of which passages in these tracts as they at present stand afford a specimen, the course of his argument is now too often broken off by the necessity of perpetual replies to the feeble and perverse crotchets of his adversary: and the reader is forced to conclude, that in this (as in nine-tenths of his other writings) Bramhall's fame would have stood higher, had his opponent been more worthy of him. August, 1844. A. W. H. CONTENTS OF VOL. IV. Page Defence of True Liberty from Antecedent and Extrinsecal The Catching of Leviathan or the Great Whale. Part iii. 3 197 |