| Orestes Augustus Brownson - 1849 - 566 pages
...series of proofs. They are, under the point of view of religion and philosophy, wholly rotten, and from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head there is no soundness in them. Nothing will answer for them that does not descend as low as the last... | |
| Thomas Boston - 1849 - 696 pages
...is a loathsome spectacle of the outbreakings and workings of that corruption. So that he sees that " from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head there is no soundness ; and therefore he loathes himself." (3.) The pollution cleaving to his duties... | |
| Henry Hammond - 1849 - 368 pages
...•" fallen from our head, and the heart in terrible fainting fits, every foot ready to overcome ; from the " sole of the foot to the crown of the head," from one extreme part of the nation to another, nothing but distress or oppression, suffering or acting... | |
| British Museum - 1851 - 284 pages
...Egyptian proportions are known : J. The canon of the time of the Pyramids ; the height was reckoned at six feet from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head, and subdivisions obtain by one-half or one-third of a foot. 2. The canon from the 12th to the 22nd dynasty is only an... | |
| William Sandys Wright Vaux, British Museum - 1851 - 496 pages
...executed agreeably to— I. The Canon of the time of the Pyramids, in which the height was reckoned at six feet from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head ; and subdivisions obtain by one half or one third of a foot. — II. The Canon which prevailed between the Twelfth and... | |
| Edward Lucatt - 1851 - 524 pages
...communicating, caused the explosion of the other. The slave was blown to atoms, and the two chiefs were burned from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head, but neither was killed ; and they were picked up by their horror-stricken followers, and carried to... | |
| William Sandys Wright Vaux, British Museum - 1851 - 528 pages
...which is mentioned by Diodorus, and which reckons the entire height at twenty-one feet and one quarter from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head, taken to the upper part. The proportions are different, but there does not appear to have been any... | |
| Fred Arthur Neale - 1851 - 350 pages
...friction, gets more and more excited in the discharge of his arduous duty ; the frothing up of soapsuds from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head ; these are grievances for which one is amply repaid, by the final torrent of deliciously pure and... | |
| William Sandys Wright Vaux, British Museum - 1851 - 526 pages
...which is mentioned by Diodorus, and which reckons the entire height at twenty-one feet and one quarter from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head, taken to the upper part. The proportions are different, but there does not appear to have been any... | |
| Jean Calvin - 1851 - 552 pages
...rebelling against God.— Ed. is found in Isaiah, " In vain," he says, " have I chastised you ; for from the sole of the foot to the crown of the head there is no soundness." (Is. i. 6.) There God shews that he had tried every remedy, but that the Jews,... | |
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