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2000500211037GALLIMARD 2000 272 pages 12 4x1 4x16 8cm. 2000. Broché. 272 pages.
2081502111906191Chinese book office N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Chinese book office paperback
1932R160125888ECOLE SPECIALE DES TRAVAUX PUBLICS. 1932. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. partiel. décollorée, Dos plié, Intérieur acceptable. 164 pages. Nombreuses figures en noir et blanc dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 372.7-Livre scolaire : mathématiques
69276aafService des constructions scolaires et des sports, 1991, lg. in-8vo, 191 p., ill., cartonnage original ill.
19952080502106917298Not Available 1995. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
43 pages. Average wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. Good working copy. Circa 1920? Book
SB19C-02841Coyne Electrical School. Used - Good. Good condition. Acceptable dust jacket. technology circuits diagrams A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates stamps limited notes and highlighting or a few light stains. Coyne Electrical School unknown
2005L58353Maaseik, 2005 341pp., rijkelijk geïllustreerd, bijgevoegd: DVD met alle klasfoto's van 1955-2005, gecart. uitgeversband, 30cm., goede staat, gewicht: 1.7kg., L58353
1991143048Privatdruck. Reutlingen 1991. 189 Seiten. Mit zahlreichen teils faks. Abbildungen u. Dokumenten. Illustrierte Originalbroschur. (Titelblatt gestempelt. Teils mit geringeren Gebrauchsspuren). 20x21 cm
2092902141302350Kanki nashi N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Kanki nashi paperback
Bunschoten, Raoul, edIn Pristine Condition. unknown
2090502113706103Not Available N.A. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19532091502133800042Not Available 1953. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 88 pages 57 pages Not Available paperback
ABE-118581768138 CM X 11,5 CM-DOS MUET-PEUT-ETRE IMAGES REMISES A L'ECOLE POUR RECOMPENSER LES BONS ELEVES-LA CHAPE DE ST MARTIN CLOVIS-GUERRIERS FRANCS CHARLEMAGNE-L'ORIFLAMME DES CHEVALIERS CHARLES V-INFANTERIE CHARLES VIII-LES CROISES SAINT LOUIS-LA CHEVALERIE JEANNE D'ARC 1429-ENSEIGNES DES BANDES FRANCOIS IER-LA CORNETTE BLANCHE HENRI IV-MOUSQUETAIRES LOUIS XIV-GARDES FRANCAISES LOUIS XV-LA 32 EME DEMI BRIGADE REPUBLIQUE 1792-GRENADIERS DE LA GARDE NAPOLEON IER-CARABINIERS RESTAURATION-INFANTERIE RESTAURATION-INFANTERIE DE LIGNE LOUIS PHILIPPE-LANCIERS 1848 1852-TRACES DE COLLE AU DOS DE CERTAINES IMAGES
Arline M. FischOne in Pristine Condition one not in good condition very shelf worn. unknown
20001322216PN. New. 2000. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
20001321981PN. New. 2000. Soft Cover. Date is original print. This is a reprint edition . PN paperback
20082092902141206833Chinese Zodiac 2008. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Chinese Zodiac paperback
19839460Couverture souple. Broché. 46 pages. (20 x 30 cm).
198335932Couverture souple. Broché. 46 pages. (20 x 30 cm).
198398428Couverture souple. Broché. 46 pages. (20 x 30 cm).
78231Jumet (Belgique), Imprimerie Graphing, 1976. 16 x 12, 160 pp., très nombreuses photographies dont certaines en couleurs, broché, très bon état.
19102111902153300774Tendai Buddhist School Academic Affairs Division 1910. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Tendai Buddhist School Academic Affairs Division paperback
1832List3436Auburn New York 1832. Single four-page letter measuring 7 ¾ x 9 ¾ inches. Folded with very small tears at folds. Excellent to Near Fine. A letter written from the Auburn Theological Seminary in 1832 from the soon-to-be Reverend Thomas Reed Rawson 1803-1877 to his soon-to-be wife Louisa W. Dawes 1810–1849. Dawes who lived in Cummington Massachusetts was the older sister of Senator Henry Laurens Dawes best known for the 1887 Dawes Act.<br /> <br /> Rawson opens by commenting on the death of one of his students and his time spent in Oswego “visiting in the most fashionable familiesâ€; he felt this taught him a great deal about “human nature†which in Oswego is “peculiarâ€. He seems to have been particularly perplexed by the spiritual character he encountered in upstate New York a locus of the Christian revival movement now called the Second Great Awakening:<br /> <br /> “You know I expected that the spirit of the west was a more active . spirit than what was seen in the N.E. states & hoped by breathing this pure atmosphere to enjoy great spiritual health. How erroneous was the impression! How greatly have I been deceived! . I acted as though it was so – as though man was man only in certain latitudes. I acted as though face answered to face only when seen in the waters of N.E. & consequently that the heart of a N.E. man had no analogy to what beats in the bosom of one born in a more western longitude.â€<br /> <br /> Not only is Rawson nonplussed by New Yorkers’ religious qualities he is vehemently opposed to some of the new practices that arose from the religious revival there:<br /> <br /> “The state of things here I mean in all this country at the west is very peculiar. You have heard of ‘Old & New Measures’ I suppose. For myself I cannot approve of the latter. I find not a spirit in me to Fellowship them. Have been exceedingly tried by them as I have been in the midst of ‘new measures’ all winter. You can form but a faint idea of the excitement which is in this country in the religious community. In Oswego Co. the lay-men are going through the Co. holding meetings once a month in praying exhorting dispensing the duties of Clergymen &c. &c.; & it seems that the present state of things must result in a wide division in the churches. ‘A house divided against itself cannot stand.’ . As near as I can find out very sinister is the spirit that knows the new measures to that wild-pine which ran so extensively in the time of Edwards. The effects of it are seen in your town to this day.â€<br /> <br /> The “New Measures†were novel practices for American Christianity that came about during the Second Great Awakening mainly due to Presbyterian minister Charles Finney. These include very lengthy meetings public naming of sinners and public confessions of sin and were controversial with those who preferred a more orthodox and restrained service. Rawson accurately predicts that the new practices would lead to a schism; starting in 1837 the Old School-New School Controversy split the Presbyterian church along these lines. He later worries that such a division in the church would allow “Catholicism to take the advantage†and that “Satan is bringing this about as rapidly as possibleâ€. The appeal of a strong hierarchical Catholic church as opposed to a weak and divided Protestant one was a common worry among Protestants at the time.<br /> <br /> Rawson traces the “sinister spirit†of the new measures back to “the time of Edwardsâ€: Jonathan Edwards a key figure in the First Great Awakening of the 1730s and 40s. Given his reference to “your townâ€â€”Cummington Massachusetts—Rawson is probably referring to the so-called “New England theology†that arose from the First Great Awakening. Among other things New England theology proposed new views on man’s free will and responsibility; similar views would create controversy in Rawson’s time as he explains:<br /> <br /> “I see my own heart to be depraved & wicked beyond all observation but the fruits of the spirit I think I do love & hope they are sweeter & more sweet to my taste. I say taste the New measure-men are not taste-men but believe in the ‘motive scheme’ — By taste is meant the implantation of a new principle – love to God & is affected by the Holy Spirit. The ‘motive scheme’ implies that the sinner turns himself about in by motive merely.â€<br /> <br /> He is objecting to the idea that a sinner could redeem himself through an act of his own will—by his own ‘motives.’ Old School Presbyterianism holds a more orthodox Calvinist view wherein the redemption of the sinner is not up to the sinner’s will at all. Rawson makes an interesting comparison between New School views on the matter and states’ rights in the context of the then-ongoing nullification crisis:<br /> <br /> “The signs of the times declare most plainly to him who has wiped up his eyes that ‘the end has come upon the four corners of this earth’ i.e. the end of peaceful days for the present. Never was our Republic brought to a crisis like this. Nullification in the Political world is the same with Denunciation in the Religious world. This is my opinion; don’t know as have heard others say so.â€<br /> <br /> The nullification crisis arose when South Carolina declared that several import tariffs were unconstitutional and thus nullified them under the states’ rights doctrine of state nullification. Rawson seems to be drawing a parallel between the revivalists’ idea of the role of one’s motives in salvation and states’ rights advocates’ idea of the relationship between the states’ wills and the federal government’s. Of course the states’ rights issue would soon reach an apotheosis.<br /> Rawson closes with some affectionate lines for Dawes and advice about her own teaching job; the crossed text updates her on the Christian conversions within his family. Overall the letter provides detailed insights into the views of a more conservative theology student on the Presbyterian controversy that was soon to come to a head. unknown
194713921Genève, imprimerie du Journal de Genève, [1947]. In-8 broché de 37-[3] pages, couverture imprimée.