those are received who depart the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the... | |
| Bede (the venerable.) - 1843 - 448 pages
...eternity. This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so bright and merry, is that into which the souls of those are received who depart the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the... | |
| John Henry Newman - 1844 - 720 pages
...eternity. This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so bright and merry, is that into which the souls of those are received who depart the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the... | |
| English saints - 1844 - 674 pages
...eternity. This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so bright and merry, is that into which the souls of those are received who depart the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the... | |
| 1853 - 496 pages
...eternity. This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so joyful and bright, is that into which the souls of those are received who depart from the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the kingdom of heaven ; yet they shall... | |
| Bede (the venerable.) - 1853 - 488 pages
...eternity. This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so joyful and bright, is that into which the souls of those are received who depart from the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the kingdom of heaven ; yet they shall... | |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 1886 - 454 pages
...especially by the celebration of masses. That fiery and stinking pit, which thou sawest, is the month of hell, into which whosoever falls shall never be...are not so perfect as to be worthy of an immediate entranee into the kingdom of heaven ; yet they shall all, at the day of judgment, be admitted to the... | |
| Marcus Dods - 1903 - 300 pages
...delivered to all eternity," by implication the everlasting abode of the unrepentant. The third state is " that into which the souls of those are received who depart the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the... | |
| James Harvey Robinson - 1904 - 592 pages
...living, and more especially by masses. to all eternity. This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so bright and gay, is that...into which the souls of those are received who depart the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the... | |
| Albert Stanburrough Cook, Chauncey Brewster Tinker - 1908 - 312 pages
...This flowery place, in which you see these most beautiful young people, so resplendent and joyful, is that into which the souls of those are received who depart the body in good works, but who are not so perfect as to deserve to be immediately admitted into the... | |
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