. With the world's people : an account of the ethnic origin, primitive estate, early migrations, social evolution, and present conditions and promise of the principal families of men : together with a preliminary inquiry on the time, place and manner of the beginning . nto call hs iniscrablcs; but it also be-came the city of the human mind. Wemay not see that the results wrought outin this mountain fastness were alwaysgood and great. It inight be allegedthat Protestantism suffered in the handsof the Genevese. The student of his-tory knows well through what a trans-formation the work of Luther


. With the world's people : an account of the ethnic origin, primitive estate, early migrations, social evolution, and present conditions and promise of the principal families of men : together with a preliminary inquiry on the time, place and manner of the beginning . nto call hs iniscrablcs; but it also be-came the city of the human mind. Wemay not see that the results wrought outin this mountain fastness were alwaysgood and great. It inight be allegedthat Protestantism suffered in the handsof the Genevese. The student of his-tory knows well through what a trans-formation the work of Luther was passedwhen it ascended the Alps. The futurewill show that though in many respectsthe system was intensified, in few was itbettered when it left the hands of theGerman reformers for those of and more with the changed con-dition in Europe, more and more withthe revival and expansion Hardships of theof the intellect, did the ^^J^sromee-mind look to a residence in do™-that high region from which it might 108 GREAT RACES OE MANKIND. look down into Italy, into Germany, intoFrance. The modern reader may notwell apprehend to what extent the hu-man mind has been fugitive. It hasbeen pursued through all the earth. Ithas been hunted in the wilderness and. SHEPHERD OF THE MEGLlb ALP, IN APPENZELL—TYPE, the desert. It has found no place for thesole of the foot, no seat, no pillow. Inevery age the advanced guard who havechosen freedom and love for their inher-itance, generosity and truth for theirwork, have gone to exile, even to bond-age, to death, for the sole enjoyment of which they were capable, the sole libertywhich they cared to enjoy and few have known, have cared toknow, within the last century the ex-tent and variety of that malign animositywith which the best thought of the ilid-dle Ages and of thesubsequent times,in both Catholica n d Protestantc (J u n t r i e s, waswhipped andscourged andbranded until it puton a shivering,frightful appear-ance, as


Size: 1387px × 1802px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidwithworldspe, bookyear1912